<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<h3>INVENTIVE PROGRESS.</h3>
<p>The year 1801, the first of the nineteenth
century, was <i>annus mirabilis</i> in the industrial
history of mankind. It was in that
year that the railway locomotive was invented
by Richard Trevithick, who had studied the
steam engine under a friend and assistant of
James Watt. His patent, which was secured
during the ensuing year, makes distinct mention
of the use of his locomotive driven by
steam upon tramways; and in 1803 he actually
had an engine running on the Pen-y-Darran
mining tramway in Cornwall. From that small
beginning has grown a system of railway communication
which has brought the farthest
inland regions of mighty continents within easy
reach of the seaboard and of the world's great
markets; which has made social and friendly
intercourse possible in millions of homes which
otherwise would have been almost destitute of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2"></SPAN></span>
it; which has been the means of spreading a
knowledge of literature, science and religion
over the face of the civilised world; and which,
at the present moment, constitutes the outward
and visible sign of the difference between
Western civilisation and that of the Asiatic, as
seen in China.</p>
<p>In another corner of the globe, during the
year 1801, Volta was constructing his first apparatus
demonstrating the material and physical
nature of those mysterious electric currents
which his friend Professor Galvani of Bologna,
who died just two years earlier, had at first ascribed
to a physiological source. The researches
of the latter, it will be remembered, were begun
in an observation of the way in which the legs
of a dead frog twitched under certain conditions.
The voltaic pile was the first electric battery,
and, therefore, the parent of the existing
marvellous telegraphic and telephonic systems,
while less immediately it led to the development
of the dynamo and its work in electric lighting
and traction. It brought into harmony much
fragmentary knowledge which had lain disjointed
in the armoury of the physicist since
Dufay in France and Franklin in America
had investigated their theories of positive and
negative frictional electricities, and had connected
them with the flash of lightning as
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></SPAN></span>
seen in Nature. Thus it became a fresh starting
point both for industry and for science.</p>
<p>At the Exposition of National Industry, held
in Paris during the year 1801, a working model
of the Jacquard loom was exhibited—the prototype
of those remarkable pieces of mechanism
by which the most elaborately figured designs
are worked upon fabrics during the process of
weaving by means of sets of perforated cardboards.
This was the crowning achievement
of the inventions relating to textile fabrics,
which had rendered the latter half of the
eighteenth century so noteworthy in an industrial
sense. It brought artistic designs in
articles of common use within the reach of
even poor people, and has been the means of
unconsciously improving the public taste, in
matters of applied art, more rapidly than could
have been accomplished by an army of trained
artists. The riots in which the mob nearly
drowned Jacquard at Lyons for attempting to
set up some of his looms were very nearly a
counterpart of those which had occurred in
England in connection with the introduction
of spinning, weaving and knitting machinery.</p>
<p>In Paris, during the first year of the nineteenth
century, Robert Fulton, an American,
and friend of the United States representative
in France, was making trials on the Seine
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></SPAN></span>
with his first steam-boat—a little vessel imitated
by him later on in the first successful
steamers which plied on the river Hudson,
carrying passengers from New York. At the
same time, William Symongton launched the
<i>Charlotte Dundas</i>, the steam tug-boat which,
on the Scottish canals, did the first actually
useful work in the conveyance of goods by
steam power on the water. These small
experiments have initiated a movement in
maritime transport which is fully comparable
to that brought about on land by the invention
of the railway locomotive.</p>
<p>Again, in 1801, Sir Humphry Davy gave
his first lecture at the Royal Institution in
London, where he had just been installed as
a professor, and began that long series of
investigations into the chemistry of common
things which, taken up by his successor Faraday,
gave to the United Kingdom the first
start in some of those industries depending
upon a knowledge of organic chemistry and
the use of certain essential oils.</p>
<p>Public attention at the beginning of the
nineteenth century, however, was directed
anywhere but towards these small commencements
of mighty forces which were to revolutionise
the industrial world, and through it
also the social and political. If in those days
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></SPAN></span>
Cornwall was ever referred to, it was not by
any means in connection with Trevithick and
his steam-engine which would run on rails,
but by way of reference to the relations of the
Prince of Wales to the Duchy, and the proportion
of its revenues which belonged to him
from birth.</p>
<p>Glancing over the pages of any history
compiled in the early half of the century,
the eye will trace hardly the barest allusions
to forces, the discoveries in which were, in
the year 1801, still in the incipient stage.
Canon Hughes, for instance, in his continuation
of the histories of Hume and Smollett,
devoted some forty pages to the record of
that year. The space which he could spare
from the demands made upon his attention
by the wars in Spain and Egypt, and the
naval conflict with France, was mainly occupied
with such matters as the election of the
Rev. Horne Tooke for Old Sarum, and the
burning question as to whether that gentleman
had not rendered himself permanently
ineligible for Parliamentary honours through
taking Holy Orders, and with a miscellaneous
mass of topics relating to the merely evanescent
politics of the day.</p>
<p>The whole of the effects of invention and
discovery in making history during the first
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></SPAN></span>
year of the century were dismissed by this
writer with a casual reference to the augmentation
of the productive power of the labouring
population through the use of machinery, and
a footnote stating that "this was more particularly
the case in the cotton manufacture".</p>
<p>Time corrects the historical perspective of
the past, but it does not very materially alter
the power of the historical vision to adjust
itself to an examination of the present day
forces which are likely to grow to importance
in the making of future history. When we
ask what are the inventions and discoveries
which are really destined to grow from seeds
of the nineteenth into trees of the twentieth
century, we are at once confronted with the
same kind of difficulty which would present
itself to one who, standing in the midst of an
ancient forest, should be requested to indicate
in what spots the wide-spreading giants of the
next generation of trees might be expected to
grow. The company promoter labels those
inventions in which he is commercially interested
as the affairs which will grow to huge
dimensions in the future; while the man of
scientific or mechanical bent is very apt to
predict a mighty future only for achievements
which strike him as being peculiarly brilliant.</p>
<p>Patent experts, on the other hand, when
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></SPAN></span>
asked by their clients to state candidly what
class of inventions may be relied upon to
bring the most certain returns, generally reply
that "big money usually comes from small
patents". In other words, an invention embodying
some comparatively trivial, but yet
really serviceable, improvement on a very
widely used type of machine; or a little bit of
apparatus which in some small degree facilitates
some well known process; or a fashionable
toy or puzzle likely to have a good run for a
season or two, and then a moderate sale for a
few years longer; these are the things to be
recommended to an inventor whose main
object is to make money. Thus the most
qualified experts in patent law and practice
do not fail to disclose this fact to those who
seek their professional advice in a money-making
spirit, as the great majority of inventors
do.</p>
<p>The full term of fourteen years in the
United Kingdom, or seventeen in the United
States, may be a ridiculously long period for
which to grant a monopoly to the inventor of
some ephemeral toy, although absolutely inadequate
to secure the just reward for one
who labours for many years to perfect an
epoch-making invention, and then to introduce
it to the public in the face of all the opposition
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></SPAN></span>
from vested interests which such inventions
almost invariably meet.</p>
<p>Thus the fact that a man has made money
out of one class of patents may not be any safe
guide at all to arriving at a due estimate of his
ideas on industrial improvements of greater
"pith and moment," but, on the contrary, it is
generally exactly the reverse. The law offers
an immense premium for such inventions as
are readily introduced, and the inventor who
has made it his business to take advantage of
this fact is usually one of the last men from
whom to get a trustworthy opinion on patents
of a different class.</p>
<p>Of the patents taken out during the latter
portion of the nineteenth century, many undoubtedly
contain the germs of great ideas,
and, nevertheless, have excited comparatively
little attention from business men or from the
general public. It was so in the latter part of
the eighteenth century, and history is only
repeating itself when the seeds of twentieth
century industrial movements are permitted
to germinate unseen.</p>
<p>For all practical purposes each invention must
be referred to the age in which it actually does
useful work in the service of mankind. Thus,
Hero of Alexandria, in the third century <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>,
devised a water fountain worked by the expansive
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></SPAN></span>
power of steam. From time to time
during the succeeding twenty centuries similar
pieces of apparatus excited the curiosity of the
inquisitive and the interest of the learned.
The clever and eccentric Marquis of Worcester,
in his little book published in 1663, <i>A Century
of the Names and Scantlings of Inventions</i>, generally
known as the <i>Century of Inventions</i>, gave
an account of one application of the power of
steam to lift water which he had worked out,
probably on a scale large enough to have become
of practical service. Thomas Savery
and Denis Papin, both of them men of high
attainments and great ingenuity, made important
improvements before the end of the seventeenth
century.</p>
<p>Yet, if we refer to the question as to the
proper age to which the steam-engine as a
useful invention is to be assigned, we shall
unhesitatingly speak of it as an eighteenth
century invention, and this notwithstanding
the fact that Savery's patent for the first
pumping engine which came into practical
use was dated 1698. The real introduction
of steam as a factor in man's daily work was
effected later on, partly by Savery himself
and partly by Newcomen, and above all by
James Watt. The expiration of Watt's vital
patent occurred in 1800, and he himself then
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></SPAN></span>
retired from the active supervision of his
engineering business, having virtually finished
his great life's work on the last year of the
century which he had marked for all time by
the efforts of his genius.</p>
<p>Similarly we may confidently characterise
the locomotive engine as an invention belonging
to the first half of the nineteenth century,
although tramways on the one hand, and steam-engines
on the other hand, were ready for the
application of steam transport, and the only
work that remained to be accomplished in the
half century indicated was the bringing of
the two things together. The dynamo, as a
factor in human life—or, in other words, the
electric current as a form of energy producing
power and light—is an invention of the second
half of the nineteenth century, although the
main principles upon which it was built were
worked out prior to the year 1851.</p>
<p>It will be seen, in the course of the subsequent
pages, that portable electric power has
as yet won its way only into very up-to-date
workshops and mines, and that the means by
which it will be applied to numerous useful
purposes in the field, the road, and the house
will be distinctly inventions of the twentieth
century. Similarly the steam-engine has not
really been placed upon the ordinary road,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></SPAN></span>
although efforts have been made for more than
a century to put it there, the conception of a
road locomotive being, in fact, an earlier one
than that of an engine running on rails. Steam
automobiles and traction engines are still confined
to special purposes, the natures of which
prove that certain elements of adaptability
are still lacking in order to render them universally
useful as are the locomotive and the
steam-ship.</p>
<p>In nearly every other important line of
human needs and desires it will be found
that merely tentative efforts have been made
by ingenious minds resulting in inventions of
greater or less promise. Many of the finest
conceptions which have necessarily been set
down as failures have missed fulfilling their
intended missions, not so much by reason of
inherent weakness, as through the want of
accessory circumstances to assist them. As
in biology, so in industrial progress the definition
of fitness appended to the law of the
survival of the fittest must have reference to
the environment.</p>
<p>A foolish law or public prejudice results in
the temporary failure of a great invention, and
the inventor's patent succumbs to the inexorable
operation of the struggle for existence.
Yet, fortunately for mankind, if not for the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></SPAN></span>
individual inventor, an idea does not suffer
extinction as the penalty for non-success in
the struggle. "The beginning of creation," says
Carlyle, "is light," and the kind of light which
inventors throw upon the dark problems involving
man's industrial progress is providentially
indestructible.</p>
<p>Twentieth century inventions—as the term
is used in this book—are, therefore, those
which are destined to fulfil their missions
during the ensuing hundred years. They are
those whose light will not only exist in hidden
places, but will also shine abroad to help and
to bless mankind. Or, if we may revert to the
former figure, they are those which have not
only been planted in the seed and have germinated
in the leaf, but which have grown to
goodly proportions, so that none may dare to
assert that they have been planted for nought.
A man's age is the age in which he does his
work rather than that in which he struggles
to years of maturity. Moore and Byron were
poets of the nineteenth century, although the
one had attained to manhood and the other
had grown from poverty to inherit a peerage
before the new century dawned.</p>
<p>The prophetic rôle—although proverbially an unsafe one—is
nevertheless one which every business man must play almost every day of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></SPAN></span>
his life. The merchant, the manufacturer, the publisher, the
director, the manager, and even the artist, must perforce stake some
portion of his success in life upon the chance of his forecast as to
the success of a particular speculation, article of manufacture, or
artistic conception, and its prospects of proving as attractive or
remunerative as he has expected it to be. The successful business man
no doubt makes his plans, as far as may be practicable, upon the
system indicated by the humorist, who advises people never to prophesy
unless they happen to know, but the nature of his knowledge is almost
always to some extent removed from certainty. He may spend much time
in laborious searching; make many inquiries from persons whom he
believes to be competent to advise him; diligently study the
conditions upon which the problem before him depends—in short, he may
take every reasonable precaution against the chances of failure, yet,
in spite of all, he must necessarily incur risks. And so it is with
regard to the task of forecasting the trend of industrial improvement.
All who are called upon to lay their plans for a number of years
beforehand must necessarily be deeply interested in the problems
relating to the various directions which the course of that improvement may possibly
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></SPAN></span>
take. Meanwhile their estimates of the
future, although based upon an intimate knowledge of the past and
aided by naturally clear powers of insight, must be hypothetical and
conditional. Unfortunately for the vast majority of manufacturing
experts, the thoroughness with which they have mastered the details of
one particular branch of industry too often blinds them to the chances
of change arising from localities beyond their own restricted fields
of vision.</p>
<p>The merriment occasioned by the first proposals
for affixing pneumatic tyres to bicycles
may be cited as a striking instance of the lack
of forecasting insight displayed by very many
of those who are best entitled to pronounce
opinions on the minutiae of their particular
avocations. In almost every "bike" shop
and factory throughout the United Kingdom
and America, the suggestion of putting an
air-filled hosepipe around each wheel of the
machine to act as a tyre was received with
shouts of ridicule!</p>
<p>Railway men, who understood the wonderful
elasticity imparted by air to pieces of mechanism,
such as the pneumatic brake, were not by
any means so much inclined to laughter; but
naturally, for the most part, they deferred to
the rule which enjoins every man to stick to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></SPAN></span>
his trade. The rule in question—when applied
to the task of estimating the worth of inventions
claiming to produce revolutionary effects
in any industry—is necessarily, in the majority
of cases, more or less irrelevant, because such
an invention should be regarded not so much
as a proposed <i>innovation</i> in an old trade as the
<i>creation</i> of a new one.</p>
<p>George Stephenson's ideas on the transport
of passengers and goods were almost unanimously
condemned by the experts of his day
who were engaged in that line of business.
On points relating to wheels of waggons and
the harness of horses, the opinions of these
men were probably worth something; but
in relation to steam locomotives, carriages
and trucks running upon rails, their judgment
was not merely worthless, but a good deal
worse; it was indeed actually misleading, because
based on a pretence of knowledge of a
trade which was to be called into existence to
compete with their own. "Great is Diana of
the Ephesians" said the artificers of old; and
on the strength of their expert knowledge in
the making of idols they set themselves up as
judges of systems of theology and morality.
The argument, although based on self-interest
subjectively, was nevertheless intended to
carry weight even among persons who wished
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></SPAN></span>
to judge the questions in dispute according
to their merits, and most of the latter were
only too ready to accept the implied dictum
that men who work about a temple must be
experts in theology! The principles upon
which Royal Commissions and Select Committees
are sometimes appointed and entrusted
with the onerous duty of deciding upon far-reaching
industrial problems, affecting the
progress of trade and manufactures in the
present day, involve exactly the same kind
of fallacy. Men are selected to pronounce
judgment upon the proposals of their rivals in
trade, and narrow-minded specialists to give
their opinions upon projects which essentially
belong to the border lands between two or
more branches of industry, and cannot be
understood by persons not possessing a knowledge
of both.</p>
<p>Yet the world's work goes on apace; and as capital is accumulated and
seeks to find new outlets the multiplication of industrial projects
must continue in spite of every discouragement. This process will go
on at a rate even faster than that which was exhibited at the
beginning of the nineteenth century; but in watching the course of
advancement, the world must take count of ideas rather than of the
names of those who may have
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></SPAN></span>
claims to rank as the originators of
ideas. While for purposes of convenience, history labels certain great
inventive movements, each with the name of one pre-eminent individual
who has contributed largely to its success, nothing like a due
appraisement of the services rendered by other men is ever attempted.
It is not even as if the commanding general should by public
acclamation receive all the applause for a successful campaign to the
exclusion of his lieutenants. The pioneers in each great department of
invention have generally acted as forerunners of the men whose names
have become the most famous. They have borne much of the heat and
burden of the day, while their successors have reaped the fruits of
triumph. Mr. Herbert Spencer's strong protest against the part
assigned by some writers in the mental and industrial evolution of the
human race to the influence of great men is certainly fully justified,
if the attribute of greatness is to be ascribed only to those whose
names figure in current histories. The parts performed by others,
whose fate it may have been to have fallen into comparatively
unfavourable environments, may have entitled them even more eminently
to the acclamation of greatness.</p>
<p>The world in such a matter asks, reasonably
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></SPAN></span>
enough under the circumstances, Shall
we omit to honour any of the great men who
have played important parts in an industrial
movement, assigning as our motive the difficulty
of enumerating so many names? For
the encouragement of those to whom the
ambition for fame acts as a great stimulus to
self-devotion in the interests of human progress,
it is unavoidable that some men should
be singled out and made heroes, while the
much more numerous class of those who have
also done great work, but who have not been
quite so successful, must pass out of the ken
of all, excepting the few who possess an expert
knowledge of the various subjects which they
have taken in hand.</p>
<p>Still the distortion to which history has
been subjected through its biographical mode
of treatment must always be reckoned with as
a factor of possible error by any one attempting
to read the riddle of the past, and it may offer
a still more dangerous snare to one who tries
to deduce the future course of events from the
evidences of the past, and the promises which
they hold out. People are naturally prone to
take it for granted that the world's progress
during the first part of the twentieth century
depends upon the future work of those inventors
and industrial promoters whose names
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></SPAN></span>
have become most famous during the latter
half of the nineteenth. But this personal treatment
of the subject will be found to be in the
last degree unsatisfactory, when judged in the
light both of past experience and of some of
the utterances of those eminent inventors who
have tried to forecast the future in their own
particular lines of research.</p>
<p>If, therefore, we look at the whole subject
from the entirely impersonal point of view, and
face the task of forecasting the progress of
industry during the twentieth century, in this
aspect we shall find that we have entered
upon a chapter in the evolution of the human
race—dealing, in fact, with a branch of anthropology.
We see certain industrial and inventive
forces at work, producing certain initial effects,
but plainly, as yet, falling immeasurably short
of an entire fulfilment of their possibilities;
setting to work a multitude of busy brains,
planning and arranging, and gradually preparing
the minds of the more apathetic portion
of humanity for the reception of new ideas and
the adoption of improved methods of life and of
work. Whither is it all tending? Will the
twentieth century bring about as great a
change upon the earth—man's habitat—as the
nineteenth did? Or have the possibilities
of really great and effective industrial revolutions
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></SPAN></span>
been practically exhausted? The
belief impressed upon the Author's mind, by
facts and considerations evoked during the
collection of materials for this book, is that the
march of industrial progress is only just beginning,
and that the twentieth century will
witness a far greater development than the
nineteenth has seen.</p>
<p>The great majority of mankind still require
to be released from the drudgery of irksome,
physical exertion, which, when power has been
cheapened, will be seen to be to a very large
extent avoidable. Pleasurable exercise will be
substituted for the monotonous, manual labour
which, while it continues, generally precludes
the possibility of mental improvement. Hygienic
science will insist more strenuously than
ever upon the great truth that, in order to be
really serviceable in promoting the health of
mind and body, physical exertion must be in
some degree exhilarating, and the bad old
practice of "all work and no play," which was
based upon the assumption that a boy can
get as much good out of chopping wood for
an hour as out of a bicycle ride or a game of
cricket, will be relegated to the limbo of
exploded fallacies.</p>
<p>The race, as a whole, will be athletic in
the same sense in which cultured ladies and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></SPAN></span>
gentlemen are at present. It will, a century
hence, offer a still more striking contrast to the
existing state of the Chinese, who bandage
their women's feet in order to show that they
are high born and never needed to walk or
to exert themselves!—the assumption being
that no one would ever move a muscle
unless under fear of the lash of poverty or of
actual hunger. The farther Western civilisation
travels from that effete Eastern ideal,
the greater will be the hope for human progress
in physical, mental and moral well-being.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />