Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
My library | Help | Advanced Book Search | Web History | Sign in

Books

Children of Light:

How Electricity Changed Britain Forever
Front Cover
2 Reviews
Atlantic Books, Apr 1, 2011 - Technology & Engineering - 200 pages
In the early 1870's a nighttime view over Britain would have revealed towns lit by the warm glow of gas and oil lamps and a much darker countryside, the only light emanating from the fiery sparks of late running steam trains. However, by the end of this same decade,Victorian Britons would experience a new brilliance in their streets, town halls, and other public places. Electricity had come to town. InChildren of Light, Gavin Weightman brings to life not just the most celebrated electrical pioneers, such as Thomas Edison, but also the men such as Rookes Crompton who lit Henley Regatta in 1879; Sebastian Ziani de Ferranti, a direct descendant of one of the Venetian Doges, who built Britain’s first major power station on the Thames at Deptford; and Anglo–Irish aristocrat, Charles Parsons inventor of the steam turbine, which revolutionized the generating of electricity.Children of Lighttakes in the electrification of the tramways and the London Underground, the transformation of the home with "labor saving" devices, the vital modernizing of industry during two world wars, and the battles between environmentalists and the promoters of electric power, which began in earnest when the first pylons went up. AsChildren of Lightshows, the electric revolution has brought us luxury that would have astonished the Victorians, but at a price we are still having to pay.
  

What people are saying - Write a review

Review: Children of Light: How Electricity Changed Britain Forever

User Review  - Lauren Albert - Goodreads

Keep in mind that this focuses on the use of electricity in Britain only, not on the scientific development of it internationally. Weightman shows how dramatically different Britain was in its ... Read full review

Related books

Contents

3
142
Brave New World 191830
151
14
164
Power for the People 194889
187
ix
200
The Promise of Calder Hall
213
19
224
Back to the Future
234
Epilogue
246
Notes
253
33
259
Index
265
49
269
111
275
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2011)

Gavin Weightmanis a social historian based in London. His books include the best sellingLondon River: A History of the Thames,The Frozen Water Trade,Signor Marconi’s Magic Box, and most recentlyThe Industrial Revolutionaries.

Bibliographic information