1st Edition

The Social History of Lighting

By William T. O'Dea Copyright 1958
304 Pages
by Routledge

304 Pages
by Routledge

How was a billiards table lit in 1763, or the stage of the Red Bull playhouse in 1673? The earliest red and green traffic light was in London in 1868; but what was street lighting like in Paris in 1524, or San Jose, California, in 1885? How did the early U.S. settlers light their homes, and how did this compare with the homes of Sumeria 4500 years ago, or with Stone-age lighting 15000 years ago?... Read more

1. ‘Bad Light’  2. Light for the Home (I)  3. Light for the Home (II) from the Argand Lamp to Modern Times  4. Light for Travel  5. Light for Work  6. Light in Worship and Superstition  7. Light for the Theatre  8. Light for Gaiety and Great Occasions  9. Lighthouses  10. The Materials of Light  11. Getting a Light 

Biography

William T. O’Dea was Keeper in the Science Museum, London.

Review of the first publication:

‘Written with style and wit, having an almost anthropological perspective, and packed with well-documented information, this book will serve equally the historian of science and culture, the antiquarian, or the mere browser who enjoys pleasant reading in unusual byways.’

C. Malcom Watkins, U.S. National Museum, Washington, D.C.