Artificial Light 
 
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Title: Artificial Light Its Influence upon Civilization 
Author: M. Luckiesh 
Release Date: January 29, 2006 [EBook #17625] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
ARTIFICIAL LIGHT *** 
 
Produced by K.D. Thornton, Karina Aleksandrova and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
Transcriber's Notes: 
1. Subscripts have been marked with an underscore character in front 
with text surrounded in curly braces, for example: H_{2}O (formula of 
water).
2. Inconsistent hyphenation of words preserved. 
3. Several misprints fixed. A full list of corrections can be found at the 
end of the text. 
 
[Illustration: LIGHT AND LIBERTY] 
 
The Century Books of Useful Science 
ARTIFICIAL LIGHT 
ITS INFLUENCE UPON CIVILIZATION 
BY M. LUCKIESH 
DIRECTOR OF APPLIED SCIENCE. NELA RESEARCH 
LABORATORY, NATIONAL LAMP WORKS OF GENERAL 
ELECTRIC COMPANY 
Author of "Color and Its Applications," "Light and Shade and Their 
Applications," "The Lighting Art," "The Language of Color," etc. 
_ILLUSTRATED WITH PHOTOGRAPHS_ 
 
NEW YORK THE CENTURY CO. 1920 
Copyright, 1920, by THE CENTURY CO. 
 
DEDICATED 
TO THOSE WHO HAVE ENCOURAGED ORGANIZED 
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF 
CIVILIZATION
PREFACE 
In the following pages I have endeavored to discuss artificial light for 
the general reader, in a manner as devoid as possible of intricate details. 
The early chapters deal particularly with primitive artificial light and 
their contents are generally historical. The science of light-production 
may be considered to have been born in the latter part of the eighteenth 
century and beginning with that period a few chapters treat of the 
development of artificial light up to the present time. Until the middle 
of the nineteenth century mere light was available, but as the century 
progressed, the light-sources through the application of science became 
more powerful and efficient. Gradually mere light grew to more light 
and in the dawn of the twentieth century adequate light became 
available. In a single century, after the development of artificial light 
began in earnest, the efficiency of light-production increased fifty-fold 
and the cost diminished correspondingly. The next group of chapters 
deals with various economic influences of artificial light and with some 
of the byways in which artificial light is serving mankind. On passing 
through the spectacular aspects of lighting we finally emerge into the 
esthetics of light and lighting. 
The aim has been to show that artificial light has become intricately 
interwoven with human activities and that it has been a powerful 
influence upon the progress of civilization. The subject is too extensive 
to be treated in detail in a single volume, but an effort has been made to 
present a discussion fairly complete in scope. It is hoped that the reader 
will gain a greater appreciation of artificial light as an economic factor, 
as an artistic medium, and as a mighty influence upon the safety, 
efficiency, health, happiness, and general progress of mankind. 
M. LUCKIESH. 
 
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 
It is a pleasant duty to acknowledge the coöperation of various
companies in obtaining the photographs which illustrate this book. 
With the exception of Plates 2 and 7, which are reproduced from the 
excellent works of Benesch and Allegemane respectively, the 
illustrations of early lighting devices are taken from an historical 
collection in the possession of the National Lamp Works of the General 
Electric Co. To this company the author is indebted for Plates 1, 3, 4, 5, 
6, 9, 11, 15, 18b, 20, 21, 29; to Dr. McFarlan Moore for Plate 10; to 
Macbeth Evans Glass Co. for Plate 12; to the Corps of Engineers, U. S. 
Army, for Plate 13; to Lynn Works of G. E. Co. for Plates 14, 16; to 
Edison Lamp Works of G. E. Co. for Plates 17, 24; to Cooper Hewitt 
Co. for Plate 18a; to R. U. V. Co. for Plate 19; to New York Edison Co. 
for Plates 22, 26, 30; to W. D'A. Ryan and the Schenectady Works of G. 
E. Co. for Plates 23, 25, 31; to National X-Ray Reflector Co. for Plate 
28. Besides the companies and the individuals particularly involved in 
the foregoing, the author is glad to acknowledge his appreciation of the 
assistance of others during the preparation of this volume. 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER PAGE 
I LIGHT AND PROGRESS 3 
II THE ART OF MAKING FIRE 15 
III PRIMITIVE LIGHT-SOURCES 24 
IV THE CEREMONIAL USE OF LIGHT 38 
V OIL-LAMPS OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY 51 
VI EARLY GAS-LIGHTING 63 
VII THE SCIENCE OF LIGHT-PRODUCTION 80 
VIII MODERN GAS-LIGHTING 97
IX THE ELECTRIC ARCS 111 
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