We all know that some of the greatest inventions came from the Victorian
age, the successors of which are still with us today. But this book is
not entirely about those. It's more about some of the weird and
wonderful inventions, ideas and projects - some successful, others less
so - that have largely been forgotten. Where well-known inventions or
design concepts are included, it is from a perspective not previously
appreciated, with details of the ingenious technology and thinking that
led to their introduction and success.
Here you can read how Victorian innovators were responsible for: the
world's largest glass structure; an electric railway with lines under
the sea and a carriage on stilts 20 feet above the waves; a monster
globe that visitors could enter to see the world's land masses, seas,
mountains and valleys modeled on the interior; cameras disguised as
bowler hats and many other everyday objects; the London Underground as a
steam railway; safety coffins designed to prevent premature burial;
unusual medical uses for electricity; the first traffic lights, which
exploded a month after their erection in Westminster; and the birth and
rapid rise to popularity of the cinema ... as well as many other
ingenious inventions.