Reviews
For more than a century, coal improved ordinary Americans' comfort, convenience, and cleanliness, and Mark Aldrich persuasively shows the centrality of entrepreneurs, competition, and male and female consumers in coal's emergence and diminution. Accessible tables provide a quantitative account of American energy use and render the book still more valuable. This is a fundamentally important book, written in a clear style and informed by massive primary research and generations of historical scholarship.
Mark Aldrich's outstanding study of the history of the rise and fall of coal as key in U.S. energy history deserves close examination by those concerned with energy transitions. Emphasizing the critical nature of market incentives in coordination with other factors in these transitions, Aldrich explores coal as a major element in the industrial, transportation, and domestic domains.
A fresh, comprehensive, and incisive account of energy transitions in American history, focusing on the rise and demise of coal across 140 years. Extensive data and fine-grained portraits of technologies bear out Aldrich's analytic case: the rewards and penalties of free markets powerfully drove both innovation and conservation in energy choices.
Mark Aldrich's meticulous history of market-driven developments in the coal industry documents a constant war on waste that led to solutions for many pressing issues. Policy makers could learn much from this clear text which, unlike most current energy policy discussions, avoids facile energy transition narratives that indict past generations as needlessly wasteful and destructive.
Book Details
List of Figures
List of Text Tables
Preface
Introduction
Part I: The Rise
1. The Dawning of the Coal Age, 1800-1860
2. The Age of Bituminous Coal, 1860-World War I
Part 2: Losing Industry
3. Soft Coal in
List of Figures
List of Text Tables
Preface
Introduction
Part I: The Rise
1. The Dawning of the Coal Age, 1800-1860
2. The Age of Bituminous Coal, 1860-World War I
Part 2: Losing Industry
3. Soft Coal in Industry, 1900-1940—The Long Good Bye
4. Railroads: Fuel Substitution and Conservation, 1885–1943
Part 3: Leaving Home
5. Coal Departs the Urban Kitchen, 1900–1940
6. "Cooking Shouldn't Cook the Cook": The Kerosene Kitchen, In Rural America, 1870–1940
7. The Battle of the Basements: Oil, Gas and the Retreat of Coal, 1917–1940
Part 4: Counterattack
8. Coal Fights Back: Machines, Markets and Research, 1880–1945
Conclusion
Appendices
Appendix I: Basic Data
Appendix II: Chapters 1 and 2
Appendix III: Chapters 3 and 4
Appendix IV: Chapters 5-7
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Measurement and Conversion Factors
Notes
Bibliography
Index