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Sunday, July 8, 2012

Predictions


Pictorial predictions from the past

By John Durant

Copyright 1956  

When I think of a period in history, I don’t recall specific dates, battle sites, or names of treaties.  Instead, I like to wonder what the average citizen was living through at that particular time.  Was it easy for them to choose a side on an issue?  What were they most afraid of?  What were their hopes for the future; for the future world their children and grandchildren would live in?  This book sheds light on these perceptions.  

Each page contains an illustration from around the turn of the twentieth century, predicting what life would be like in what was then the distant future.  Some of these drawings are eerily accurate.  Others are far off base.  

In an 1897 LIFE magazine, one artist displays a prediction for “an inauguration of the future”.  While I’m sure it seemed ridiculous at the time, this drawing shows a woman becoming President.  While it hasn’t happened yet, this event no longer seems preposterous.  

An illustration from a 1907 LIFE illustrates a suburb of the future in which pedestrians have been forced off the streets by the many vehicles rushing by.  This has certainly come to pass in many parts of the country.  

One erroneous prediction is from a 1901 LIFE and was titled “A Prediction For 1905.  Of course there will always be some use for the automobile.”  The artist depicts a car, resting on a lawn, planted full with flowers.  The cartoonist thought that the airship, as shown in his drawing, would replace the automobile.  

Similarly, some people are predicting that physical copies of books will become a relic of the past.  I hope that this prediction is one that doesn’t come true.  I know that many consider electronic portable devices and e-books to be enjoyable and convenient, but to me, there is nothing like the feel of picking a well-loved book off my shelf and settling with it in a comfortable chair.  

Like the “airship”, e-books have their place, but like the automobile, it is difficult to imagine a world without traditional books. 

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