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The wonder and civilization-saving nature of air conditioning
Posted on 8/3/25 at 8:42 pm
Posted on 8/3/25 at 8:42 pm
Heat was a killer while air itself was unclean before air conditioning. This book review in Realclear Markets is pretty interesting.
Realclear Markets
quote:
To read Basile is to marvel at how awful things used to be. And this was true for everyone, rich and poor alike. Think The Great Gatsby, and the “immensely rich characters” who endured “the hottest day of the year with no relief even in a luxury suite at the Plaza.”
A famous novel isn’t enough for you? Consider New York City’s 5th Avenue in the 19th century, where the Plaza is. Basile confirms that “the air inside these homes” was “as hot, heavy, and oppressive as the atmosphere inside any slum tenement.” As for the scent of towns and cities before the advent of “dirty” energy propelling air refrigerants and cleaners, Basile writes that the “signature aroma” during the summer was “a blend of garbage and horse dung.” Translated, the air was neither clean nor healthy in the era before cars and air conditioners....
It boggles the mind contemplating how people formerly dealt with summers. The simple truth is that many did not. Basile writes of how newspapers had “daily death reports” owing to the summer heat. In other parts of the book, he writes of how people used to fall to their death at night, after rolling off the roof of their dwelling while mercifully catching at least some sleep in the cooler outdoors....
Crucial about the obsession with “cool” is that it went beyond comfort. Heat was plainly a killer that men would die from. Women were always expected to carry smelling salts....
About our nation’s capital, Basile writes that “from its earliest days, the city’s 100-plus-degree summers appalled everyone from tourists to presidents.” No, 100 degree stretches aren’t a late 20th century, early 21st notion.
Which means people persevered in pursuit of relief from the heat. It was mostly about wafting air over enormous amounts of “white gold,” and into public rooms. At Madison Square Theatre in New York, Basile reports that two to four tons of ice were melted for cooling purposes per performance.
Back down in D.C., President James A. Garfield was shot in July of 1881, but had to recover at the White House at a time when “temperatures flirted with the hundred-degree mark.” A machine meant to cool Garfield’s room was certainly brought to the White House, and it “consumed a staggering 436 pounds of ice each hour.” After Garfield died (seemingly the brutality of the heat, along with the total lack of medical sophistication loomed large), Basile writes that the Independent Ice Company sent an invoice for 535,970 pounds of ice…
Basile indicates that a major heat wave in 1901 took 9,500 U.S. lives. As for babies, the journal American Medicine mused that “all the sick babies slaughtered by a heat wave could be saved by putting them in a cool room, but unfortunately we use the cooling machinery only to keep their poor little bodies from decay after the heat has killed them.”...
movie theaters in particular, saw cooling as a way to keep their seats full year-round. Air conditioning gradually became an expensive, but necessary investment for entertainment venues. In 1925 Paramount’s New York City head Adolp Zukor had cooling machinery installed at the Rivoli Theatre. Upon exposure to the cooler air, he concluded that “the people are going to like it.” Zukor was right. Rivoli quickly earned back its $65,000 investment.
In 1924, department store Hudson’s spent $250,000 to cool its location in Detroit. As Basile describes it “For the first time ever in human history [emphasis Basile], there was a hot-weather refuge available to overheated people.”
Just the same, these were public places. Basile largely chalks this up to disbelief, but does so with full acknowledgment of costs. Frigidaire’s “Room Cooler” was released in 1929, it could cool a room ten degrees, but Basile reports that the cost of a “Room Cooler” was $800.
General Electric rolled out its own room cooler in 1930, but it cost $950. ...
Basile cites a well-to-do Houston businessman who hated the horrible summer tradeoffs for drivers in the city: he could either suffer “convulsive sneezing” with his Cadillac’s windows down, or overwhelming heat with the windows up. Instead, this intrepid soul strapped a “a trunk-shaped Kelvinator refrigeration unit, powered by its lawnmower-sized gasoline engine” to the car’s rear luggage rack. He could drive without intense heat or sneezing....
Realclear Markets
Posted on 8/3/25 at 8:44 pm to prplhze2000
Florida was not on anyone’s radar as a place to inhabit year round until AC came around.
I blame AC for messing up paradise.
I blame AC for messing up paradise.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 8:46 pm to prplhze2000
An amazing can’t live without wonder that’s now made to break more easily and then fixed with more expensive pieces, taking advantage of people.
It’s fricked up
It’s fricked up
This post was edited on 8/3/25 at 8:50 pm
Posted on 8/3/25 at 8:48 pm to prplhze2000
Air conditioning killed the fury of the Southern writer.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 8:51 pm to prplhze2000
quote:I’d have written them back and told them that they needed to change his address (for any further billing purposes) to 12316 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio:
Basile writes that the Independent Ice Company sent an invoice for 535,970 pounds of ice…

Posted on 8/3/25 at 8:51 pm to Yakker
That GE room cooler that was 950 in 1930 would cost nearly $20,000 today. Ouch.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 8:53 pm to weagle1999
I bet some furious and overheated Southerners killed a few people, too
Posted on 8/3/25 at 8:53 pm to prplhze2000
Often not mentioned. Ice. Ice is just as important as A/C.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 8:56 pm to prplhze2000
AC made it possible for millions of yankees to move south, if that's your idea of a good thing
Posted on 8/3/25 at 9:02 pm to weagle1999
quote:no, academia did that
Air conditioning killed the fury of the Southern writer
"I'm often asked if colleges stifle writers. My response is they don't stifle enough of them." - Flannery O'Connor
Posted on 8/3/25 at 9:02 pm to prplhze2000
Wait …. I thought it has only started to get hot this year according to environmental wackos.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 9:09 pm to weagle1999
quote:
Air conditioning killed the fury of the Southern writer.
That and neopuritanism.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 9:11 pm to prplhze2000
quote:
To read Basile is to marvel at how awful things used to be. And this was true for everyone, rich and poor alike.
There used to be a common expression in history conversations, that if you want to know how rich people lived a hundred years ago, look at how poor people live now.
Of course, we probably have to go back more than 100 years at this point to see the massive changes in basic utilities and sanitation.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 9:12 pm to Dawg7730
quote:
Wait …. I thought it has only started to get hot this year according to environmental wackos.
I don’t recall the icecaps and glaciers melting like they are but maybe I’ve forgotten. My contention has been that we are coming out of an ice age but are one disaster away from entering another one.
Maybe mankind has speeded it up a little but history says that the earth climate changes over the centuries and will continue one way or another. But that’s just my opinion, I don’t expect anyone to agree.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 9:35 pm to prplhze2000
You can blame the metastasizing of the federal bureaucracy on the development of the air conditioner.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 9:40 pm to prplhze2000
I haven’t turned on my AC yet this year and I’m doing just fine 
Posted on 8/3/25 at 9:52 pm to prplhze2000
My Grandmother grew up in the Delta during the Depression. She said in the summer they would soak the bed sheets in water, ring them out and put them on the beds in order to get some relief at night.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 10:10 pm to geauxbrown
quote:
My Grandmother grew up in the Delta during the Depression. She said in the summer they would soak the bed sheets in water, ring them out and put them on the beds in order to get some relief at night.
I love stories like this. Screen porches were for the rich folks. I also love an operable interior above-door transom window. I’m not even sure ceilng fans were invented when those were in every shotgun house in New Orleans.
No wonder why you don’t see overweight folks in old photos.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 10:21 pm to SuperSaint
quote:
I haven’t turned on my AC yet this year and I’m doing just fine
Hopefully you reminded your FIL how thankful you are today.
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