Ten 100-Year Predictions That Came True
by Tom Geoghegan
BBC
In 1900, an
American civil engineer called John Elfreth Watkins made a number
of predictions about what the world would be like in 2000. How did
he do?
As is customary
at the start of a new year, the media have been full of predictions
about what may happen in the months ahead.
But a much
longer forecast made in 1900 by a relatively unknown engineer has
been recirculating in the past few days.
In December
of that year, at the start of the 20th Century, John Elfreth Watkins
wrote a
piece published on page eight of an American women's magazine,
Ladies' Home Journal, entitled What May Happen in the Next
Hundred Years.
He began the
article with the words: "These prophecies will seem strange,
almost impossible," explaining that he had consulted the country's
"greatest institutions of science and learning" for their
opinions on 29 topics.
Watkins was
a writer for the Journal's sister magazine, the Saturday
Evening Post, based in Indianapolis.
The Post
brought this article to a modern audience last week when its history
editor Jeff Nilsson wrote
a feature praising Watkins' accuracy.
It was picked
up and caused some
excitement on Twitter. So what did Watkins get right
and wrong?
10 predictions
that Watkins got right...
1. Digital
colour photography
Watkins did
not, of course, use the word "digital" or spell out precisely
how digital cameras and computers would work, but he accurately
predicted how people would come to use new photographic technology.
"Photographs
will be telegraphed from any distance. If there be a battle in China
a hundred years hence, snapshots of its most striking events will
be published in the newspapers an hour later.... photographs will
reproduce all of nature's colours."
This showed
major foresight, says Mr Nilsson. When Watkins was making his predictions,
it would have taken a week for a picture of something happening
in China to make its way into Western papers.
People thought
photography itself was a miracle, and colour photography was very
experimental, he says.
"The idea
of having cameras gathering information from opposite ends of the
world and transmitting them he wasn't just taking a present
technology and then looking to the next step, it was far beyond
what anyone was saying at the time."
Patrick Tucker
from the World Future Society, based in Maryland in the US, thinks
Watkins might even be hinting at a much bigger future breakthrough.
"'Photographs
will be telegraphed' reads strikingly like how we access information
from the web," says Mr Tucker.
2. The rising
height of Americans
"Americans
will be taller by from one to two inches."
Watkins had
unerring accuracy here, says Mr Nilsson the average American
man in 1900 was about 66-67ins (1.68-1.70m) tall and by 2000, the
average was 69ins (1.75m).
Today, it's
69.5ins (1.76m) for men and 64ins (1.63m) for women.
3. Mobile
phones
"Wireless
telephone and telegraph circuits will span the world. A husband
in the middle of the Atlantic will be able to converse with his
wife sitting in her boudoir in Chicago. We will be able to telephone
to China quite as readily as we now talk from New York to Brooklyn."
International
phone calls were unheard of in Watkins' day. It was another 15 years
before the first call was made, by Alexander Bell, even from one
coast of the US to the other. The idea of wireless telephony was
truly revolutionary.
4. Pre-prepared
meals
"Ready-cooked
meals will be bought from establishment similar to our bakeries
of today."
The proliferation
of ready meals in supermarkets and takeaway shops in High Streets
suggests that Watkins was right, although he envisaged the meals
would be delivered on plates which would be returned to the cooking
establishments to be washed.
5. Slowing
population growth
"There
will probably be from 350,000,000 to 500,000,000 people in America
[the US]."
The figure
is too high, says Nilsson, but at least Watkins was guessing in
the right direction. If the US population had grown by the same
rate it did between 1800 and 1900, it would have exceeded 1 billion
in 2000.
"Instead,
it grew just 360%, reaching 280m at the start of the new century."
6. Hothouse
vegetables
Winter will
be turned into summer and night into day by the farmer, said Watkins,
with electric wires under the soil and large gardens under glass.
"Vegetables
will be bathed in powerful electric light, serving, like sunlight,
to hasten their growth. Electric currents applied to the soil will
make valuable plants to grow larger and faster, and will kill troublesome
weeds. Rays of coloured light will hasten the growth of many plants.
Electricity applied to garden seeds will make them sprout and develop
unusually early."
Large gardens
under glass were already a reality, says Philip Norman of the Garden
Museum in London, but he was correct to predict the use of electricity.
Although coloured lights and electric currents did not take off,
they were probably experimented with.
"Electricity
certainly features in plant propagation. But the earliest item we
have is a 1953 booklet Electricity in Your Garden detailing electrically
warmed frames, hotbeds and cloches and electrically heated greenhouses,
issued by the British Electrical Development Association.
"We have
a 1956 soil heater, used in soil to assist early germination of
seeds in your greenhouse."
Read
the rest of the article
January
19, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 BBC
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