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In 1876 John Warne Gates described the new product he hoped to sell as 鈥渓ighter than air, stronger than whiskey, cheaper than dust鈥�. Barbed wire wreaked huge changes in America.

In 1876 John Warne Gates described the new product he hoped to sell as 鈥渓ighter than air, stronger than whiskey, cheaper than dust鈥�. We simply call it barbed wire. The advertisements of the time touted it this fence as 鈥淭he Greatest Discovery Of The Age鈥�. That might seem hyperbolic, even making allowances for the fact that the advertisers didn鈥檛 know that Alexander Graham Bell was just about to be awarded a patent for the telephone. But 鈥� as Tim Harford explains 鈥� while modern minds naturally think of the telephone as transformative, barbed wire wreaked huge changes in America, and much more quickly.

Producer: Ben Crighton
Editors: Richard Knight and Richard Vadon

(Image: Barbed wire and sun, Credit: Getty Images)

Available now

9 minutes

Last on

Mon 26 Jun 2017 03:50GMT

Sources and related links

Olivier Razac - Barbed Wire: A political history, English translation by Jonathan Kneight, Profile books 2002

Alan Krell - The Devil's Rope: A cultural history of Barbed Wire, Reaktion Books 2002,听p27

Broadcasts

  • Sat 24 Jun 2017 02:50GMT
  • Sat 24 Jun 2017 19:50GMT
  • Mon 26 Jun 2017 03:50GMT

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