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The average life expectancy in the United States was forty-seven. (Sounds
low to me)
Only 14 percent of the homes in the United States had a bathtub.
Only 8 percent of the homes had a telephone. A three minute call from Denver to
New York City cost eleven dollars.
There were only 8,000 cars in the US and only 144 miles of paved roads.
The maximum speed limit in most cities was ten mph.
Alabama, Mississippi, Iowa, and Tennessee were each more heavily populated than
California. With a mere 1.4 million residents, California was only the
twenty-first most populous state in the Union.
The tallest structure in the world was the Eiffel Tower.
The average wage in the U.S. was twenty-two cents an hour. The average U.S.
worker made between $200 and $400 per year.
A competent accountant could expect to earn $2000 per year, a dentist $2500 per
year, a veterinarian between $1500 and $4000 per year, and a mechanical engineer
about $5000 per year.
More than 95 percent of all births in the United States took place at home. (Sounds
about right, after reading about child-bed fever)
Ninety percent of all U.S. physicians had no college education. Instead,
they attended medical schools, many of which were condemned in the press and by
the government as "substandard."
Sugar cost four cents a pound. Eggs were fourteen cents a dozen. Coffee cost
fifteen cents a pound.
Most women only washed their hair once a month and used borax or egg yolks for
shampoo. (I'd imagine they made their own soap, using yolks or borax as an
emulsifying agent)
Canada passed a law prohibiting poor people from entering the country for
any reason, either as travelers or immigrants.
The five leading causes of death in the U.S. were:
1. Pneumonia and influenza
2. Tuberculosis
3. Diarrhea
4. Heart disease
5. Stroke
The American flag had 45 stars. Arizona, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Hawaii and Alaska
hadn't been admitted to the Union yet.
Drive-by-shootings -- in which teenage boys galloped down the street on horses
and started randomly shooting at houses, carriages, or anything else that caught
their fancy -- were an ongoing problem in Denver and other cities in the West.
(Sounds fishy as a direct analogy to "drive-by shootings," but a
certain amount of misrule makes sense if Western cities didn't have stable law
enforcement)
The population of Las Vegas, Nevada was thirty. The remote desert community
was inhabited by only a handful of ranchers and their families. (Kind of
true, at least in 1855)
Plutonium, insulin, and antibiotics hadn't been discovered yet. Scotch tape,
crossword puzzles, canned beer, and iced tea hadn't been invented.
There was no Mother's Day or Father's Day.
One in ten U.S. adults couldn't read or write. Only 6 percent of all Americans
had graduated from high school.
Some medical authorities warned that professional seamstresses were apt to
become sexually aroused by the steady rhythm, hour after hour, of the sewing
machine's foot pedals. They recommended slipping bromide -- which was thought to
diminish sexual desire -- into the women's drinking water.
Marijuana, heroin, and morphine were all available over the counter at corner
drugstores. According to one pharmacist, "Heroin clears the complexion,
gives buoyancy to the mind, regulates the stomach and the bowels, and is, in
fact, a perfect guardian of health."
(I've read that these items were legal until Prohibition, which was not
limited to alcohol)
Coca-Cola contained cocaine instead of caffeine.
It did include cocaine.
Punch card data processing had recently been developed, and early
predecessors of the modern computer were used for the first time by the
government to help compile the 1900 census.
Eighteen percent of households in the United States had at least one full-time
servant or domestic.
There were about 230 reported murders in the U.S. annually.