The History of Technology Working Group meets monthly to discuss a colleague’s works-in-progress or to discuss readings that are of particular interest to participants.

 

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Participants may send reports or concerns about violations of this policy to conduct@chstm.org.

Upcoming Meetings

Tuesday, April 22, 2025, 1:00 - 2:30 pm EDT

Ramya Swayamprakash, Grand Valley State University

Raising Down the “Hell gate” of the Great Lakes: The Limekiln Projects in the Lower Detroit River, 1873-1900

In November 1873, the Milwaukee Daily Sentinel remarked that there was “not a more dangerous point to shipping between Chicago and Buffalo” than the Limekiln Crossing (henceforth the Crossing).  In the path of the rising shipping trade, the river’s rocky bed in this unavoidable stretch grounded many a vessel, damaging bottom lines as well. This section of the river, a chokepoint, had to be improved. These first series of iterative and incremental infrastructures set up further, more expansive interventions that created new nature in the lower river. Combatting sedimentation at this chokepoint was the basis of larger, grander hidden-in-plain-sight infrastructures of control. 

Chronicling the alleviation of this chokepoint, this chapter argues that technological and infrastructural development in the Great Lakes were territorializing processes that relied on and solidified a nascent techno-infrastructural diplomacy between engineers in the Canada and the United States. Dredging—the scooping up of river bottom silt to clear up channels—was seminal in ensuring smooth trade movement. More importantly, dredging cemented unequal economic power equations between the two nations. Infrastructure creation did not just entail an engineering desire though. Disparate U.S. interests who had begun to consolidate to form the Lake Carriers Association in the 1890s—the preeminent lobby of its kind in the Great Lakes with no parallel in Canada at the time—controlled the growth of shipping. The Lake Carriers worked closely with the U.S Army Corps of Engineers and able to wield significant political power and attention to improve Great Lakes connecting channels. By charting the evolution of the shipping lobby, this chapter addresses an important historical and historiographical lacuna in Great Lakes literature.

Tuesday, April 22, 2025, 1:00 - 2:30 pm EDT

Ramya Swayamprakash, Grand Valley State University

Raising Down the “Hell gate” of the Great Lakes: The Limekiln Projects in the Lower Detroit River, 1873-1900

In November 1873, the Milwaukee Daily Sentinel remarked that there was “not a more dangerous point to shipping between Chicago and Buffalo” than the Limekiln Crossing (henceforth the Crossing).  In the path of the rising shipping trade, the river’s rocky bed in this unavoidable stretch grounded many a vessel, damaging bottom lines as well. This section of the river, a chokepoint, had to be improved. These first series of iterative and incremental infrastructures set up further, more expansive interventions that created new nature in the lower river. Combatting sedimentation at this chokepoint was the basis of larger, grander hidden-in-plain-sight infrastructures of control. 

Chronicling the alleviation of this chokepoint, this chapter argues that technological and infrastructural development in the Great Lakes were territorializing processes that relied on and solidified a nascent techno-infrastructural diplomacy between engineers in the Canada and the United States. Dredging—the scooping up of river bottom silt to clear up channels—was seminal in ensuring smooth trade movement. More importantly, dredging cemented unequal economic power equations between the two nations. Infrastructure creation did not just entail an engineering desire though. Disparate U.S. interests who had begun to consolidate to form the Lake Carriers Association in the 1890s—the preeminent lobby of its kind in the Great Lakes with no parallel in Canada at the time—controlled the growth of shipping. The Lake Carriers worked closely with the U.S Army Corps of Engineers and able to wield significant political power and attention to improve Great Lakes connecting channels. By charting the evolution of the shipping lobby, this chapter addresses an important historical and historiographical lacuna in Great Lakes literature.

Tuesday, April 22, 2025, 1:00 - 2:30 pm EDT

Ramya Swayamprakash, Grand Valley State University

Raising Down the “Hell gate” of the Great Lakes: The Limekiln Projects in the Lower Detroit River, 1873-1900

In November 1873, the Milwaukee Daily Sentinel remarked that there was “not a more dangerous point to shipping between Chicago and Buffalo” than the Limekiln Crossing (henceforth the Crossing).  In the path of the rising shipping trade, the river’s rocky bed in this unavoidable stretch grounded many a vessel, damaging bottom lines as well. This section of the river, a chokepoint, had to be improved. These first series of iterative and incremental infrastructures set up further, more expansive interventions that created new nature in the lower river. Combatting sedimentation at this chokepoint was the basis of larger, grander hidden-in-plain-sight infrastructures of control. 

Chronicling the alleviation of this chokepoint, this chapter argues that technological and infrastructural development in the Great Lakes were territorializing processes that relied on and solidified a nascent techno-infrastructural diplomacy between engineers in the Canada and the United States. Dredging—the scooping up of river bottom silt to clear up channels—was seminal in ensuring smooth trade movement. More importantly, dredging cemented unequal economic power equations between the two nations. Infrastructure creation did not just entail an engineering desire though. Disparate U.S. interests who had begun to consolidate to form the Lake Carriers Association in the 1890s—the preeminent lobby of its kind in the Great Lakes with no parallel in Canada at the time—controlled the growth of shipping. The Lake Carriers worked closely with the U.S Army Corps of Engineers and able to wield significant political power and attention to improve Great Lakes connecting channels. By charting the evolution of the shipping lobby, this chapter addresses an important historical and historiographical lacuna in Great Lakes literature.

Tuesday, April 22, 2025, 1:00 - 2:30 pm EDT

Ramya Swayamprakash, Grand Valley State University

Raising Down the “Hell gate” of the Great Lakes: The Limekiln Projects in the Lower Detroit River, 1873-1900

In November 1873, the Milwaukee Daily Sentinel remarked that there was “not a more dangerous point to shipping between Chicago and Buffalo” than the Limekiln Crossing (henceforth the Crossing).  In the path of the rising shipping trade, the river’s rocky bed in this unavoidable stretch grounded many a vessel, damaging bottom lines as well. This section of the river, a chokepoint, had to be improved. These first series of iterative and incremental infrastructures set up further, more expansive interventions that created new nature in the lower river. Combatting sedimentation at this chokepoint was the basis of larger, grander hidden-in-plain-sight infrastructures of control. 

Chronicling the alleviation of this chokepoint, this chapter argues that technological and infrastructural development in the Great Lakes were territorializing processes that relied on and solidified a nascent techno-infrastructural diplomacy between engineers in the Canada and the United States. Dredging—the scooping up of river bottom silt to clear up channels—was seminal in ensuring smooth trade movement. More importantly, dredging cemented unequal economic power equations between the two nations. Infrastructure creation did not just entail an engineering desire though. Disparate U.S. interests who had begun to consolidate to form the Lake Carriers Association in the 1890s—the preeminent lobby of its kind in the Great Lakes with no parallel in Canada at the time—controlled the growth of shipping. The Lake Carriers worked closely with the U.S Army Corps of Engineers and able to wield significant political power and attention to improve Great Lakes connecting channels. By charting the evolution of the shipping lobby, this chapter addresses an important historical and historiographical lacuna in Great Lakes literature.

Tuesday, May 27, 2025, 1:00 - 2:30 pm EDT

Philip Scranton, Rutgers, "The Auto Parts Maze in the US and the USSR, 1946-1980" 

Please join us for discussion of a chapter of Prof. Scranton's book manuscript Spare Parts: A Global History of a Modern Problem, forthcoming from Johns Hopkins in 2026. We expect to post the chapter early in May, hot off the ether from Phil.

While we await the chapter from Prof. Scranton, he has graciously offered to let us read his working introduction to the book. It is posted below.

 

Tuesday, May 27, 2025, 1:00 - 2:30 pm EDT

Philip Scranton, Rutgers, "The Auto Parts Maze in the US and the USSR, 1946-1980" 

Please join us for discussion of a chapter of Prof. Scranton's book manuscript Spare Parts: A Global History of a Modern Problem, forthcoming from Johns Hopkins in 2026. We expect to post the chapter early in May, hot off the ether from Phil.

While we await the chapter from Prof. Scranton, he has graciously offered to let us read his working introduction to the book. It is posted below.

 

Tuesday, May 27, 2025, 1:00 - 2:30 pm EDT

Philip Scranton, Rutgers, "The Auto Parts Maze in the US and the USSR, 1946-1980" 

Please join us for discussion of a chapter of Prof. Scranton's book manuscript Spare Parts: A Global History of a Modern Problem, forthcoming from Johns Hopkins in 2026. We expect to post the chapter early in May, hot off the ether from Phil.

While we await the chapter from Prof. Scranton, he has graciously offered to let us read his working introduction to the book. It is posted below.

 

Tuesday, May 27, 2025, 1:00 - 2:30 pm EDT

Philip Scranton, Rutgers, "The Auto Parts Maze in the US and the USSR, 1946-1980" 

Please join us for discussion of a chapter of Prof. Scranton's book manuscript Spare Parts: A Global History of a Modern Problem, forthcoming from Johns Hopkins in 2026. We expect to post the chapter early in May, hot off the ether from Phil.

While we await the chapter from Prof. Scranton, he has graciously offered to let us read his working introduction to the book. It is posted below.

 

Group Conveners

jalexander

Jennifer Alexander

Jennifer Alexander is an Associate Professor of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine at the University of Minnesota, with specialization in technology and religion; industrial culture; and engineering, ethics, and society.  Her publications include The Mantra of Efficiency: From Waterwheel to Social Control (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008). Her current project is a book manuscript analyzing the international religious critique of technology that developed following WWII.  She asks how religious and theological interpretations of technology have changed over time; how, over time, technologies and engineering have extended their reach into the human world over time through a developing technological orthodoxy; and how these changes have affected each other.

 

grossbLHL

Benjamin Gross

Benjamin Gross is Vice President for Research and Scholarship at the Linda Hall Library in Kansas City, Missouri. He is responsible for managing the Library’s scholarly outreach initiatives, including its fellowship program. Before relocating to the Midwest in 2016, he was a research fellow at the Science History Institute and consulting curator of the Sarnoff Collection at the College of New Jersey. His book, The TVs of Tomorrow: How RCA’s Flat-Screen Dreams Led to the First LCDs, was published in 2018 by the University of Chicago Press. 

 

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