The first passenger train on the Fourteenth Street Bridge, over the Ohio River, in Louisville, Ky., in 1870.Credit...Edward E. Klauber

Economic View

What Was the Greatest Era for Innovation? A Brief Guided Tour

Which was a more important innovation: indoor plumbing, jet air travel or mobile phones?

We’re in the golden age of innovation, an era in which digital technology is transforming the underpinnings of human existence. Or so a techno-optimist might argue.

We’re in a depressing era in which innovation has slowed and living standards are barely rising. That’s what some skeptical economists believe.

The truth is, this isn’t a debate that can be settled objectively. Which was a more important innovation: indoor plumbing, jet air travel or mobile phones? You could argue for any of them, and data can tell plenty of different stories depending on how you look at it. Productivity statistics or information on inflation-adjusted incomes is helpful, but can’t really tell you whether the advent of air-conditioning or the Internet did more to improve humanity’s quality of life.

We thought a better way to understand the significance of technological change would be to walk through how Americans lived, ate, traveled, and clothed and entertained themselves in 1870, 1920, 1970 and the present. This tour is both inspired by and reliant on Robert J. Gordon’s authoritative examination of innovation through the ages, “The Rise and Fall of American Growth,” published this year. These are portraits of each point in time, culled from Mr. Gordon’s research; you can decide for yourself which era is truly most transformative. (Readers later added their favorites here.)

The Civil War was over and a transcontinental railway newly completed, allowing easy (or at least easier) passage from the great cities of the East Coast to California and many points between.

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Two men standing on a catwalk surveying the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge, with Manhattan in the background.Credit...Museum of the City of New York, via Getty Images

But even as the glimmers of the technological future were emerging, much would seem primitive today. People lit their houses with candles and whale oil, and heated them with wood or coal-burning stoves that kept homes unevenly heated and smelling of smoke.

Only a quarter of the population lived in cities, most of them in the Northeast. Families were large, and the population skewed young; there were 5.3 people per household, twice as many as in 2010, and 59 percent of the population was under age 25, while today it is more like 34 percent. By modern standards, the population was extremely poor, with the average citizen spending $2,808 a year in 2010 prices — less than the equivalent of the modern-day per-capita economic output of the Republic of Congo.

They ate pork. Lots and lots of pork — 131 pounds of it per person per year in 1870 (that number was half as much by 1929 and is around 55 pounds today). Unlike other meat-producing animals, pigs could live almost anywhere and could survive largely on food scraps. Their meat, easily salted or smoked, could be preserved in an era without refrigeration.

Fresh vegetables were scarce; farmers emphasized crops that could be stored or preserved, like turnips, pumpkins, beans and potatoes, instead of leafy greens that would deteriorate quickly. Apples were the only fruit widely consumed, and much of the apple crop was turned into cider or brandy for preservation.

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A family of farmers stopping work to pose for a photograph with the latest farming technology of the day, in 1870.Credit...Getty Images

The diet of mainly meat and starch frequently resulted in ailments like rickets and scurvy.

Most rural adults had two sets of work clothes, both made at home, and better-off families had a nicer set of clothing for church or social outings. There was not much in the way of consumer goods, and department stores were in their infancy, just starting to appear in large cities.

Instead of a toilet, you used a chamber pot or an open window in the city, an outhouse with an open pit underneath in the country. Modern toilets were an invention that was in its earliest phases during the decade of the 1870s. Big cities had sewers for both rainwater and human waste, but they flowed into rivers unfiltered.

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A pioneer family, along with friends, posed for a portrait in front of their hand-built home in Wyoming in 1870.Credit...Underwood Archives, via Getty Images

The New York City subway wouldn’t open for another 34 years. Boston had 700 horses per square mile. The average horse produced 40 to 50 pounds of manure and a gallon of urine daily, which made the streets of major cities no pleasant place to be.

By today’s standards, entertainment options were limited. Total circulation of newspapers was 2.6 million in a country of 40 million people. There was no telephone, record player, movie or radio. Men could go to the local saloon to drink; women generally couldn’t. Vacations and weekends were not really a thing.

Childbirth usually took place at home, and deaths were common both at birth and during early years from diseases like yellow fever, cholera and many others. There was no licensing of doctors, so quacks were common.

The Great War was over, the Great Depression had not yet started, and life in the United States in 1920 was profoundly different from 50 years earlier.

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A wooden stave pipeline under construction by a power company at Copco, Calif., in 1925.Credit...The New York Times

The most fundamental shift over those decades was that the American home became, in Mr. Gordon’s word, “networked.” Houses that were once dark and isolated were becoming intertwined. They were starting to be connected to electric grids, providing clean, bright light without emitting smoke. Urban water networks supplied clean water, and sewer systems removed waste without the pungent odors of chamber pots and outhouses. Telephones allowed people to converse with distant friends.

These advances were enabled not just by technological innovation in plumbing and electricity, but also by urbanization. In 1870, 23 percent of the United States population lived in cities, which rose to 51 percent by 1920. Large, ornate Victorian mansions were giving way to small bungalows affordable to the working class, which took off in Chicago starting in 1905. Sears offered prefabricated materials for a bungalow that it boasted could be built with 352 hours of carpenter labor. A less obvious factor in making mass housing available: The inflation-adjusted price of nails dropped by a factor of 10 from 1830 to 1930 with the advent of factory production.

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The Graf Zeppelin in Lakehurst, N.J., in 1929.Credit...The New York Times

It’s hard to overstate how revolutionary the advent of electric light was. In the 1870s, a kerosene lamp could produce 5,050 candle hours worth of light a year at a cost of $20. That same $20 in 1920 bought 4.4 million candle hours a year from bulbs.

In Muncie, Ind., in 1890, there were not more than a dozen bathrooms with running water and sewers across town. By 1925, 75 percent of Muncie’s homes had running water and two-thirds had sewer connections, including almost all newly constructed houses.

This is thought to be a major reason public health and life expectancy improved in the years leading to 1920. Many of the major advances in medical treatment, like antibiotics, were yet to arrive, but clean water and waste removal — chlorination and filtration were introduced — cut back the death rate from typhoid fever by a factor of five from 1900 to 1920. The number of modern hospitals grew to 6,000 in 1920 from 120 in 1870, and medicine became more of a science, with doctors getting away from selling dubious cure-alls.

Transportation was undergoing its own transformation, and people were becoming far more connected to one another physically. In 1900, just 8,000 motorcars were registered in the United States, but there were 9 million in 1920 and 23 million in 1929. Streetcars and subways, unheard-of in 1870, were in all the major cities by 1920. Intercity trains were becoming steadily faster and more reliable — a train trip from New York to Chicago that took 38 hours in 1870 was 24 hours in 1900 and 16 hours in 1940.

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Passengers going aboard a Havana-bound flight in 1928.Credit...The New York Times

Add it all up, and Americans who in 1870 would rarely travel farther than they could go on foot or horseback could suddenly range much more widely.

The social effect was particularly great in rural areas. Between 1900 and 1910, one local paper in Illinois reported on the arrival of each new automobile in its town. The automobile “seemed designed to loosen ties and dangle the horizon before the unsettled,” wrote the geographer John A. Jakle. Suddenly a farmer had options beyond the general store and the local bank.

The age of processed food had begun. National food brands including Heinz sauces, Campbell’s soup, Quaker oats, Jell-O and Coca-Cola had been invented and began to fill cupboards. Instead of a 1870s breakfast of pork and grain mush, a 1920s American ate Kellogg’s cornflakes, invented in 1894, and orange juice.

Refrigerated railroad cars and in-home iceboxes meant that vegetables were now available in winter, and not just turnips. Growers in California developed “iceberg” lettuce in 1903, advertising that it could stay fresh as it crossed the country by rail.

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A Ford assembly line in 1927.Credit...The New York Times

Still, much about a 1920 household would still seem foreign to a modern visitor. There were no standardized electrical plugs, so even households with electricity didn’t have appliances we would recognize today. Electric refrigerators and washing machines were virtually unknown.

Restaurants were starting to arise, with fancy hotels in the biggest cities employing French chefs, and less expensive restaurants owned by Chinese, German and Italian immigrants starting to appear. While traveling by car, options were few, but the White Castle hamburger stand would open in 1921 and Howard Johnson’s restaurant in 1925. A wave of German immigration meant sausages and sauerkraut were becoming widespread. The hot dog on a bun had made its first appearance at Coney Island in 1900, and was becoming ever more popular.

Consumers were starting to have more options, as chain stores arose to offer more variety and lower prices than the small-town general store, which in many places had a monopoly on all manner of goods. The grocery chain A.&P. had 67 stores in 1876 and 15,000 by 1930. Local merchants fought the rise of the chains much as they have fought the rise of Walmart more recently.

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New York City street cleaners in the mid-1920s.Credit...The New York Times

And increasingly, anything not available in a local store could be obtained by a mail-order catalog — the Montgomery Ward catalog was first issued in 1872, the Sears catalog in 1894. By 1900, Sears was fulfilling 100,000 orders a day, and its catalog featured fur coats, furnaces, furniture and much more. The catalog business was helped along by a technological innovation — parcel post, which arrived in 1913. By contrast, in 1890, only about a quarter of American households received mail at their door.

It wasn’t just consumer goods arriving at Americans’ doors. Better printing presses and transportation made publishing newspapers more economical, and the average American household read more than three newspapers in the time frame from 1910 to 1930, up from 0.9 in the 1870s.

Telephones were not yet ubiquitous but were spreading quickly. In 1880, the telephone was used for 10 conversations per household per year, a number that reached 800 by 1929; a popular form of entertainment in rural areas became using a “party line” to talk with far-flung neighbors.

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Mayor Jimmy Walker of New York turning on the new traffic lights and signal system on the Grand Concourse.Credit...The New York Times

The phonograph, invented in 1877 and in wide use by the 1920s, opened up another entertainment option: listening to professional-quality music at home, unheard-of in earlier generations. Outside the home, motion pictures — still silent, until 1927 — were the latest thing, offering an affordable way to consume a new form of entertainment. They were wildly popular by modern standards; a 1919 study in Toledo, Ohio, found 316,000 movie visits in a week — in a city with a population of only 243,000!

The age of electronic information had not yet begun as of 1920, however: The first commercial radio station opened that year (and by 1923, there were 556 of them).

The changes in transportation and communication starting to be seen in 1920 had become fundamental parts of daily life half a century later.

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A Concorde as it landed in New York in 1977.Credit...Allan Tannenbaum/Getty Images

Air travel was a perilous, uncomfortable endeavor in 1920 (Charles Lindbergh did not cross the Atlantic until 1927, and many died trying that and similar feats); by 1970 jumbo jets connected major cities around the world and were quite safe. Indeed, in many ways flight in 1970 was more pleasant than today, with no security lines and larger, more comfortable seats in coach class — albeit at a much higher price than today.

Traveling from the West Coast to the East Coast went from being a multiday affair by train to a trip made in less than a single day, at least for those who could afford it.

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Heading toward the Black Hills on Interstate 90 in 1972, in Murdo, S.D.Credit...Associated Press

Cars in 1920 were uncomfortable and prone to breakdowns, and were driven on dirt or irregularly paved roads. A 1920 Ford Model T had to be hand-cranked to start. By 1970, cars were comfortable, with options like radios and air-conditioning. They were driven on comparatively smooth, safe surfaces on the Interstate highway system, most of which had been built by 1972.

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Customers at Midtown Chevrolet in Manhattan in 1973.Credit...Eddie Hausner/The New York Times

Homes were changing, as the innovations that were being increasingly adopted in 1920 became truly universal. Electric light was in 79 percent of households in 1940 and 100 percent in 1970; running water was in 98 percent of homes, up from 74 percent.

Refrigerators rose to 100 percent adoption in 1970 from 44 percent in 1940, and their quality improved a great deal as well; Consumer Reports described constant repair needs in 1949 that had been mostly solved by 1971. The same was true of almost all household appliances.

Air-conditioning, first introduced in the United States in 1923, transformed cities with hot weather, propelling the population growth of places like Las Vegas, Miami and Houston. There were 48,000 room air-conditioning units sold in 1946, which rose to two million by 1957. Still, by 1970 only a minority of households had air-conditioning — 11 percent with central air, and 26 percent with room units.

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Plenty of choices at the supermarket in 1977.Credit...Barbara Alper/Getty Images

Americans started eating a lot less pork and a lot more chicken and turkey; consumption of fresh fruits and vegetables fell as the proportion of people living on or near farms fell, while diets shifted toward much more canned fruits and vegetables (canned vegetable consumption rose from 34 pounds per person per year in 1940 to 93 pounds in 1970). Margarine replaced lard and butter as the cooking fat of choice.

The size of grocery stores exploded, with a wide variety of processed foods; a small chain store in the 1920s offered 300 to 600 items, while a 1950 supermarket stocked 2,200, and its 1985 equivalent 17,500.

The age of mass communication radically shifted the way Americans entertained themselves. A person living in 1920 could listen to a phonograph at home or go to a silent movie at the nearest theater. By 1970, color television and radio were both widely available. Movie attendance in any given week fell to 20 percent of the population in 1970 from 60 percent in 1940. But those who did go could view lush epics with color and sound.

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An ABC cameraman during the first “Monday Night Football” telecast, in 1970.Credit...Tony Tomsic/Associated Press

A person had fewer TV channels and fewer movies to choose from than today; the videocassette recorder was years away, so you were captive to what broadcast networks happened to be showing. This resulted in huge audiences; in 1953, 69 percent of televisions were tuned in to the broadcast of the episode of “I Love Lucy” in which Lucy has a baby.

In 1970, anyone who needed to reheat leftovers faced a messy, time-consuming task at the stove — not the quick minute in a microwave of today. The microwave was introduced in 1965 and was not widely purchased until the 1980s, partly owing to falling price. It cost $495 in 1968, and a compact model with more bells and whistles fell to $191 by 1986.

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Air conditioners in Manhattan in 2013.Credit...Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

But the microwave is the exception. Most of the advances in home appliances since 1970 have been trivial in the scheme of things: a little more energy efficiency here, a more ergonomic handle there, greater reliability, meaning fewer repair calls. Indeed, while fashions have changed in homes since then, in terms of décor and layout, the American household works largely as it did then.

Airplanes continued getting safer, with the number of deaths per 100 billion miles traveled falling to less than 1 from more than 100 in 1970. Travel became considerably less expensive — though the rate of price decrease for air travel was slower from 1960 to 1980 than it had been from 1940 to 1960. Still, air travel had been an upper-middle-class activity in 1970, and now is affordable to the masses.

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An Airbus A380 aircraft at the Farnborough Air Show in Hampshire, England, in 2014.Credit...Leon Neal/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

By some measures, air travel has become more onerous since 1970. There were no security screening lines (those were introduced after a series of hijackings in the late 1960s and early ’70s). Seats were larger and came with free meals and drinks. Arguably, though, the bundle offered by circa-1970 airlines for coach class seats is still available: You can still get a bigger seat and free drinks at a higher price, but now it’s called first class.

Once you factor in the time it takes to arrive early and get through security, flying from New York to Chicago takes about the same time, and costs about the same in inflation-adjusted dollars, as it did in 1936; modern planes are faster, but then one could show up at the airport 10 minutes before the scheduled flight time and hop on the plane.

Automobiles became more reliable, and car travel far safer, with widespread use of seatbelts, adoption of airbags and anti-lock brakes, better technology to understand how to build a car so that it protects occupants in a crash, and legal and public-awareness efforts against drunken driving. Deaths per 100 million miles driven have fallen from about 11 in 1940 to about five in 1970 to around one today.

Compared with 1970, Americans today eat a good bit less beef, pork and eggs, and about twice as much chicken. They eat more fruits and vegetables. But that’s only part of the story. Americans are eating more of their meals away from home, and in restaurants more varied than people in 1970 could have imagined. Thai, Japanese, Middle Eastern and Indian food is now for sale even in small cities.

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A man looking at ultra slim televisions at a consumer electronics show in Las Vegas in January.Credit...David Mcnew/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Some of the biggest changes to everyday life since 1970 have been around information and entertainment. The cliché about TV going from three channels a generation ago to hundreds actually understates it. The television itself has gone from a 19-inch screen to 50 or more inches, with much more vivid color and definition. Besides many more channels, thousands of movies and television shows are available at any moment of the day or night through on-demand streaming services.

And that doesn’t even account for the Internet more broadly. In effect, a person can get access to nearly any notable work mankind has ever produced — novels, movies, visual art — instantly and at home. Or thanks to Internet-enabled mobile devices that have become widespread in the last decade, nearly anywhere the person is.

Keeping up with distant friends and relatives once required expensive calls on land-based phone lines; now there are free or nearly free conversations through text messages, mobile phone calls or video communication services like FaceTime and Skype. Sending a more detailed message once meant writing it by hand or on a typewriter, putting it in an envelope, driving it to the post office, and waiting a few days for the recipient to get it; now it is an instant, free email.

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Taking pictures of a scale model of a dinosaur in front of Sapienza University in Rome.Credit...Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters

In short, the sheer number of ways a person can be in touch with others, and consume information or entertainment, has exploded, and the price has collapsed.

This is the area in which human life has changed the most in the last 46 years. We live and travel much as we did in 1970. We eat more variety of foods. Products of all types keep getting a little safer, a little more efficient, a little better designed.

But the real revolution of recent decades is in the supercomputer most people keep in their pocket. And how that stacks up against the advances of yesteryear is the great question of whether an era of innovation remains underway, or has slowed way down.

A correction was made on 
Aug. 7, 2016

A picture caption with an article on May 15 about the greatest innovations of the current era erroneously attributed a distinction to the flight shown, the landing of a Concorde supersonic jet in New York in 1977. While that landing was the first by the Concorde in New York, which had previously prohibited the jet from landing, it was not the first trans-Atlantic flight by the Concorde, which took place in 1973.

How we handle corrections

Photographs curated by Darcy Eveleigh; art direction by Antonio de Luca.

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A version of this article appears in print on  , Section BU, Page 4 of the New York edition with the headline: Tracking Down the True Golden Age of Innovation. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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