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About 110 years ago, the plastics era (as we understand that term) began with a material called 













This was one helluva post!
Thanks Stad. I just wish I could the images and captions to work right. I had it right once, re-jiggered a bit and haven’t been able to get right since.
In my lifetime I’ve seen specs requiring bakelite labels for electrical panels.
More, please.
Great post.
As for Bakelite in music:
– No Action, Elvis Costello & The Attractions (1978)
Interesting!
Thanks Mark. I had that album way back when.
When I saw the picture up top, I thought I’d accidentally posted a “Saturday Night Radio.”
Awesome post, @tigerlily
Very cool history.
I knew of the existence of Bakelite, and what shellac is, but never made a connection between them.
—
When I was a kid, I read my dad’s Boy’s Life magazines from the 50s. They regularly had stories by sci-fi luminaries like Clarke.
One I distinctly remember was about a kid who wakes up and discovers that he could reshape his face because of the prevalence of plastic in post-War life.
Of course, it’s nearly impossible to search for, and finding the exact story requires scanning the archives of the magazine, but I’d live to find it again.
Here’s one:
There is a lot of there there.
Yeah Addiction. That radio looked familiar to me as well. And, thanks.
Thank you, @tigerlily! It’s posts such as yours that keep me coming to Ricochet.
There really is more to life than politics.
Thanks Jim.
Fantastic post, Tigerlily! We need more like it–keep ’em coming, please.
Thanks Gary!
I like the anecdote from the link about exploding celluloid billiard balls:
I remember a Boy’s Life story by Clarke about a very long distance yacht race in outer space using the solar wind for propulsion.
Yep. That was a cover.
And has inspired NASA and others to build actual light sails.
The archives aren’t working well, but searching for Arthur C. Clarke only turned up one result which might fit: p 7 of the November 1967 issue.
Thanks for the idea, because I found it! Here’s the link to The Sunjammer. And yes, @dnewlander, that was one heck of a cover.
The “plastics” story wasn’t a Clarke one. (I’d remember that.) But it was another “Golden Age” sci-fi author, I’m 75% sure. It was definitely intriguing as a 10-year old kid reading it.
Also, definite @jameslileks bait.
Thanks Arahant. I hope he does weigh in.
Thank goodness for Leo Baekeland! Plastics make much of modern life possible.
Planet Money did an episode on Bakelite a few years back.
Super post, @tigerlily, even though it wasn’t about baseball! ;-)
Thanks Charlotte!
Heinlein wrote a couple stories for BL. Farmer In The Sky has a major Boy Scout plot running through it.
I’m pretty sure he expanded that one into a novella. I’m fairly certain I’ve read it.
Yes. I’ve read it within the last few years. Settlers sent to Ganymede. Teenage boy brings his scout stuff along (despite mass restrictions), starts a new Scout Troop there, only to be in competition with a troop that’s already there.
I reread all of the Heinlein Juveniles a few years ago when I was on jury duty. So I’ve probably read it twice.
Wiki sez:
Great post TL.