Before Alarm Clocks, Nobody Needed One — Then the Industrial Revolution Changed Everything cover art

Before Alarm Clocks, Nobody Needed One — Then the Industrial Revolution Changed Everything

Before Alarm Clocks, Nobody Needed One — Then the Industrial Revolution Changed Everything

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Summary

For most of human history, nobody needed an alarm clock. Work followed the sun. Time was fluid. You woke up when it got light, and slept when it got dark.Then the Industrial Revolution showed up — and everything changed.In this episode of Hidden History with Aiden Thomas, we follow waking up itself from medieval monastery bells through the brutal new schedules of the factory floor — where a profession called the "knocker-upper" tapped on bedroom windows for a fee. In 1847, a man named Levi Hutchins built the first adjustable mechanical alarm clock, and it could only ring at 4:00 AM, because that's when he woke up. We trace it through the rise of the nine-minute snooze button (a quirk of old mechanical gears that survives in your phone today) and the 1883 US railroad decision that created time zones themselves.It wasn't about waking up. It was about who got to decide when your day began.Take a look around. History is everywhere.
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