Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Year 1900
Episode Date: September 18, 2025The year 1900 was a pivotal year in world history. It was the end of the 19th century and on the cusp of the 20th century. Many of the technical advances that would come to define the next 100 year...s were just being unleashed. Social and economic changes were unfolding that would revolutionize the world. The changes that the world had seen in the 19th century were only a taste of what would come over the next century. Learn more about the world in the year 1900 and how the world had changed over the last 50 years on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase. ExpressVPN Go to expressvpn.com/EED to get an extra four months of ExpressVPN for free!w Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The year 1900 was a pivotal year in world history.
It was the end of the 19th century and on the cusp of the 20th century.
Many of the technical advances that would come to define the next 100 years were just being unleashed.
Social and economic changes were unfolding that would revolutionize the world.
The changes that the world had seen in the 19th century were only a taste of what was about to come.
Learn more about the world in the year 1900 and how the world had changed over the last 50 years
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Did you ever hear about the selfie that solved a murder or the jury that used a Ouija board to speak to a victim?
If that made you pause, you need to listen to Morning Cup of Murder.
I'm Karina B. Minasurfer, and every single day on Morning Cup of Murder,
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go listen to Morning Cup of Murder wherever you get your podcasts.
And remember, stay safe.
Before I get into what the world was like in the year 1900, I want to explain something
that's confused many listeners of this podcast.
The year 1900 was the last year of the 19th century, not the first year of the 20th century.
The 20th century and the 1900s overlap by 99%.
The exception is the year 1900.
The reason why 1900 is the last year of the 19th century is that there was no year zero.
Under our calendar system, the first year of the first century was the year one, and the last
year of the first century was the year 100.
As such, the last year of the 19th century was 1900, the last year of the 20th century was 2000,
and the last year of the 21st century will be 2100.
So with that out of the way, the year.
1900 was a landmark year in history. It was a turning point, marking the end of the 19th century
and giving a taste of what was to come in the 20th century. The last episode where I reviewed the
state of the world was in 1850. In the 50 years that had passed, an incredible amount has changed.
So let's take a step back and look at the state of the entire world in the year 1900.
The population of the Earth in 1900 was about 1.6 billion people.
Asia had roughly 900 million to a billion people.
Europe had about 400 million.
Africa, 120 to 130 million.
The Americas had about 140 to 160 million.
And Oceania had roughly 6 to 7 million.
Urbanization was concentrated in Europe and North America.
Global life expectancy sat near 30 to 35 years,
higher in rich cities and lower in colonized or rural regions.
Railways span continents.
Steamships dominated ocean trade,
with the Suez Canal shortening Eurasian routes.
Sub-C telegraph cables created near real-time communications,
allowing for global imperial administration and the birth of global finance.
Electricity spread through large cities for lighting and streetcars,
and internal combustion engines finally began to emerge.
Telephones were becoming standard in the United States.
States and parts of Europe. Wireless radio was experimental but showing promise, and armies were
using magazine rifles, smokeless powder, and the Maxim gun. The gold standard was the default
among leading trading states. The world was effectively working on a single monetary system with
individual currencies simply representing different amounts of gold. With that, let's start our trip
around the world in the Pacific. Over in Australia, six different British colonies were on the
Eva Federation, which would occur in 1901. Wool, gold, and wheat drove exports, yet rail
gauges were still not standardized among the colonies. Cities such as Melbourne and Sydney had
become modern, developed metropolitan areas. New Zealand was a self-governed colony with progressive
social legislation, with wool, meat, and dairy exports enabled by new refrigerated shipping systems.
Maori communities continued to navigate land loss and engaged in political negotiations.
islands in the Pacific had mostly been divided between European powers and the United States by this point.
Africa had changed radically since 1850.
There was only a minor European presence on the continent 50 years earlier.
But since then, the Scramble for Africa divided up the continent via the 1884 Berlin Conference,
which I covered in a previous episode.
Britain de facto controlled Egypt and pushed south through Sudan towards the Cape.
France consolidated French, West,
and equatorial Africa, and Germany held colonies in the east, southwest, and in Cameroon.
Belgium's king personally controlled the Congo free state, where rule was exceptionally brutal.
Portugal controlled Angola and Mozambique. Italy held Eritrea and part of Somaliland, but was defeated
by Ethiopia in 1896, which secured Ethiopian sovereignty. Liberia remained independent,
and the Boer Republic fought Britain in South Africa. The political map of Africa
had been completely redrawn by European powers who often showed little regard for existing
ethnic, linguistic, or political boundaries. This arbitrary division would create lasting problems
for African development for decades to come. China, despite being the world's most popular
country with over 400 million inhabitants, was in severe decline. The Qing dynasty was weakening
under internal rebellions and external pressures from European powers and Japan. The boxer rebellion of
1900 represented Chinese frustration with foreign influence, but its suppression only further demonstrated
the country's military weakness. Economically, China remained largely agricultural, with traditional
handicraft industries being undermined by imported manufactured goods. Japan presented a striking
contrast to China. Following the Meiji Restoration of 1868, Japan embarked on a remarkable program
of modernization and westernization. By 1900, the country had developed modern industries,
build railways and created a powerful military.
Japan's victory over China in 1895 announced its arrival as a regional power, and the country
was preparing for an even more significant challenge to Russian rule over Manchuria.
The Indian subcontinent under British rule since 1858 contained roughly 300 million people
living under colonial administration. While the British had built extensive railway networks
and introduced modern administrative systems, the vast majority of Indians remained poor agricultural
workers. However, an educated Indian elite was emerging, increasingly critical of British rule
and laying the groundwork for the independence movement that would define much of the 20th century.
Southeast Asia was largely under European colonial control with the Dutch controlling Indonesia,
the British dominating Burma and Malaya, and the French ruling Indochina. These colonies primarily
served as sources of raw materials and tropical agricultural products for European markets.
The Russian Empire ruled Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, and much of Central Asia and Siberia.
The Trans-Siberian Railway was nearing functional completion, tying European Russia to the Pacific.
Politics were autocratic under Nicholas II, and industrialization was advancing in St. Petersburg and Moscow.
Rural poverty and peasant unrest simmered, preparing to be unleashed in the decades ahead.
The Ottoman Empire still existed, but was in its final stages.
Sultan Abdul Hamid II presided over a strained state spanning Anatolia, parts of the Balkans, the Levant, Mesopotamia, and Arabia.
European creditors and advisors exerted significant influence over the empire, while rail projects such as the Hajas line symbolized modernization attempts.
National movements began fomenting amongst Armenians, Arabs, Greeks, Bulgarians, and others.
Qajar Persia was fiscally weak dependent upon Russian and British concession,
but formerly independent.
Afghanistan stood as a buffer between Russian Central Asia and British India after two Anglo-Afghan
wars.
Europe in 1900 represented the pinnacle of what historians call the European century.
The major powers had settled into what seemed like a stable balance after the unification
of Germany in 1871, though beneath the surface lay growing tensions that would eventually
explode.
Politically, Europe was dominated by a handful of.
of great empires in emerging nation-states.
The British Empire controlled roughly a quarter of the world's landmass and population,
while the newly unified German Empire was rapidly challenging Britain's industrial supremacy.
France, despite its defeat in the Franco-Prussian War in 1870,
remained a major colonial power, especially in Africa and Indochina.
The Austro-Hungarian Empire was struggling to manage its diverse ethnic populations,
foreshadowing the nationalist conflicts that would define much of the 20th century.
Technologically, Europe was experiencing what we might call the second industrial revolution.
While the first wave had been about steam and textiles, this new phase centered on electricity,
steel, and chemicals. German companies like Siemens and AEG were pioneering electrical
technologies, while new chemical processes were revolutionizing everything from photography to explosives.
The internal combustion engine was just beginning to transform transportation, though horse-drawn
vehicles still dominated city streets. Demographically, Europe was undergoing a crucial transition.
The population had roughly doubled in the 19th century, but birth rates were now starting to decline
in the more industrialized nations. This demographic shift was accompanied by massive urbanization.
Cities like London, Paris, and Berlin were swelling with industrial workers, creating new social
dynamics and political pressures. Life expectancy was improving due to better sanitation and medical
knowledge, though significant disparities remained.
Latin America in 1900 had been independent from European colonial rule for roughly three
quarters of a century, but the region was struggling to achieve genuine economic and political
stability. Most countries remained heavily dependent on exporting agricultural products and raw
materials to European and North American markets. Politically, many Latin American countries
were dominated by strong men representing land and interests. Democratic institutions existed on
paper, but often function poorly in practice.
Countries like Argentina and Brazil were experiencing significant European immigration,
which was changing their demographic composition and creating new social dynamics.
Argentina in 1900 was actually one of the richest countries on Earth.
The region's economy was increasingly integrated into the global system dominated by
European capital and North American markets.
Coffee from Brazil and Colombia, beef and wheat from Argentina, nitrates, or
from Chile and sugar from Cuba were all major export commodities. Canada, meanwhile, was still
finding its identity as a self-governing dominion within the British Empire, having confederated
in 1867. The completion of the Canadian Pacific Railway in 1885 had helped unite the vast
territory, but the country remained heavily dependent on agriculture and natural resource extraction.
We'll conclude the episode by focusing on the country that underwent the most significant changes
over the last 50 years, and was most poised to shape the world over the next century, the United States.
The United States in 1900 was emerging as a true global power, having recently demonstrated its
military capabilities in the Spanish-American War of 1898. This conflict marked America's entry onto the
world's stage as an imperial power, acquiring territories in both the Caribbean and the Pacific.
Sometime around the year 1895, the United States surpassed Great Britain as the world's largest economy,
a title that it has retained until the present day. London was still the center of world finance at this point,
but much of the energy in terms of growth and innovation had moved across the Atlantic.
Domestically, the country was still healing from the Civil War's aftermath,
while experiencing unprecedented industrial growth.
The American political system was grappling with the challenges
of rapid industrialization and urbanization.
The progressive era was just beginning,
as reformers sought to address the social problems
created by industrialization.
Labor movements were gaining strength,
sometimes violently clashing with industrial interests,
as seen in events like the Pullman Strike of 1894.
Technologically, America was becoming increasingly innovative.
The country was leading in mass production techniques
with companies like Carnegie Steel,
pioneering new methods of industrial organization.
Thomas Edison's inventions were transforming
daily life, while the Wright brothers were just three years away from their historic flight.
The Transcontinental Railroad had been completed in 1869, but now a vast network of rail lines
was knitting together the country economically and culturally. The American population in 1900 stood
at about 76 million people, with massive immigration from Europe fueling growth. This influx of
diverse populations was creating new cultural tensions, but also providing the labor force necessary
for industrial expansion.
The frontier was officially declared closed in 1890,
marking the end of westward expansion
and the beginning of a more settled continental society.
By the year 1900,
many of the things that we take for granted
as part of our modern world,
such as electricity and automobiles, existed,
but were not yet widely adopted.
The next several decades would see massive transformations in society,
as current technologies expanded, new technologies were developed, and war became more deadly than at any point in human history.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
My big thanks go to everyone who supports the show over on Patreon. Your support helps make this podcast possible.
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That's where everything happens that's outside the podcast. And links to those.
are available in the show notes.
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or in the above community groups,
you two can have it read in the show.
