A midÂdle-class Parisian livÂing around the turn of the twenÂtiÂeth cenÂtuÂry would have to budÂget for serÂvices like not just water or gas, but also time. Though elecÂtric clocks had been demonÂstratÂed, they were still a high-tech rarÂiÂty; installing one in the home would have been comÂpleteÂly out of the quesÂtion. If you wantÂed to synÂchroÂnize timeÂkeepÂing across an entire major city, it made more sense to use a proven, reliÂable, and much cheapÂer infraÂstrucÂture: pipes full of comÂpressed air. Paris’ pneuÂmatÂic postal sysÂtem had been in serÂvice since 1866, and in 1877, VienÂna had demonÂstratÂed that the same basic techÂnolÂoÂgy could be used to run clocks.
“The idea was to have a masÂter clock in the cenÂter of Paris that would send out a pulse each minute to synÂchroÂnize every clock around the city,” writes Ewan CunÂningÂham at PriÂmal NebÂuÂla, on a comÂpanÂion page to the PriÂmal Space video above.
“The clocks wouldn’t have to be powÂered, the bursts of air would simÂply move all the clocks in the sysÂtem forÂward at the same time. As for the masÂter clock itself, it was kept in time by “anothÂer super accuÂrate clock that was updatÂed daiÂly using obserÂvaÂtions of stars and planÂets” at the Paris ObserÂvaÂtoÂry. Just five years after its first impleÂmenÂtaÂtion in 1880, this sysÂtem had made posÂsiÂble the instalÂlaÂtion of thouÂsands of “Popp clocks” (named for its AusÂtriÂan invenÂtor VicÂtor Popp) in “hotels, train staÂtions, housÂes, schools and pubÂlic streets.”
In 1881, the visÂitÂing engiÂneer Jules Albert Berly wrote of these “numerÂous clocks standÂing on graceÂful light iron pilÂlars in the squares, at the corÂners of streets, and in othÂer conÂspicÂuÂous posiÂtions about the city,” also notÂing those “throughÂout their hotels were, what is unusuÂal with hotel clocks, keepÂing accuÂrate time.” Apart from the great flood of 1910, which “stopped time” across Paris, this pneuÂmatÂic time-keepÂing sysÂtem seems to have remained in steady serÂvice for nearÂly half a cenÂtuÂry, until its disÂconÂtinÂuÂaÂtion in 1927. But even now, nearÂly a cenÂtuÂry late, some of the sites where Popp clocks once stood are still idenÂtiÂfiÂable — and thus worÂthy sites of pilÂgrimÂage for steamÂpunk fans everyÂwhere.
RelatÂed ConÂtent:
Paris Had a MovÂing SideÂwalk in 1900, and a Thomas EdiÂson Film CapÂtured It in Action
How Big Ben Works: A Detailed Look Inside London’s Beloved VicÂtoÂriÂan Clock TowÂer
Clocks Around the World: How OthÂer LanÂguages Tell Time
How Clocks Changed HumanÂiÂty ForÂevÂer, MakÂing Us MasÂters and Slaves of Time
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on TwitÂter at @colinmarshall or on FaceÂbook.
Thanks for this! I have always been fasÂciÂnatÂed by horolÂoÂgy, I disÂasÂsemÂbled my first alarm clock at age 6 or 7 and put it back togethÂer so well my parÂents did not notice.
I had a quesÂtion for you, how did they resynch the clocks after the outÂage? Did they have to manÂuÂalÂly visÂit every subÂscriber or did they wait for the time of ten minÂutes to 11 to send the first presÂsure pulse?
It is not like the atomÂic clock sigÂnal from, I guess some verÂsion of WWV in ColÂorado that my OreÂgon SciÂenÂtifÂic atomÂic clocks receive. I just replaced my batÂterÂies in one last night before bed and voila this mornÂing, day, date, time were all back to norÂmal.
Again, thanks for this!
Peter Duffy, Los AngeÂles, CA
Note that the pneuÂmatÂic sysÂtem between Paris post offices remained in serÂvice until 1984 (mainÂly for disÂtriÂbÂuÂtion of telegrams as it was notoÂriÂousÂly difÂfiÂcult to get a phone line throughÂout the 70s). ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_pneumatic_post
ProÂtip: if someÂthing actuÂalÂly ‑was- creÂatÂed in the 19th cenÂtuÂry, it’s not “SteamÂpunk.” It’s just hisÂtoÂry.