Cost of living, pros and cons, and history of an electrician

Home Salary, demand and, Requirements Living, pros and cons,and history

Cost Of Living

Typical Exspenses


Pros and Cons

Pros:

Cons


History

First electricity

Historians agree that the first recorded instance of humankind witnessing electrical phenomena occurred around 600 BC, when the Greek philosopher Thales of Miletus documented that rubbing amber against fur created a static charge capable of attracting light objects like feathers or dried grass.

First "Electrician"

Benjamin Franklin is widely considered the "first electrician" due to his pioneering studies of electricity in the 1700s, including his 1752 kite experiment identifying lightning as electricity and inventing the lightning rod.

When it became an official job

The profession transitioned from a dangerous, experimental side-gig into an official, regulated trade during the late 19th century, spurred by the rapid commercialization of electric lighting. This professionalization was cemented by the 1891 founding of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) in St. Louis, which organized "wiremen" and "linemen" to advocate for better training and safer working conditions. Around the same time, the first National Electrical Code (NEC) was published in 1897, establishing the standardized safety rules that transformed the role from informal labor into a licensed and inspected specialty. By the early 1900s, what was once a life-threatening "experiment" had become a formal career path with its own dedicated trade schools, apprenticeships, and government labor classifications.