
In the early days of the automobile, winter driving was a perilous, blinding endeavor. Drivers were forced to either open their windows to the freezing elements or constantly stop to manually clear their windshields. It was a chaotic era of transportation until Mary Anderson observed this absurdity during a snowy streetcar ride in New York City and envisioned a simple, sweeping rubber blade. Despite holding the patent for the first effective windshield wiper, Anderson faced relentless rejection from a male-dominated manufacturing industry. Automotive executives dismissed her invention as a dangerous distraction that would hypnotize drivers, fundamentally failing to understand the critical necessity of automated visibility. Her groundbreaking mechanism was abandoned, only to become a mandatory safety feature after her patent expired. "Clearing the View" documents the frustrating and triumphant history of this ubiquitous invention. It exposes the short-sighted hubris of early automotive giants and highlights the vital contributions of female inventors who were systematically erased from the industrial narrative. Discover the untold origin of everyday automotive safety. Recognize the insidious nature of institutional resistance to new ideas, and draw inspiration from the relentless pursuit of solving the world's most obvious problems.