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I’d like to make a moment, if you’ll permit me, to offer thanks to the memory of Percy Shaw, a Yorkshireman from the town of Halifax. I don’t know if he was an especially upstanding or moral man, whether he was kind to others or donated a fortune to charity.

What I do know is that he invented something remarkably simple — something that has saved countless lives, and may well have saved me the other night.

Percy Shaw invented the cat’s eye or Catseye. This simple, reflective stud makes following the road so much easier at night, especially in poor visibility. The other night, I found myself with my mother on the R40 between Hazyview and White River. (I went away for a much-needed weekend break. We stayed at the The Winkler. Friendly service, excellent food, lots of Dutch tourists. Bit like 1652 all over again. The Dutch that is, not the food or the service.) The weather after we left the Phabeni Gate of the Kruger Park was awful, with a constant drizzle and drifts of thick fog swathed along the road. Driving a car without fog lamps — I’m using a hired Polo right now, ironic I know — made it especially challenging. At one point, I could see no more than one cat’s eye ahead. I’ve never been so focused on one little pinprick of red light in a ghostly halo of mist.

It was all that kept me from disappearing into the unfathomable darkness beyond.

The idea for cat’s eyes occurred to Shaw in the early 1930s, when he realised that reflective strips of metal in the road — tram tracks — made it easier for him to see where he was driving at night. Using the reflective lens had been invented by an enterprising accountant in 1927, he patented his invention in 1934 and Reflecting Roadstuds Ltd was established. Sales of this beautifully simple device took off after the British ministry of transport approved it, and eventually it found its way all to otherwise dark and forbidden roads over the world.

The cat’s eye is an item of genius. Relatively simple to produce and embed in the road surface, it uses no electricity and requires no special intervention to be effective. We need more of this kind of innovation: not just a clever idea, but the energy and drive to produce it and implement it.

Percy Shaw received an OBE in 1965 in recognition of his services to the United Kingdom. Today, I doff my metaphorical cap to him in recognition of his invaluable gift to the world.




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6 Responses to “Thank you for saving my life, Percy”

I don’t see the typo! :P

(Report abuse)

Marius Redelinghuys on October 20th, 2009 at 1:25 pm

Damn. Typo is still there. Sob.

(Report abuse)

Sarah Britten on October 20th, 2009 at 1:26 pm

Hear hear for Percy Shaw. But I am afraid I can’t say the same for Dept of Transport. I have noticed that few roads that still have cats eyes have had them replaced with truly sub standard products that almost require one to be virtually upon them before they luminesce.

The same goes for the sub standard road paint being used that is virtually no longer reflective.

Driving at night while it is raining can be a truly harrowing experience these days.

I wonder how many accidents could have been prevented if the government placed the value of lives before cost?

(Report abuse)

Robin Grant on October 20th, 2009 at 1:43 pm

that typo is cool. I don’t “take” a moment, I “make” a moment. Could become part of the vernacular.

(Report abuse)

David J Smith on October 20th, 2009 at 2:10 pm

A great invention. Not so the one delivered to the world by Mikhail Kalashnikov, being the AK-47 and which accounts for many more lives lost in SA than those saved by cats eyes.

(Report abuse)

Mike S on October 21st, 2009 at 6:52 pm

Mike S - Can’t free a country with a Catseye Mike ;)

(Report abuse)

Grant W on October 25th, 2009 at 6:51 pm

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Sarah Britten has written three books on South African insults. The latest has a yellow cover and would make a perfect Christmas present. And yes, Julius Malema gets a chapter to himself.
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