Was there a moment midstride when horses had all hooves off the
ground?
Leland Stanford, the railroad baron and future university founder,
bet there was—or at least that’s the story.
It was 1872 when Stanford hired noted landscape photographer
Eadweard Muybridge to figure it out. It took years, but Muybridge
delivered: He rigged a racetrack with a dozen strings that triggered
12 cameras.
Muybridge not only proved Stanford right but also set off the
revolution in motion photography that would become movies.
Biographer Rebecca Solnit summed up his life: “He is the man who
split the second, as dramatic and far-reaching an action as the
splitting of the atom.”