Another interesting note is the fact that LEM mentions the Shutdown command came on the scene with System 2.0. However, this
April 1985 MacTech Mousehole mentions (mistakenly, I assume) that Shutdown came about in "Finder 2.6" -- which is a version I've never seen before.
There were of course developer copies seeded at the time and the folks on MacTech would have been privy to them, so their could have been a Finder 2.6x. However, when System 2.0 was released in April '85 it came as System 2.0, Finder 4.1. The previous official system was 1.1 with Finder 1.1g. There was no other official combination released publicly between May '84 and April '85. But since Apple probably didn't just jump from 1.1g to 4.1 overnight, there must have been numerous versions developed in house or seeded to developers. I found this information on a PowerPoint classroom presentation for which I no longer have the direct link:
2ND HALF OF 1984
System 1.2
Preliminary version of Mac[tm] OS 2.0, System software (0.3) and Finder (2.0) update with MiniFinder support
System 1.3
Finder update (3.0) to fix several issues of Finder 2.0
1ST HALF OF 1985
System 1.4
Finder update (4.0) to fix several issues of Finder 3.0
And with this thread being largely about just "how devastating" a sudden power-down situation can be, I can only offer my experience of never having lost a file or corrupted a directory by doing so.
I would also say that shutting down the Mac before ejecting a 400K MFS disk, or serial or floppy port MFM hard drive under System 1.1 would be a much larger gamble than a more stable later System with a SCSI drive, especially considering that those media were not terribly reliable as it was.
I went through my guides for the original Mac covering System 1.0 & 1.1 and neither offers any instructions whatsoever for turning off the Mac, much less procedures for shutting it down. In fact, one entry indicates it is safe to leave a properly ventilated Mac on all the time as it "makes for a good night light", so long as the brightness is reduced to prevent burn-in. The recommendation is made in part because the Mac uses very little power, no more than a standard light-bulb! Who remembered by 1984 that America had long since abandoned the energy frugal years which led Jimmy Carter to install solar panels on the roof of the White House.
Apple evidently took it for granted that, despite the target market being people who never used a computer before, much less a Macintosh, users would instinctively know how to save documents and quit the active programs and eject all disks before turning off the Mac, or they seriously believed most people would never turn their Macs off except to move them. That said, one learned quickly to constantly save ones work. I usually quit the application when I was through to return to the desktop and regain my application and document disk, but rarely returned the System disk if I was done with the Mac, which of course led to desktop databases not being properly updated, but in those days it was not such a big deal.