THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Edison demonstrates incandescent light – 1879

Via History.com

In the first public demonstration of his incandescent lightbulb, American inventor Thomas Alva Edison lights up a street in Menlo Park, New Jersey. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company ran special trains to Menlo Park on the day of the demonstration in response to public enthusiasm over the event.

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Although the first incandescent lamp had been produced 40 years earlier, no inventor had been able to come up with a practical design until Edison embraced the challenge in the late 1870s. After countless tests, he developed a high-resistance carbon-thread filament that burned steadily for hours and an electric generator sophisticated enough to power a large lighting system.

Born in Milan, Ohio, in 1847, Edison received little formal schooling, which was customary for most Americans at the time. He developed serious hearing problems at an early age, and this disability provided the motivation for many of his inventions. At age 16, he found work as a telegraph operator and soon was devoting much of his energy and natural ingenuity toward improving the telegraph system itself. By 1869, he was pursuing invention full-time and in 1876 moved into a laboratory and machine shop in Menlo Park, New Jersey.

Edison’s experiments were guided by his remarkable intuition, but he also took care to employ assistants who provided the mathematical and technical expertise he lacked. At Menlo Park, Edison continued his work on the telegraph, and in 1877 he stumbled on one of his great inventions–the phonograph–while working on a way to record telephone communication. Public demonstrations of the phonograph made the Yankee inventor world famous, and he was dubbed the “Wizard of Menlo Park.”

Although the discovery of a way to record and play back sound ensured him a place in the annals of history, the phonograph was only the first of several Edison creations that would transform late 19th-century life. Among other notable inventions, Edison and his assistants developed the first practical incandescent lightbulb in 1879 and a forerunner of the movie camera and projector in the late 1880s. In 1887, he opened the world’s first industrial research laboratory at West Orange, New Jersey where he employed dozens of workers to investigate systematically a given subject.

Perhaps his greatest contribution to the modern industrial world came from his work in electricity. He developed a complete electrical distribution system for light and power, set up the world’s first power plant in New York City, and invented the alkaline battery, the first electric railroad, and a host of other inventions that laid the basis for the modern electrical world. One of the most prolific inventors in history, he continued to work into his 80s and acquired 1,093 patents in his lifetime. He died in 1931 at the age of 84.

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6 Comments
steve
steve
December 31, 2017 7:46 am

His biggest contribution -electricity- was largely the work stolen/cheated from Nikola Tesla

Anonymous
Anonymous
  steve
December 31, 2017 9:50 am

This may surprise you, but electricity predated both Edison and Tesla.

Edison worked with direct current, Tesla with alternating current.

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
  Anonymous
December 31, 2017 2:00 pm

Edison offered Tesla 50,000 bucks to convert his shop to three phase power and after the job was finished told Tesla he had just been kidding about paying him. Tesla ended up digging ditches to survive.

anarchyst
anarchyst
December 31, 2017 10:04 am

Edison was a showman, huckster and promoter who took credit for inventions created by others as his own. Edison’s sole, and greatest accomplishment was the creation of the first modern-day research laboratory.
Shortly after immigrating to the USA, Tesla did engineering work for Edison, who promised to pay Tesla $25,000 for one year’s work. When Tesla demanded his money, Edison remarked that he was “just joking”. Hence, the “split” with Edison.
Edison had outdated ideas on transmission of electrical power, promoting his DC system, which necessitated power plants on “every corner”. It was Tesla, who came up with the transmission of electric power using alternating current (AC), stepping up the voltage, and reducing the current at the source for long distance power transmission, stepping down the voltage, and stepping up the current at the destination. This polyphase system made it possible to transmit electrical power over long distances. For more on this, google “the war of the currents”, where Edison, the showman electrocuted elephants in order to discredit Tesla’s AC system.
Tesla saw his inventions as improving the lot of mankind. In fact, Tesla rescinded his royalty payments on his polyphase electric motors when Westinghouse had financial difficulties.
Tesla was a somewhat strange and quirky individual, but had a much greater scientific and analytical mind than Edison could ever hope to achieve.
It is interesting to note, that upon Tesla’s death, the US government seized all of his scientific papers and writings…

i forget
i forget
  anarchyst
January 1, 2018 11:44 am

& muskrat has seized his name. & via stoving gov, manymanysubsidy.

A. Gregory
A. Gregory
January 1, 2018 11:03 pm

I used to have great respect for Edison until…… found out he had an office “next door” to the U.S. Patent Office. Back then you could look at everything new filed and as long as your “new” patent filing was at least 20% “different” from existing filings…. everything was copasetic! TADA!!! New patents filed and technology improves everyone’s life!
Freakin hack stole everything…. and called it his own and got away with it…. Cronyism at work….!

Jus’ sayin…..