|
FROM the spring of 1876 to 1886
Edison lived and did his work at Menlo Park;
and at this stage of the narrative, midway in
that interesting and eventful period, it is
appropriate to offer a few notes and jottings on
the place itself, around which tradition is
already weaving its fancies, just as at the time
the outpouring of new inventions from it invested
the name with sudden prominence and with the
glamour of romance. "In 1876 I moved,"
says Edison, "to Menlo Park, New Jersey,
on the Pennsylvania Railroad, several miles
below Elizabeth. The move was due to trouble
I had about rent. I had rented a small shop in
Newark, on the top floor of a padlock factory,
by the month. I gave notice that I would give
it up at the end of the month, paid the rent,
moved out, and delivered the keys. Shortly
afterward I was served with a paper, probably a
judgment, wherein I was to pay nine months'
rent. There was some law, it seems, that made
a monthly renter liable for a year. This seemed
so unjust that I determined to get out of a
place that permitted such injustice." For
several Sundays he walked through different
parts of New Jersey with two of his assistants
before he decided on Menlo Park. The change
was a fortunate one, for the inventor had
married Miss Mary E. Stillwell, and was now
able to establish himself comfortably with his
wife and family while enjoying immediate access
to the new laboratory. Every moment thus saved
was valuable.
To-day the place and region have gone back to
the insignificance from which Edison's genius
lifted them so startlingly. A glance from the
car windows reveals only a gently rolling
landscape dotted with modest residences and
unpretentious barns; and there is nothing in
sight by way of memorial to suggest that for
nearly a decade this spot was the scene of the
most concentrated and fruitful inventive activity
the world has ever known. Close to the Menlo
Park railway station is a group of gaunt and
deserted buildings, shelter of the casual
tramp, and slowly crumbling away when not
destroyed by the carelessness of some ragged
smoker. This silent group of buildings
comprises the famous old laboratory and workshops
of Mr. Edison, historic as being the
birthplace of the carbon transmitter, the
phonograph, the incandescent lamp, and the spot
where Edison also worked out his systems of
electrical distribution, his commercial dynamo,
his electric railway, his megaphone, his
tasimeter, and many other inventions of greater
or lesser degree. Here he continued,
moreover, his earlier work on the quadruplex,
sextuplex, multiplex, and automatic
telegraphs, and did his notable pioneer work in
wireless telegraphy. As the reader knows, it
had been a master passion with Edison from
boyhood up to possess a laboratory, in which
with free use of his own time and powers, and
with command of abundant material resources, he
could wrestle with Nature and probe her closest
secrets. Thus, from the little cellar at Port
Huron, from the scant shelves in a baggage
car, from the nooks and corners of dingy
telegraph offices, and the grimy little shops in
New York and Newark, he had now come to the
proud ownership of an establishment to which his
favorite word "laboratory" might justly be
applied. Here he could experiment to his
heart's content and invent on a larger, bolder
scale than ever--and he did!
Menlo Park was the merest hamlet. Omitting
the laboratory structures, it had only about
seven houses, the best looking of which Edison
lived in, a place that had a windmill pumping
water into a reservoir. One of the stories of
the day was that Edison had his front gate so
connected with the pumping plant that every
visitor as he opened or closed the gate added
involuntarily to the supply in the reservoir.
Two or three of the houses were occupied by the
families of members of the staff; in the others
boarders were taken, the laboratory, of
course, furnishing all the patrons. Near the
railway station was a small saloon kept by an old
Scotchman named Davis, where billiards were
played in idle moments, and where in the long
winter evenings the hot stove was a centre of
attraction to loungers and story-tellers. The
truth is that there was very little social life
of any kind possible under the strenuous
conditions prevailing at the laboratory, where,
if anywhere, relaxation was enjoyed at odd
intervals of fatigue and waiting.
The main laboratory was a spacious wooden
building of two floors. The office was in this
building at first, until removed to the brick
library when that was finished. There S. L.
Griffin, an old telegraph friend of Edison,
acted as his secretary and had charge of a
voluminous and amazing correspondence. The
office employees were the Carman brothers and
the late John F. Randolph, afterwards
secretary. According to Mr. Francis Jehl,
of Budapest, then one of the staff, to whom
the writers are indebted for a great deal of
valuable data on this period: "It was on the
upper story of this laboratory that the most
important experiments were executed, and where
the incandescent lamp was born. This floor
consisted of a large hall containing several long
tables, upon which could be found all the
various instruments, scientific and chemical
apparatus that the arts at that time could
produce. Books lay promiscuously about, while
here and there long lines of bichromate-of-
potash cells could be seen, together with
experimental models of ideas that Edison or his
assistants were engaged upon. The side walls of
this hall were lined with shelves filled with
bottles, phials, and other receptacles
containing every imaginable chemical and other
material that could be obtained, while at the
end of this hall, and near the organ which stood
in the rear, was a large glass case containing
the world's most precious metals in sheet and
wire form, together with very rare and costly
chemicals. When evening came on, and the last
rays of the setting sun penetrated through the
side windows, this hall looked like a veritable
Faust laboratory.
"On the ground floor we had our
testing-table, which stood on two large pillars
of brick built deep into the earth in order to
get rid of all vibrations on account of the
sensitive instruments that were upon it. There
was the Thomson reflecting mirror galvanometer
and electrometer, while nearby were the standard
cells by which the galvanometers were adjusted
and standardized. This testing-table was
connected by means of wires with all parts of the
laboratory and machine-shop, so that
measurements could be conveniently made from a
distance, as in those days we had no portable
and direct-reading instruments, such as now
exist. Opposite this table we installed, later
on, our photometrical chamber, which was
constructed on the Bunsen principle. A little
way from this table, and separated by a
partition, we had the chemical laboratory with
its furnaces and stink-chambers. Later on
another chemical laboratory was installed near
the photometer-room, and this Dr. A. Haid
had charge of."
Next to the laboratory in importance was the
machine- shop, a large and well-lighted
building of brick, at one end of which there was
the boiler and engine- room. This shop
contained light and heavy lathes, boring and
drilling machines, all kinds of planing
machines; in fact, tools of all descriptions,
so that any apparatus, however delicate or
heavy, could be made and built as might be
required by Edison in experimenting. Mr.
John Kruesi had charge of this shop, and was
assisted by a number of skilled mechanics,
notably John Ott, whose deft fingers and quick
intuitive grasp of the master's ideas are still
in demand under the more recent conditions at the
Llewellyn Park laboratory in Orange.
Between the machine-shop and the laboratory was
a small building of wood used as a
carpenter-shop, where Tom Logan plied his
art. Nearby was the gasoline plant. Before
the incandescent lamp was perfected, the only
illumination was from gasoline gas; and that was
used later for incandescent-lamp
glass-blowing, which was done in another small
building on one side of the laboratory.
Apparently little or no lighting service was
obtained from the Wallace- Farmer arc lamps
secured from Ansonia, Connecticut. The
dynamo was probably needed for Edison's own
experiments.
On the outskirts of the property was a small
building in which lampblack was crudely but
carefully manufactured and pressed into very
small cakes, for use in the Edison carbon
transmitters of that time. The
night-watchman, Alfred Swanson, took care of
this curious plant, which consisted of a battery
of petroleum lamps that were forced to burn to
the sooting point. During his rounds in the
night Swanson would find time to collect from
the chimneys the soot that the lamps gave. It
was then weighed out into very small portions,
which were pressed into cakes or buttons by means
of a hand-press. These little cakes were
delicately packed away between layers of cotton
in small, light boxes and shipped to Bergmann
in New York, by whom the telephone
transmitters were being made. A little later
the Edison electric railway was built on the
confines of the property out through the woods,
at first only a third of a mile in length, but
reaching ultimately to Pumptown, almost three
miles away.
Mr. Edison's own words may be quoted as to
the men with whom he surrounded himself here and
upon whose services he depended principally for
help in the accomplishment of his aims. In an
autobiographical article in the Electrical
World of March 5, 1904, he says: "It
is interesting to note that in addition to those
mentioned above (Charles Batchelor and Frank
Upton), I had around me other men who ever
since have remained active in the field, such as
Messrs. Francis Jehl, William J.
Hammer, Martin Force, Ludwig K. Boehm,
not forgetting that good friend and co-worker,
the late John Kruesi. They found plenty to do
in the various developments of the art, and as
I now look back I sometimes wonder how we did
so much in so short a time." Mr. Jehl in his
reminiscences adds another name to the above
--namely, that of John W. Lawson, and
then goes on to say: "These are the names of
the pioneers of incandescent lighting, who were
continuously at the side of Edison day and night
for some years, and who, under his guidance,
worked upon the carbon-filament lamp from its
birth to ripe maturity. These men all had
complete faith in his ability and stood by him as
on a rock, guarding their work with the
secretiveness of a burglar-proof safe.
Whenever it leaked out in the world that Edison
was succeeding in his work on the electric
light, spies and others came to the Park; so
it was of the utmost importance that the
experiments and their results should be kept a
secret until Edison had secured the protection
of the Patent Office." With this staff was
associated from the first Mr. E. H.
Johnson, whose work with Mr. Edison lay
chiefly, however, outside the laboratory,
taking him to all parts of the country and to
Europe. There were also to be regarded as
detached members of it the Bergmann brothers,
manufacturing for Mr. Edison in New York,
and incessantly experimenting for him. In
addition there must be included Mr. Samuel
Insull, whose activities for many years as
private secretary and financial manager were
devoted solely to Mr. Edison's interests,
with Menlo Park as a centre and main source of
anxiety as to pay-rolls and other constantly
recurring obligations. The names of yet other
associates occur from time to time in this
narrative--"Edison men" who have been very
proud of their close relationship to the inventor
and his work at old Menlo. "There was also
Mr. Charles L. Clarke, who devoted himself
mainly to engineering matters, and later on
acted as chief engineer of the Edison Electric
Light Company for some years. Then there were
William Holzer and James Hipple, both of
whom took an active part in the practical
development of the glass-blowing department of
the laboratory, and, subsequently, at the
first Edison lamp factory at Menlo Park.
Later on Messrs. Jehl, Hipple, and Force
assisted Mr. Batchelor to install the
lamp-works of the French Edison Company at
Ivry-sur-Seine. Then there were Messrs.
Charles T. Hughes, Samuel D. Mott, and
Charles T. Mott, who devoted their time
chiefly to commercial affairs. Mr. Hughes
conducted most of this work, and later on took a
prominent part in Edison's electric-railway
experiments. His business ability was on a high
level, while his personal character endeared him
to us all.
Among other now well-known men who came to us
and assisted in various kinds of work were
Messrs. Acheson, Worth, Crosby,
Herrick, and Hill, while Doctor Haid was
placed by Mr. Edison in charge of a special
chemical laboratory. Dr. E. L. Nichols
was also with us for a short time conducting a
special series of experiments. There was also
Mr. Isaacs, who did a great deal of
photographic work, and to whom we must be
thankful for the pictures of Menlo Park in
connection with Edison's work.
"Among others who were added to Mr.
Kruesi's staff in the machine-shop were
Messrs. J. H. Vail and W. S.
Andrews. Mr. Vail had charge of the dynamo-
room. He had a good general knowledge of
machinery, and very soon acquired such
familiarity with the dynamos that he could skip
about among them with astonishing agility to
regulate their brushes or to throw rosin on the
belts when they began to squeal. Later on he
took an active part in the affairs and
installations of the Edison Light Company.
Mr. Andrews stayed on Mr. Kruesi's staff
as long as the laboratory machine-shop was kept
open, after which he went into the employ of the
Edison Electric Light Company and became
actively engaged in the commercial and technical
exploitation of the system. Another man who was
with us at Menlo Park was Mr. Herman
Claudius, an Austrian, who at one time was
employed in connection with the State
Telegraphs of his country. To him Mr.
Edison assigned the task of making a complete
model of the network of conductors for the
contemplated first station in New York."
Mr. Francis R. Upton, who was early
employed by Mr. Edison as his mathematician,
furnishes a pleasant, vivid picture of his chief
associates engaged on the memorable work at
Menlo Park. He says: "Mr. Charles
Batchelor was Mr. Edison's principal
assistant at that time. He was an Englishman,
and came to this country to set up the
thread-weaving machinery for the Clark
thread-works. He was a most intelligent,
patient, competent, and loyal assistant to
Mr. Edison. I remember distinctly seeing him
work many hours to mount a small filament; and
his hand would be as steady and his patience as
unyielding at the end of those many hours as it
was at the beginning, in spite of repeated
failures. He was a wonderful mechanic; the
control that he had of his fingers was
marvellous, and his eyesight was sharp. Mr.
Batchelor's judgment and good sense were always
in evidence.
"Mr. Kruesi was the superintendent, a Swiss
trained in the best Swiss ideas of accuracy.
He was a splendid mechanic with a vigorous
temper, and wonderful ability to work
continuously and to get work out of men. It was
an ideal combination, that of Edison,
Batchelor, and Kruesi. Mr. Edison with his
wonderful flow of ideas which were sharply
defined in his mind, as can be seen by any of
the sketches that he made, as he evidently
always thinks in three dimensions; Mr.
Kruesi, willing to take the ideas, and capable
of comprehending them, would distribute the work
so as to get it done with marvellous quickness
and great accuracy. Mr. Batchelor was always
ready for any special fine experimenting or
observa- tion, and could hold to whatever he
was at as long as Mr. Edison wished; and
always brought to bear on what he was at the
greatest skill."
While Edison depended upon Upton for his
mathematical work, he was wont to check it up in
a very practical manner, as evidenced by the
following incident described by Mr. Jehl:
"I was once with Mr. Upton calculating some
tables which he had put me on, when Mr.
Edison appeared with a glass bulb having a
pear-shaped appearance in his hand. It was the
kind that we were going to use for our lamp
experiments; and Mr. Edison asked Mr.
Upton to please calculate for him its cubic
contents in centimetres. Now Mr. Upton was a
very able mathematician, who, after he finished
his studies at Princeton, went to Germany and
got his final gloss under that great master,
Helmholtz. Whatever he did and worked on was
executed in a pure mathematical manner, and any
wrangler at Oxford would have been delighted to
see him juggle with integral and differential
equations, with a dexterity that was
surprising. He drew the shape of the bulb
exactly on paper, and got the equation of its
lines with which he was going to calculate its
contents, when Mr. Edison again appeared and
asked him what it was. He showed Edison the
work he had already done on the subject, and
told him that he would very soon finish
calculating it. `Why,' said Edison, `I
would simply take that bulb and fill it with
mercury and weigh it; and from the weight of the
mercury and its specific gravity I'll get it in
five minutes, and use less mental energy than is
necessary in such a fatiguing operation.' "
Menlo Park became ultimately the centre of
Edison's business life as it was of his
inventing. After the short distasteful period
during the introduction of his lighting system,
when he spent a large part of his time at the
offices at 65 Fifth Avenue, New York, or
on the actual work connected with the New York
Edison installation, he settled back again in
Menlo Park altogether. Mr. Samuel Insull
describes the business methods which prevailed
throughout the earlier Menlo Park days of
"storm and stress," and the curious conditions
with which he had to deal as private secretary:
"I never attempted to systematize Edison's
business life. Edison's whole method of work
would upset the system of any office. He was
just as likely to be at work in his laboratory at
midnight as midday. He cared not for the hours
of the day or the days of the week. If he was
exhausted he might more likely be asleep in the
middle of the day than in the middle of the
night, as most of his work in the way of
inventions was done at night. I used to run his
office on as close business methods as my
experience admitted; and I would get at him
whenever it suited his convenience. Sometimes
he would not go over his mail for days at a
time; but other times he would go regularly to
his office in the morning. At other times my
engagements used to be with him to go over his
business affairs at Menlo Park at night, if I
was occupied in New York during the day. In
fact, as a matter of convenience I used more
often to get at him at night, as it left my days
free to transact his affairs, and enabled me,
probably at a midnight luncheon, to get a few
minutes of his time to look over his
correspondence and get his directions as to what
I should do in some particular negotiation or
matter of finance. While it was a matter of
suiting Edison's convenience as to when I
should transact business with him, it also
suited my own ideas, as it enabled me after
getting through my business with him to enjoy the
privilege of watching him at his work, and to
learn something about the technical side of
matters. Whatever knowledge I may have of the
electric light and power industry I feel I owe
it to the tuition of Edison. He was about the
most willing tutor, and I must confess that he
had to be a patient one."
Here again occurs the reference to the incessant
night-work at Menlo Park, a note that is
struck in every reminiscence and in every record
of the time. But it is not to be inferred that
the atmosphere of grim determination and
persistent pursuit of the new invention
characteristic of this period made life a burden
to the small family of laborers associated with
Edison. Many a time during the long, weary
nights of experimenting Edison would call a halt
for refreshments, which he had ordered always to
be sent in when night-work was in progress.
Everything would be dropped, all present would
join in the meal, and the last good story or
joke would pass around. In his notes Mr.
Jehl says: "Our lunch always ended with a
cigar, and I may mention here that although
Edison was never fastidious in eating, he
always relished a good cigar, and seemed to find
in it consolation and solace.... It often
happened that while we were enjoying the cigars
after our midnight re- past, one of the boys
would start up a tune on the organ and we would
all sing together, or one of the others would
give a solo. Another of the boys had a voice
that sounded like something between the ring of
an old tomato can and a pewter jug. He had one
song that he would sing while we roared with
laughter. He was also great in imitating the
tin-foil phonograph.... When Boehm was in
good-humor he would play his zither now and
then, and amuse us by singing pretty German
songs. On many of these occasions the
laboratory was the rendezvous of jolly and
convivial visitors, mostly old friends and
acquaintances of Mr. Edison. Some of the
office employees would also drop in once in a
while, and as everybody present was always
welcome to partake of the midnight meal, we all
enjoyed these gatherings. After a while, when
we were ready to resume work, our visitors would
intimate that they were going home to bed, but
we fellows could stay up and work, and they
would depart, generally singing some song like
Good-night, ladies! . . . It often
happened that when Edison had been working up to
three or four o'clock in the morning, he would
lie down on one of the laboratory tables, and
with nothing but a couple of books for a pillow,
would fall into a sound sleep. He said it did
him more good than being in a soft bed, which
spoils a man. Some of the laboratory assistants
could be seen now and then sleeping on a table in
the early morning hours. If their snoring
became objectionable to those still at work, the
`calmer' was applied. This machine consisted
of a Babbitt's soap box without a cover. Upon
it was mounted a broad ratchet-wheel with a
crank, while into the teeth of the wheel there
played a stout, elastic slab of wood. The box
would be placed on the table where the snorer was
sleeping and the crank turned rapidly. The
racket thus produced was something terrible, and
the sleeper would jump up as though a typhoon had
struck the laboratory. The irrepressible spirit
of humor in the old days, although somewhat
strenuous at times, caused many a moment of
hilarity which seemed to refresh the boys, and
enabled them to work with renewed vigor after its
manifestation." Mr. Upton remarks that often
during the period of the invention of the
incandescent lamp, when under great strain and
fatigue, Edison would go to the organ and play
tunes in a primitive way, and come back to crack
jokes with the staff. "But I have often felt
that Mr. Edison never could comprehend the
limitations of the strength of other men, as his
own physical and mental strength have always
seemed to be without limit. He could work
continuously as long as he wished, and had sleep
at his command. His sleep was always instant,
profound, and restful. He has told me that he
never dreamed. I have known Mr. Edison now
for thirty-one years, and feel that he has
always kept his mind direct and simple, going
straight to the root of troubles. One of the
peculiarities I have noticed is that I have
never known him to break into a conversation
going on around him, and ask what people were
talking about. The nearest he would ever come
to it was when there had evidently been some
story told, and his face would express a desire
to join in the laugh, which would immediately
invite telling the story to him."
Next to those who worked with Edison at the
laboratory and were with him constantly at Menlo
Park were the visitors, some of whom were his
business associates, some of them scientific
men, and some of them hero-worshippers and
curiosity-hunters. Foremost in the first
category was Mr. E. H. Johnson, who was
in reality Edison's most intimate friend, and
was required for constant consultation; but
whose intense activity, remarkable grasp of
electrical principles, and unusual powers of
exposition, led to his frequent detachment for
long trips, including those which resulted in
the introduction of the telephone, phonograph,
and electric light in England and on the
Continent. A less frequent visitor was Mr.
S. Bergmann, who had all he needed to occupy
his time in experimenting and manufacturing, and
whose contemporaneous Wooster Street
letter-heads advertised Edison's inventions as
being made there, Among the scientists were
Prof. George F. Barker, of Philadelphia,
a big, good-natured philosopher, whose
valuable advice Edison esteemed highly. In
sharp contrast to him was the earnest, serious
Rowland, of Johns Hopkins University,
afterward the leading American physicist of his
day. Profs. C. F. Brackett and C. F.
Young, of Princeton University, were often
received, always interested in what Edison was
doing, and proud that one of their own
students, Mr. Upton, was taking such a
prominent part in the development of the work.
Soon after the success of the lighting
experiments and the installation at Menlo Park
became known, Edison was besieged by persons
from all parts of the world anxious to secure
rights and concessions for their respective
countries. Among these was Mr. Louis Rau,
of Paris, who organized the French Edison
Company, the pioneer Edison lighting
corporation in Europe, and who, with the aid
of Mr. Batchelor, established lamp-works and
a machine-shop at Ivry sur-Seine, near
Paris, in 1882. It was there that Mr.
Nikola Tesla made his entree into the field of
light and power, and began his own career as an
inventor; and there also Mr. Etienne Fodor,
general manager of the Hungarian General
Electric Company at Budapest, received his
early training. It was he who erected at
Athens the first European Edison station on
the now universal three-wire system. Another
visitor from Europe, a little later, was Mr.
Emil Rathenau, the present director of the
great Allgemeine Elektricitaets Gesellschaft
of Germany. He secured the rights for the
empire, and organized the Berlin Edison
system, now one of the largest in the world.
Through his extraordinary energy and enterprise
the business made enormous strides, and Mr.
Rathenau has become one of the most conspicuous
industrial figures in his native country. From
Italy came Professor Colombo, later a cabinet
minister, with his friend Signor Buzzi, of
Milan. The rights were secured for the
peninsula; Colombo and his friends organized
the Italian Edison Company, and erected at
Milan the first central station in that
country. Mr. John W. Lieb, Jr., now a
vice-president of the New York Edison
Company, was sent over by Mr. Edison to
steer the enterprise technically, and spent ten
years in building it up, with such brilliant
success that he was later decorated as Commander
of the Order of the Crown of Italy by King
Victor. Another young American enlisted into
European service was Mr. E. G. Acheson,
the inventor of carborundum, who built a number
of plants in Italy and France before he
returned home. Mr. Lieb has since become
President of the American Institute of
Electrical Engineers and the Association of
Edison Illuminating Companies, while Doctor
Acheson has been President of the American
Electrochemical Society.
Switzerland sent Messrs. Turrettini,
Biedermann, and Thury, all distinguished
engineers, to negotiate for rights in the
republic; and so it went with regard to all the
other countries of Europe, as well as those of
South America. It was a question of keeping
such visitors away rather than of inviting them
to take up the exploitation of the Edison
system; for what time was not spent in personal
interviews was required for the masses of letters
from every country under the sun, all making
inquiries, offering suggestions, proposing
terms. Nor were the visitors merely those on
business bent. There were the lion-hunters and
celebrities, of whom Sarah Bernhardt may serve
as a type. One visit of note was that paid by
Lieut. G. W. De Long, who had an earnest
and protracted conversation with Edison over the
Arctic expedition he was undertaking with the
aid of Mr. James Gordon Bennett, of the
New York Herald. The Jeannette was being
fitted out, and Edison told De Long that he
would make and present him with a small dynamo
machine, some incandescent lamps, and an arc
lamp. While the little dynamo was being built
all the men in the laboratory wrote their names
on the paper insulation that was wound upon the
iron core of the armature. As the Jeannette
had no steam-engine on board that could be used
for the purpose, Edison designed the dynamo so
that it could be worked by man power and told
Lieutenant De Long "it would keep the boys
warm up in the Arctic," when they generated
current with it. The ill-fated ship never
returned from her voyage, but went down in the
icy waters of the North, there to remain until
some future cataclysm of nature, ten thousand
years hence, shall reveal the ship and the first
marine dynamo as curious relics of a remote
civilization.
Edison also furnished De Long with a set of
telephones provided with extensible circuits, so
that parties on the ice-floes could go long
distances from the ship and still keep in
communication with her. So far as the writers
can ascertain this is the first example of
"field telephony." Another nautical
experiment that he made at this time, suggested
probably by the requirements of the Arctic
expedition, was a buoy that was floated in New
York harbor, and which contained a small
Edison dynamo and two or three incandescent
lamps. The dynamo was driven by the wave or
tide motion through intermediate mechanism, and
thus the lamps were lit up from time to time,
serving as signals. These were the prototypes
of the lighted buoys which have since become
familiar, as in the channel off Sandy Hook.
One notable afternoon was that on which the New
York board of aldermen took a special train out
to Menlo Park to see the lighting system with
its conductors underground in operation. The
Edison Electric Illuminating Company was
applying for a franchise, and the aldermen, for
lack of scientific training and specific
practical information, were very sceptical on
the subject--as indeed they might well be.
"Mr. Edison demonstrated personally the
details and merits of the system to them. The
voltage was increased to a higher pressure than
usual, and all the incandescent lamps at Menlo
Park did their best to win the approbation of
the New York City fathers. After Edison had
finished exhibiting all the good points of his
system, he conducted his guests upstairs in the
laboratory, where a long table was spread with
the best things that one of the most prominent
New York caterers could furnish. The
laboratory witnessed high times that night, for
all were in the best of humor, and many a bottle
was drained in toasting the health of Edison and
the aldermen." This was one of the extremely
rare occasions on which Edison has addressed an
audience; but the stake was worth the effort.
The representatives of New York could with
justice drink the health of the young inventor,
whose system is one of the greatest boons the
city has ever had conferred upon it.
Among other frequent visitors was Mr,
Edison's father, "one of those amiable,
patriarchal characters with a Horace Greeley
beard, typical Americans of the old school,"
who would sometimes come into the laboratory with
his two grandchildren, a little boy and girl
called "Dash" and "Dot." He preferred to
sit and watch his brilliant son at work "with an
expression of satisfaction on his face that
indicated a sense of happiness and content that
his boy, born in that distant, humble home in
Ohio, had risen to fame and brought such honor
upon the name. It was, indeed, a pathetic
sight to see a father venerate his son as the
elder Edison did." Not less at home was Mr.
Mackenzie, the Mt. Clemens station agent,
the life of whose child Edison had saved when a
train newsboy. The old Scotchman was one of
the innocent, chartered libertines of the
place, with an unlimited stock of good jokes and
stories, but seldom of any practical use. On
one occasion, however, when everything possible
and impossible under the sun was being carbonized
for lamp filaments, he allowed a handful of his
bushy red beard to be taken for the purpose; and
his laugh was the loudest when the
Edison-Mackenzie hair lamps were brought up to
incandescence--their richness in red rays being
slyly attributed to the nature of the filamentary
material! Oddly enough, a few years later,
some inventor actually took out a patent for
making incandescent lamps with carbonized hair
for filaments!
Yet other visitors again haunted the place, and
with the following reminiscence of one of them,
from Mr. Edison himself, this part of the
chapter must close: "At Menlo Park one cold
winter night there came into the laboratory a
strange man in a most pitiful condition. He was
nearly frozen, and he asked if he might sit by
the stove. In a few moments he asked for the
head man, and I was brought forward. He had a
head of abnormal size, with highly intellectual
features and a very small and emaciated body.
He said he was suffering very much, and asked
if I had any morphine. As I had about
everything in chemistry that could be bought, I
told him I had. He requested that I give him
some, so I got the morphine sulphate. He
poured out enough to kill two men, when I told
him that we didn't keep a hotel for suicides,
and he had better cut the quantity down. He
then bared his legs and arms, and they were
literally pitted with scars, due to the use of
hypodermic syringes. He said he had taken it
for years, and it required a big dose to have
any effect. I let him go ahead. In a short
while he seemed like another man and began to
tell stories, and there were about fifty of us
who sat around listening until morning. He was
a man of great intelligence and education. He
said he was a Jew, but there was no distinctive
feature to verify this assertion. He continued
to stay around until he finished every
combination of morphine with an acid that I
had, probably ten ounces all told. Then he
asked if he could have strychnine. I had an
ounce of the sulphate. He took enough to kill a
horse, and asserted it had as good an effect as
morphine. When this was gone, the only thing
I had left was a chunk of crude opium, perhaps
two or three pounds. He chewed this up and
disappeared. I was greatly disappointed,
because I would have laid in another stock of
morphine to keep him at the laboratory. About a
week afterward he was found dead in a barn at
Perth Amboy."
Returning to the work itself, note of which has
al- ready been made in this and preceding
chapters, we find an interesting and unique
reminiscence in Mr. Jehl's notes of the
reversion to carbon as a filament in the lamps,
following an exhibition of metallic- filament
lamps given in the spring of 1879 to the men
in the syndicate advancing the funds for these
experiments: "They came to Menlo Park on a
late afternoon train from New York. It was
already dark when they were conducted into the
machine- shop, where we had several platinum
lamps installed in series. When Edison had
finished explaining the principles and details of
the lamp, he asked Kruesi to let the dynamo
machine run. It was of the Gramme type, as
our first dynamo of the Edison design was not
yet finished. Edison then ordered the `juice'
to be turned on slowly. To-day I can see
those lamps rising to a cherry red, like
glowbugs, and hear Mr. Edison saying `a
little more juice,' and the lamps began to
glow. `A little more' is the command again,
and then one of the lamps emits for an instant a
light like a star in the distance, after which
there is an eruption and a puff; and the
machine-shop is in total darkness. We knew
instantly which lamp had failed, and Batchelor
replaced that by a good one, having a few in
reserve near by. The operation was repeated two
or three times with about the same results,
after which the party went into the library until
it was time to catch the train for New York."
Such an exhibition was decidedly discouraging,
and it was not a jubilant party that returned to
New York, but: "That night Edison remained
in the laboratory meditating upon the results
that the platinum lamp had given so far. I was
engaged reading a book near a table in the
front, while Edison was seated in a chair by a
table near the organ. With his head turned
downward, and that conspicuous lock of hair
hanging loosely on one side, he looked like
Napoleon in the celebrated picture, On the
Eve of a Great Battle. Those days were
heroic ones, for he then battled against mighty
odds, and the prospects were dim and not very
encouraging. In cases of emergency Edison
always possessed a keen faculty of deciding
immediately and correctly what to do; and the
decision he then arrived at was predestined to be
the turning-point that led him on to ultimate
success.... After that exhibition we had a
house- cleaning at the laboratory, and the
metallic-filament lamps were stored away, while
preparations were made for our experiments on
carbon lamps."
Thus the work went on. Menlo Park has
hitherto been associated in the public thought
with the telephone, phonograph, and
incandescent lamp; but it was there, equally,
that the Edison dynamo and system of
distribution were created and applied to their
specific purposes. While all this study of a
possible lamp was going on, Mr. Upton was
busy calculating the economy of the "multiple
arc" system, and making a great many tables to
determine what resistance a lamp should have for
the best results, and at what point the proposed
general system would fall off in economy when the
lamps were of the lower resistance that was then
generally assumed to be necessary. The world at
that time had not the shadow of an idea as to
what the principles of a multiple arc system
should be, enabling millions of lamps to be
lighted off distributing circuits, each lamp
independent of every other; but at Menlo Park
at that remote period in the seventies Mr.
Edison's mathematician was formulating the
inventor's conception in clear, instructive
figures; "and the work then executed has held
its own ever since." From the beginning of his
experiments on electric light, Mr. Edison had
a well-defined idea of producing not only a
practicable lamp, but also a SYSTEM of
commercial electric lighting. Such a scheme
involved the creation of an entirely new art,
for there was nothing on the face of the earth
from which to draw assistance or precedent,
unless we except the elementary forms of dynamos
then in existence. It is true, there were
several types of machines in use for the then
very limited field of arc lighting, but they
were regarded as valueless as a part of a great
comprehensive scheme which could supply everybody
with light. Such machines were confessedly
inefficient, although representing the farthest
reach of a young art. A commission appointed at
that time by the Franklin Institute, and
including Prof. Elihu Thomson, investigated
the merits of existing dynamos and reported as to
the best of them: "The Gramme machine is the
most economical as a means of converting motive
force into electricity; it utilizes in the arc
from 38 to 41 per cent. of the motive work
produced, after deduction is made for friction
and the resistance of the air." They reported
also that the Brush arc lighting machine
"produces in the luminous arc useful work
equivalent to 31 per cent. of the motive power
employed, or to 38 1/2 per cent. after the
friction has been deducted." Commercial
possibilities could not exist in the face of such
low economy as this, and Mr. Edison realized
that he would have to improve the dynamo himself
if he wanted a better machine. The scientific
world at that time was engaged in a controversy
regarding the external and internal resistance of
a circuit in which a generator was situated.
Discussing the subject Mr. Jehl, in his
biographical notes, says: "While this
controversy raged in the scientific papers, and
criticism and confusion seemed at its height,
Edison and Upton discussed this question very
thoroughly, and Edison declared he did not
intend to build up a system of distribution in
which the external resistance would be equal to
the internal resistance. He said he was just
about going to do the opposite; he wanted a
large external resistance and a low internal
one. He said he wanted to sell the energy
outside of the station and not waste it in the
dynamo and conductors, where it brought no
profits.... In these later days, when these
ideas of Edison are used as common property,
and are applied in every modern system of
distribution, it is astonishing to remember that
when they were propounded they met with most
vehement antagonism from the world at large."
Edison, familiar with batteries in telegraphy,
could not bring himself to believe that any
substitute generator of electrical energy could
be efficient that used up half its own possible
output before doing an equal amount of outside
work.
Undaunted by the dicta of contemporaneous
science, Mr. Edison attacked the dynamo
problem with his accustomed vigor and
thoroughness. He chose the drum form for his
armature, and experimented with different kinds
of iron. Cores were made of cast iron, others
of forged iron; and still others of sheets of
iron of various thicknesses separated from each
other by paper or paint. These cores were then
allowed to run in an excited field, and after a
given time their temperature was measured and
noted. By such practical methods Edison found
that the thin, laminated cores of sheet iron
gave the least heat, and had the least amount of
wasteful eddy currents. His experiments and
ideas on magnetism at that period were far in
advance of the time. His work and tests
regarding magnetism were repeated later on by
Hopkinson and Kapp, who then elucidated the
whole theory mathematically by means of formulae
and constants. Before this, however, Edison
had attained these results by pioneer work,
founded on his original reasoning, and utilized
them in the construction of his dynamo, thus
revolutionizing the art of building such
machines.
After thorough investigation of the magnetic
qualities of different kinds of iron, Edison
began to make a study of winding the cores,
first determining the electromotive force
generated per turn of wire at various speeds in
fields of different intensities. He also
considered various forms and shapes for the
armature, and by methodical and systematic
research obtained the data and best conditions
upon which he could build his generator. In the
field magnets of his dynamo he constructed the
cores and yoke of forged iron having a very large
cross-section, which was a new thing in those
days. Great attention was also paid to all the
joints, which were smoothed down so as to make a
perfect magnetic contact. The Edison dynamo,
with its large masses of iron, was a vivid
contrast to the then existing types with their
meagre quantities of the ferric element. Edison
also made tests on his field magnets by slowly
raising the strength of the exciting current, so
that he obtained figures similar to those shown
by a magnetic curve, and in this way found where
saturation commenced, and where it was useless
to expend more current on the field. If he had
asked Upton at the time to formulate the results
of his work in this direction, for publication,
he would have anticipated the historic work on
magnetism that was executed by the two other
investigators; Hopkinson and Kapp, later on.
The laboratory note-books of the period bear
abundant evidence of the systematic and searching
nature of these experiments and investigations,
in the hundreds of pages of notes, sketches,
calculations, and tables made at the time by
Edison, Upton, Batchelor, Jehl, and by
others who from time to time were intrusted with
special experiments to elucidate some particular
point. Mr. Jehl says: "The experiments on
armature-winding were also very interesting.
Edison had a number of small wooden cores made,
at both ends of which we inserted little brass
nails, and we wound the wooden cores with twine
as if it were wire on an armature. In this way
we studied armature-winding, and had matches
where each of us had a core, while bets were
made as to who would be the first to finish
properly and correctly a certain kind of
winding. Care had to be taken that the wound
core corresponded to the direction of the
current, supposing it were placed in a field and
revolved. After Edison had decided this
question, Upton made drawings and tables from
which the real armatures were wound and connected
to the commutator. To a student of to-day all
this seems simple, but in those days the art of
constructing dynamos was about as dark as air
navigation is at present.... Edison also
improved the armature by dividing it and the
commutator into a far greater number of sections
than up to that time had been the practice. He
was also the first to use mica in insulating the
commutator sections from each other."
In the mean time, during the progress of the
investigations on the dynamo, word had gone out
to the world that Edison expected to invent a
generator of greater efficiency than any that
existed at the time. Again he was assailed and
ridiculed by the technical press, for had not
the foremost electricians and physicists of
Europe and America worked for years on the
production of dynamos and arc lamps as they then
existed? Even though this young man at Menlo
Park had done some wonderful things for
telegraphy and telephony; even if he had
recorded and reproduced human speech, he had his
limitations, and could not upset the settled
dictum of science that the internal resistance
must equal the external resistance.
Such was the trend of public opinion at the
time, but "after Mr. Kruesi had finished the
first practical dynamo, and after Mr. Upton
had tested it thoroughly and verified his figures
and results several times-- for he also was
surprised--Edison was able to tell the world
that he had made a generator giving an efficiency
of 90 per cent." Ninety per cent. as
against 40 per cent. was a mighty hit, and
the world would not believe it. Criticism and
argument were again at their height, while
Upton, as Edison's duellist, was kept busy
replying to private and public challenges of the
fact.... "The tremendous progress of the
world in the last quarter of a century, owing to
the revolution caused by the all-conquering
march of `Heavy Current Engineering,' is
the outcome of Edison's work at Menlo Park
that raised the efficiency of the dynamo from
40 per cent. to 90 per cent."
Mr. Upton sums it all up very precisely in his
remarks upon this period: "What has now been
made clear by accurate nomenclature was then very
foggy in the text-books. Mr. Edison had
completely grasped the effect of subdivision of
circuits, and the influence of wires leading to
such subdivisions, when it was most difficult to
express what he knew in technical language. I
remember distinctly when Mr. Edison gave me
the problem of placing a motor in circuit in
multiple arc with a fixed resistance; and I had
to work out the problem entirely, as I could
find no prior solution. There was nothing I
could find bearing upon the counter electromotive
force of the armature, and the effect of the
resistance of the armature on the work given out
by the armature. It was a wonderful experience
to have problems given me out of the intuitions
of a great mind, based on enormous experience in
practical work, and applying to new lines of
progress. One of the main impressions left upon
me after knowing Mr. Edison for many years is
the marvellous accuracy of his guesses. He will
see the general nature of a result long before it
can be reached by mathematical calculation. His
greatness was always to be clearly seen when
difficulties arose. They always made him
cheerful, and started him thinking; and very
soon would come a line of suggestions which would
not end until the difficulty was met and
overcome, or found insurmountable. I have
often felt that Mr. Edison got himself
purposely into trouble by premature publications
and otherwise, so that he would have a full
incentive to get himself out of the trouble."
This chapter may well end with a statement from
Mr. Jehl, shrewd and observant, as a
participator in all the early work of the
development of the Edison lighting system:
"Those who were gathered around him in the old
Menlo Park laboratory enjoyed his confidence,
and he theirs. Nor was this confidence ever
abused. He was respected with a respect which
only great men can obtain, and he never showed
by any word or act that he was their employer in
a sense that would hurt the feelings, as is
often the case in the ordinary course of business
life. He conversed, argued, and disputed with
us all as if he were a colleague on the same
footing. It was his winning ways and manners
that attached us all so loyally to his side, and
made us ever ready with a boundless devotion to
execute any request or desire." Thus does a
great magnet, run through a heap of sand and
filings, exert its lines of force and attract
irresistibly to itself the iron and steel
particles that are its affinity, and having
sifted them out, leaving the useless dust
behind, hold them to itself with responsive
tenacity.
|
|