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IN Berlin, on December 11, 1908,
with notable eclat, the seventieth birthday was
celebrated of Emil Rathenau, the founder of
the great Allgemein Elektricitaets
Gesellschaft. This distinguished German,
creator of a splendid industry, then received
the congratulations of his fellow-countrymen,
headed by Emperor William, who spoke
enthusiastically of his services to
electro-technics and to Germany. In his
interesting acknowledgment, Mr. Rathenau told
how he went to Paris in 1881, and at the
electrical exhibition there saw the display of
Edison's inventions in electric lighting
"which have met with as little proper
appreciation as his countless innovations in
connection with telegraphy, telephony, and the
entire electrical industry." He saw the
Edison dynamo, and he saw the incandescent
lamp, "of which millions have been manufactured
since that day without the great master being
paid the tribute to his invention." But what
impressed the observant, thoroughgoing German
was the breadth with which the whole lighting art
had been elaborated and perfected, even at that
early day. "The Edison system of lighting was
as beautifully conceived down to the very
details, and as thoroughly worked out as if it
had been tested for decades in various towns.
Neither sockets, switches, fuses,
lamp-holders, nor any of the other accessories
necessary to complete the installation were
wanting; and the generating of the current, the
regulation, the wiring with distributing boxes,
house connections, meters, etc., all showed
signs of astonishing skill and incomparable
genius."
Such praise on such an occasion from the man who
introduced incandescent electric lighting into
Germany is significant as to the continued
appreciation abroad of Mr. Edison's work.
If there is one thing modern Germany is proud
and jealous of, it is her leadership in
electrical engineering and investigation. But
with characteristic insight, Mr. Rathenau
here placed his finger on the great merit that
has often been forgotten. Edison was not simply
the inventor of a new lamp and a new dynamo.
They were invaluable elements, but far from all
that was necessary. His was the mighty
achievement of conceiving and executing in all
its details an art and an industry absolutely new
to the world. Within two years this man
completed and made that art available in its
essential, fundamental facts, which remain
unchanged after thirty years of rapid improvement
and widening application.
Such a stupendous feat, whose equal is far to
seek anywhere in the history of invention, is
worth studying, especially as the task will take
us over much new ground and over very little of
the territory already covered. Notwithstanding
the enormous amount of thought and labor expended
on the incandescent lamp problem from the autumn
of 1878 to the winter of 1879, it must
not be supposed for one moment that Edison's
whole endeavor and entire inventive skill had
been given to the lamp alone, or the dynamo
alone. We have sat through the long watches of
the night while Edison brooded on the real
solution of the swarming problems. We have
gazed anxiously at the steady fingers of the deft
and cautious Batchelor, as one fragile filament
after another refused to stay intact until it
could be sealed into its crystal prison and there
glow with light that never was before on land or
sea. We have calculated armatures and field
coils for the new dynamo with Upton, and held
the stakes for Jehl and his fellows at their
winding bees. We have seen the mineral and
vegetable kingdoms rifled and ransacked for
substances that would yield the best
"filament." We have had the vague
consciousness of assisting at a great development
whose evidences to-day on every hand attest its
magnitude. We have felt the fierce play of
volcanic effort, lifting new continents of
opportunity from the infertile sea, without any
devastation of pre-existing fields of human toil
and harvest. But it still remains to elucidate
the actual thing done; to reduce it to concrete
data, and in reducing, to unfold its colossal
dimensions.
The lighting system that Edison contemplated in
this entirely new departure from antecedent
methods included the generation of electrical
energy, or current, on a very large scale; its
distribution throughout extended areas, and its
division and subdivision into small units
converted into light at innumerable points in
every direction from the source of supply, each
unit to be independent of every oth- er and
susceptible to immediate control by the user.
This was truly an altogether prodigious
undertaking. We need not wonder that Professor
Tyndall, in words implying grave doubt as to
the possibility of any solution of the various
problems, said publicly that he would much
rather have the matter in Edison's hands than
in his own. There were no precedents, nothing
upon which to build or improve. The problems
could only be answered by the creation of new
devices and methods expressly worked out for
their solution. An electric lamp answering
certain specific requirements would, indeed, be
the key to the situation, but its commercial
adaptation required a multifarious variety of
apparatus and devices. The word "system" is
much abused in invention, and during the early
days of electric lighting its use applied to a
mere freakish lamp or dynamo was often
ludicrous. But, after all, nothing short of a
complete system could give real value to the lamp
as an invention; nothing short of a system could
body forth the new art to the public. Let us
therefore set down briefly a few of the leading
items needed for perfect illumination by
electricity, all of which were part of the
Edison programme:
First--To conceive a broad and fundamentally
correct method of distributing the current,
satisfactory in a scientific sense and practical
commercially in its efficiency and economy.
This meant, ready made, a comprehensive plan
analogous to illumination by gas, with a network
of conductors all connected together, so that in
any given city area the lights could be fed with
electricity from several directions, thus
eliminating any interruption due to the
disturbance on any particular section.
Second--To devise an electric lamp that would
give about the same amount of light as a gas
jet, which custom had proven to be a suitable
and useful unit. This lamp must possess the
quality of requiring only a small investment in
the copper conductors reaching it. Each lamp
must be independent of every other lamp. Each
and all the lights must be produced and operated
with sufficient economy to compete on a
commercial basis with gas. The lamp must be
durable, capable of being easily and safely
handled by the public, and one that would remain
capable of burning at full incandescence and
candle-power a great length of time.
Third--To devise means whereby the amount of
electrical energy furnished to each and every
customer could be determined, as in the case of
gas, and so that this could be done cheaply and
reliably by a meter at the customer's premises.
Fourth--To elaborate a system or network of
conductors capable of being placed underground or
overhead, which would allow of being tapped at
any intervals, so that service wires could be
run from the main conductors in the street into
each building. Where these mains went below the
surface of the thoroughfare, as in large
cities, there must be protective conduit or pipe
for the copper conductors, and these pipes must
allow of being tapped wherever necessary. With
these conductors and pipes must also be furnished
manholes, junction-boxes, con- nections, and
a host of varied paraphernalia insuring perfect
general distribution.
Fifth--To devise means for maintaining at all
points in an extended area of distribution a
practically even pressure of current, so that
all the lamps, wherever located, near or far
away from the central station, should give an
equal light at all times, independent of the
number that might be turned on; and safeguarding
the lamps against rupture by sudden and violent
fluctuations of current. There must also be
means for thus regulating at the point where the
current was generated the quality or pressure of
the current throughout the whole lighting area,
with devices for indicating what such pressure
might actually be at various points in the area.
Sixth--To design efficient dynamos, such not
being in existence at the time, that would
convert economically the steam-power of
high-speed engines into electrical energy,
together with means for connecting and
disconnecting them with the exterior consumption
circuits; means for regulating, equalizing
their loads, and adjusting the number of dynamos
to be used according to the fluctuating demands
on the central station. Also the arrangement of
complete stations with steam and electric
apparatus and auxiliary devices for insuring
their efficient and continuous operation.
Seventh--To invent devices that would prevent
the current from becoming excessive upon any
conductors, causing fire or other injury; also
switches for turning the current on and off;
lamp-holders, fixtures, and the like; also
means and methods for establishing the interior
circuits that were to carry current to
chandeliers and fixtures in buildings.
Here was the outline of the programme laid down
in the autumn of 1878, and pursued through
all its difficulties to definite accomplishment
in about eighteen months, some of the steps
being made immediately, others being taken as
the art evolved. It is not to be imagined for
one moment that Edison performed all the
experiments with his own hands. The method of
working at Menlo Park has already been
described in these pages by those who
participated. It would not only have been
physically impossible for one man to have done
all this work himself, in view of the time and
labor required, and the endless detail; but
most of the apparatus and devices invented or
suggested by him as the art took shape required
the handiwork of skilled mechanics and artisans
of a high order of ability. Toward the end of
1879 the laboratory force thus numbered at
least one hundred earnest men. In this respect
of collaboration, Edison has always adopted a
policy that must in part be taken to explain his
many successes. Some inventors of the greatest
ability, dealing with ideas and conceptions of
importance, have found it impossible to organize
or even to tolerate a staff of co-workers,
preferring solitary and secret toil, incapable
of team work, or jealous of any intrusion that
could possibly bar them from a full and complete
claim to the result when obtained. Edison
always stood shoulder to shoulder with his
associates, but no one ever questioned the
leadership, nor was it ever in doubt where the
inspiration originated. The real truth is that
Edison has always been so ceaselessly fertile of
ideas himself, he has had more than his whole
staff could ever do to try them all out; he has
sought co-operation, but no exterior
suggestion. As a matter of fact a great many of
the "Edison men" have made notable inventions
of their own, with which their names are
imperishably associated; but while they were
with Edison it was with his work that they were
and must be busied.
It was during this period of "inventing a
system" that so much systematic and continuous
work with good results was done by Edison in the
design and perfection of dynamos. The value of
his contributions to the art of lighting
comprised in this work has never been fully
understood or appreciated, having been so
greatly overshadowed by his invention of the
incandescent lamp, and of a complete system of
distribution. It is a fact, however, that the
principal improvements he made in
dynamo-electric generators were of a radical
nature and remain in the art. Thirty years
bring about great changes, especially in a field
so notably progressive as that of the generation
of electricity; but different as are the dynamos
of to-day from those of the earlier period,
they embody essential principles and elements
that Edison then marked out and elaborated as
the conditions of success. There was indeed
prompt appreciation in some well-informed
quarters of what Edison was doing, evidenced by
the sensation caused in the summer of 1881,
when he designed, built, and shipped to Paris
for the first Electrical Exposition ever held,
the largest dynamo that had been built up to that
time. It was capable of lighting twelve hundred
incandescent lamps, and weighed with its engine
twenty-seven tons, the armature alone weighing
six tons. It was then, and for a long time
after, the eighth wonder of the scientific
world, and its arrival and installation in
Paris were eagerly watched by the most famous
physicists and electricians of Europe.
Edison's amusing description of his experience
in shipping the dynamo to Paris when built may
appropriately be given here: "I built a very
large dynamo with the engine directly connected,
which I intended for the Paris Exposition of
1881. It was one or two sizes larger than
those I had previously built. I had only a
very short period in which to get it ready and
put it on a steamer to reach the Exposition in
time. After the machine was completed we found
the voltage was too low. I had to devise a way
of raising the voltage without changing the
machine, which I did by adding extra magnets.
After this was done, we tested the machine,
and the crank-shaft of the engine broke and flew
clear across the shop. By working night and day
a new crank-shaft was put in, and we only had
three days left from that time to get it on board
the steamer; and had also to run a test. So we
made arrangements with the Tammany leader, and
through him with the police, to clear the
street--one of the New York crosstown
streets--and line it with policemen, as we
proposed to make a quick passage, and didn't
know how much time it would take. About four
hours before the steamer had to get it, the
machine was shut down after the test, and a
schedule was made out in advance of what each man
had to do. Sixty men were put on top of the
dynamo to get it ready, and each man had written
orders as to what he was to perform. We got it
all taken apart and put on trucks and started
off. They drove the horses with a fire-bell in
front of them to the French pier, the policemen
lining the streets. Fifty men were ready to
help the stevedores get it on the steamer--and
we were one hour ahead of time."
This Exposition brings us, indeed, to a
dramatic and rather pathetic parting of the
ways. The hour had come for the old laboratory
force that had done such brilliant and memorable
work to disband, never again to assemble under
like conditions for like effort, although its
members all remained active in the field, and
many have ever since been associated prominently
with some department of electrical enterprise.
The fact was they had done their work so well
they must now disperse to show the world what it
was, and assist in its industrial exploitation.
In reality, they were too few for the demands
that reached Edison from all parts of the world
for the introduction of his system; and in the
emergency the men nearest to him and most trusted
were those upon whom he could best depend for
such missionary work as was now required. The
disciples full of fire and enthusiasm, as well
as of knowledge and experience, were soon
scattered to the four winds, and the rapidity
with which the Edison system was everywhere
successfully introduced is testimony to the good
judgment with which their leader had originally
selected them as his colleagues. No one can say
exactly just how this process of disintegration
began, but Mr. E. H. John- son had
already been sent to England in the Edison
interests, and now the question arose as to what
should be done with the French demands and the
Paris Electrical Exposition, whose importance
as a point of new departure in electrical
industry was speedily recognized on both sides of
the Atlantic. It is very interesting to note
that as the earlier staff broke up, Edison
became the centre of another large body, equally
devoted, but more particularly concerned with
the commercial development of his ideas. Mr.
E. G. Acheson mentions in his personal notes
on work at the laboratory, that in December of
1880, while on some experimental work, he
was called to the new lamp factory started
recently at Menlo Park, and there found
Edison, Johnson, Batchelor, and Upton in
conference, and "Edison informed me that Mr.
Batchelor, who was in charge of the
construction, development, and operation of the
lamp factory, was soon to sail for Europe to
prepare for the exhibit to be made at the
Electrical Exposition to be held in Paris
during the coming summer." These preparations
overlap the reinforcement of the staff with some
notable additions, chief among them being Mr.
Samuel Insull, whose interesting narrative of
events fits admirably into the story at this
stage, and gives a vivid idea of the intense
activity and excitement with which the whole
atmosphere around Edison was then surcharged:
"I first met Edison on March 1, 1881.
I arrived in New York on the City of Chester
about five or six in the evening, and went
direct to 65 Fifth Avenue. I had come over
to act as Edison's private secretary, the
position having been obtained for me through the
good offices of Mr. E. H. Johnson, whom
I had known in London, and who wrote to Mr.
U. H. Painter, of Washington, about me in
the fall of 1880. Mr. Painter sent the
letter on to Mr. Batchelor, who turned it
over to Edison. Johnson returned to America
late in the fall of 1880, and in January,
1881, cabled to me to come to this country.
At the time he cabled for me Edison was still
at Menlo Park, but when I arrived in New
York the famous offices of the Edison Electric
Light Company had been opened at `65'
Fifth Avenue, and Edison had moved into New
York with the idea of assisting in the
exploitation of the Light Company's business.
"I was taken by Johnson direct from the Inman
Steamship pier to 65 Fifth Avenue, and met
Edison for the first time. There were three
rooms on the ground floor at that time. The
front one was used as a kind of reception-room;
the room immediately behind it was used as the
office of the president of the Edison Electric
Light Company, Major S. B. Eaton. The
rear room, which was directly back of the front
entrance hall, was Edison's office, and there
I first saw him. There was very little in the
room except a couple of walnut roller-top
desks--which were very generally used in
American offices at that time. Edison received
me with great cordiality. I think he was
possibly disappointed at my being so young a
man; I had only just turned twenty-one, and
had a very boyish appearance. The picture of
Edison is as vivid to me now as if the incident
occurred yesterday, although it is now more than
twenty-nine years since that first meeting. I
had been connected with Edison's affairs in
England as private secretary to his London
agent for about two years; and had been taught
by Johnson to look on Edison as the greatest
electrical inventor of the day--a view of him,
by-the-way, which has been greatly
strengthened as the years have rolled by. Owing
to this, and to the fact that I felt highly
flattered at the appointment as his private
secretary, I was naturally prepared to accept
him as a hero. With my strict English ideas as
to the class of clothes to be worn by a prominent
man, there was nothing in Edison's dress to
impress me. He wore a rather seedy black
diagonal Prince Albert coat and waistcoat,
with trousers of a dark material, and a white
silk handkerchief around his neck, tied in a
careless knot falling over the stiff bosom of a
white shirt somewhat the worse for wear. He had
a large wide-awake hat of the sombrero pattern
then generally used in this country, and a
rough, brown overcoat, cut somewhat similarly
to his Prince Albert coat. His hair was worn
quite long, and hanging carelessly over his fine
forehead. His face was at that time, as it is
now, clean shaven. He was full in face and
figure, although by no means as stout as he has
grown in recent years. What struck me above
everything else was the wonderful intelligence
and magnetism of his expression, and the extreme
brightness of his eyes. He was far more modest
than in my youthful picture of him. I had
expected to find a man of distinction. His
appearance, as a whole, was not what you would
call `slovenly,' it is best expressed by the
word `careless.' "
Mr. Insull supplements this pen-picture by
another, bearing upon the hustle and bustle of
the moment: "After a short conversation
Johnson hurried me off to meet his family, and
later in the evening, about eight o'clock, he
and I returned to Edison's office; and I
found myself launched without further ceremony
into Edison's business affairs. Johnson had
already explained to me that he was sailing the
next morning, March 2d, on the S.S.
Arizona, and that Mr. Edison wanted to spend
the evening discussing matters in connection with
his European affairs. It was assumed,
inasmuch as I had just arrived from London,
that I would be able to give more or less
information on this subject. As Johnson was to
sail the next morning at five o'clock, Edison
explained that it would be necessary for him to
have an understanding of European matters.
Edison started out by drawing from his desk a
check-book and stating how much money he had in
the bank; and he wanted to know what European
telephone securities were most salable, as he
wished to raise the necessary funds to put on
their feet the incandescent lamp factory, the
Electric Tube works, and the necessary shops
to build dynamos. All through the interview I
was tremendously impressed with Edison's
wonderful resourcefulness and grasp, and his
immediate appreciation of any suggestion of
consequence bearing on the subject under
discussion.
"He spoke with very great enthusiasm of the
work before him--namely, the development of
his electric- lighting system; and his one idea
seemed to be to raise all the money he could with
the object of pouring it into the manufacturing
side of the lighting business. I remember how
extraordinarily I was impressed with him on this
account, as I had just come from a circle of
people in London who not only questioned the
possibility of the success of Edison's
invention, but often expressed doubt as to
whether the work he had done could be called an
invention at all. After discussing affairs with
Johnson--who was receiving his final
instructions from Edison--far into the night,
and going down to the steamer to see Johnson
aboard, I finished my first night's business
with Edison somewhere between four and five in
the morning, feeling thoroughly imbued with the
idea that I had met one of the great master
minds of the world. You must allow for my
youthful enthusiasm, but you must also bear in
mind Edison's peculiar gift of magnetism,
which has enabled him during his career to attach
so many men to him. I fell a victim to the
spell at the first interview."
Events moved rapidly in those days. The next
morning, Tuesday, Edison took his new fidus
Achates with him to a conference with John
Roach, the famous old ship-builder, and at it
agreed to take the AEtna Iron works, where
Roach had laid the foundations of his fame and
fortune. These works were not in use at the
time. They were situated on Goerck Street,
New York, north of Grand Street, on the
east side of the city, and there, very soon
after, was established the first Edison
dynamo-manufacturing establishment, known for
many years as the Edison Machine Works. The
same night Insull made his first visit to Menlo
Park. Up to that time he had seen very little
incandescent lighting, for the simple reason
that there was very little to see. Johnson had
had a few Edison lamps in London, lit up from
primary batteries, as a demonstration; and in
the summer of 1880 Swan had had a few series
lamps burning in London. In New York a small
gas-engine plant was being started at the
Edison offices on Fifth Avenue. But out at
Menlo Park there was the first actual
electric-lighting central station, supplying
distributed incandescent lamps and some electric
motors by means of underground conductors
imbedded in asphaltum and surrounded by a wooden
box. Mr. Insull says: "The system employed
was naturally the two-wire, as at that time the
three-wire had not been thought of. The lamps
were partly of the horseshoe filament
paper-carbon type, and partly bamboo-filament
lamps, and were of an efficiency of 95 to
100 watts per 16 c.p. I can never forget
the impression that this first view of the
electric-lighting industry produced on me.
Menlo Park must always be looked upon as the
birthplace of the electric light and power
industry. At that time it was the only place
where could be seen an electric light and power
multiple arc distribution system, the operation
of which seemed as successful to my youthful mind
as the operation of one of the large metropolitan
systems to-day. I well remember about ten
o'clock that night going down to the Menlo
Park depot and getting the station agent, who
was also the telegraph operator, to send some
cable messages for me to my London friends,
announcing that I had seen Edison's
incandescent lighting system in actual
operation, and that so far as I could tell it
was an accomplished fact. A few weeks afterward
I received a letter from one of my London
friends, who was a doubting Thomas, upbraiding
me for coming so soon under the spell of the
`Yankee inventor.' "
It was to confront and deal with just this
element of doubt in London and in Europe
generally, that the dispatch of Johnson to
England and of Batchelor to France was
intended. Throughout the Edison staff there
was a mingled feeling of pride in the work,
resentment at the doubts expressed about it, and
keen desire to show how excellent it was.
Batchelor left for Paris in July,
1881--on his second trip to Europe that
year--and the exhibit was made which brought
such an instantaneous recognition of the
incalculable value of Edison's lighting
inventions, as evidenced by the awards and
rewards immediately bestowed upon him. He was
made an officer of the Legion of Honor, and
Prof. George F. Barker cabled as follows
from Paris, announcing the decision of the
expert jury which passed upon the exhibits:
"Accept my congratulations. You have
distanced all competitors and obtained a diploma
of honor, the highest award given in the
Exposition. No person in any class in which
you were an exhibitor received a like reward."
Nor was this all. Eminent men in science who
had previously expressed their disbelief in the
statements made as to the Edison system were now
foremost in generous praise of his notable
achievements, and accorded him full credit for
its completion. A typical instance was M. Du
Moncel, a distinguished electrician, who had
written cynically about Edison's work and
denied its practicability. He now recanted
publicly in this language, which in itself shows
the state of the art when Edison came to the
front: "All these experiments achieved but
moderate success, and when, in 1879, the
new Edison incandescent carbon lamp was
announced, many of the scientists, and I,
particularly, doubted the accuracy of the
reports which came from America. This
horseshoe of carbonized paper seemed incapable to
resist mechanical shocks and to maintain
incandescence for any considerable length of
time. Nevertheless, Mr. Edison was not
discouraged, and despite the active opposition
made to his lamp, despite the polemic acerbity
of which he was the object, he did not cease to
perfect it; and he succeeded in producing the
lamps which we now behold exhibited at the
Exposition, and are admired by all for their
perfect steadiness."
The competitive lamps exhibited and tested at
this time comprised those of Edison, Maxim,
Swan, and Lane-Fox. The demonstration of
Edison's success stimulated the faith of his
French supporters, and rendered easier the
completion of plans for the Societe Edison
Continental, of Paris, formed to operate the
Edison patents on the Continent of Europe.
Mr. Batchelor, with Messrs. Acheson and
Hipple, and one or two other assistants, at
the close of the Exposition transferred their
energies to the construction and equipment of
machine-shops and lamp factories at
Ivry-sur-Seine for the company, and in a
very short time the installation of plants began
in various countries--France, Italy,
Holland, Belgium, etc.
All through 1881 Johnson was very busy,
for his part, in England. The first
"Jumbo" Edison dynamo had gone to Paris;
the second and third went to London, where they
were installed in 1881 by Mr. Johnson and
his assistant, Mr. W. J. Hammer, in the
three-thousand-light central station on
Holborn Viaduct, the plant going into
operation on January 12, 1882. Outside
of Menlo Park this was the first regular
station for incandescent lighting in the world,
as the Pearl Street station in New York did
not go into operation until September of the
same year. This historic plant was hurriedly
thrown together on Crown land, and would
doubtless have been the nucleus of a great system
but for the passage of the English electric
lighting act of 1882, which at once
throttled the industry by its absurd restrictive
provisions, and which, though greatly
modified, has left England ever since in a
condition of serious inferiority as to
development in electric light and power. The
streets and bridges of Holborn Viaduct were
lighted by lamps turned on and off from the
station, as well as the famous City Temple of
Dr. Joseph Parker, the first church in the
world to be lighted by incandescent
lamps--indeed, so far as can be ascertained,
the first church to be illuminated by electricity
in any form. Mr. W. J. Hammer, who
supplies some very interesting notes on the
installation, says: "I well remember the
astonishment of Doctor Parker and his
associates when they noted the difference of
temperature as compared with gas. I was
informed that the people would not go in the
gallery in warm weather, owing to the great heat
caused by the many gas jets, whereas on the
introduction of the incandescent lamp there was
no complaint." The telegraph operating-room
of the General Post-Office, at St.
Martin's-Le Grand and Newgate Street
nearby, was supplied with four hundred lamps
through the instrumentality of Mr. (Sir)
W. H. Preece, who, having been seriously
sceptical as to Mr. Edison's results, became
one of his most ardent advocates, and did much
to facilitate the introduction of the light.
This station supplied its customers by a network
of feeders and mains of the standard underground
two-wire Edison tubing-conductors in sections
of iron pipe--such as was used subsequently in
New York, Milan, and other cities. It also
had a measuring system for the current,
employing the Edison electrolytic meter. Arc
lamps were operated from its circuits, and one
of the first sets of practicable storage
batteries was used experimentally at the
station. In connection with these batteries
Mr. Hammer tells a characteristic anecdote of
Edison: "A careless boy passing through the
station whistling a tune and swinging carelessly
a hammer in his hand, rapped a carboy of
sulphuric acid which happened to be on the floor
above a `Jumbo' dynamo. The blow broke the
glass carboy, and the acid ran down upon the
field magnets of the dynamo, destroying the
windings of one of the twelve magnets. This
accident happened while I was taking a vacation
in Germany, and a prominent scientific man
connected with the company cabled Mr. Edison
to know whether the machine would work if the
coil was cut out. Mr. Edison sent the laconic
reply: `Why doesn't he try it and see?'
Mr. E. H. Johnson was kept busy not only
with the cares and responsibilities of this
pioneer English plant, but by negotiations as
to company formations, hearings before
Parliamentary committees, and particularly by
distinguished visitors, including all the
foremost scientific men in England, and a great
many well- known members of the peerage.
Edison was fortunate in being represented by a
man with so much address, intimate knowledge of
the subject, and powers of explanation. As one
of the leading English papers said at the time,
with equal humor and truth: `There is but one
Edison, and Johnson is his prophet.' "
As the plant continued in operation, various
details and ideas of improvement emerged, and
Mr. Hammer says: "Up to the time of the
construction of this plant it had been customary
to place a single-pole switch on one wire and a
safety fuse on the other; and the practice of
putting fuses on both sides of a lighting circuit
was first used here. Some of the first, if not
the very first, of the insulated fixtures were
used in this plant, and many of the fixtures
were equipped with ball insulating joints,
enabling the chandeliers--or
`electroliers'--to be turned around, as was
common with the gas chandeliers. This
particular device was invented by Mr. John
B. Verity, whose firm built many of the
fixtures for the Edison Company, and
constructed the notable electroliers shown at the
Crystal Palace Exposition of 1882."
We have made a swift survey of developments from
the time when the system of lighting was ready
for use, and when the staff scattered to
introduce it. It will be readily understood
that Edison did not sit with folded hands or
drop into complacent satisfac- tion the moment
he had reached the practical stage of commercial
exploitation. He was not willing to say "Let
us rest and be thankful," as was one of
England's great Liberal leaders after a long
period of reform. On the contrary, he was
never more active than immediately after the work
we have summed up at the beginning of this
chapter. While he had been pursuing his
investigations of the generator in conjunction
with the experiments on the incandescent lamp,
he gave much thought to the question of
distribution of the current over large areas,
revolving in his mind various plans for the
accomplishment of this purpose, and keeping his
mathematicians very busy working on the various
schemes that suggested themselves from time to
time. The idea of a complete system had been in
his mind in broad outline for a long time, but
did not crystallize into commercial form until
the incandescent lamp was an accomplished fact.
Thus in January, 1880, his first patent
application for a "System of Electrical
Distribution" was signed. It was filed in the
Patent Office a few days later, but was not
issued as a patent until August 30,
1887. It covered, fundamentally, multiple
arc distribution, how broadly will be understood
from the following extracts from the New York
Electrical Review of September 10,
1887: "It would appear as if the entire
field of multiple distribution were now in the
hands of the owners of this patent.... The
patent is about as broad as a patent can be,
being regardless of specific devices, and laying
a powerful grasp on the fundamental idea of
multiple distribution from a number of generators
throughout a metallic circuit."
Mr. Edison made a number of other applications
for patents on electrical distribution during the
year 1880. Among these was the one covering
the celebrated "Feeder" invention, which has
been of very great commercial importance in the
art, its object being to obviate the "drop" in
pressure, rendering lights dim in those portions
of an electric-light system that were remote
from the central station.[10]
From these two patents alone, which were
absolutely basic and fundamental in effect, and
both of which were, and still are, put into
actual use wherever central-station lighting is
practiced, the reader will see that Mr.
Edison's patient and thorough study, aided by
his keen foresight and unerring judgment, had
enabled him to grasp in advance with a master
hand the chief and underlying principles of a
true system-- that system which has since been
put into practical use all over the world, and
whose elements do not need the touch or change of
more modern scientific knowledge.
These patents were not by any means all that he
applied for in the year 1880, which it will
be remembered was the year in which he was
perfecting the incandescent electric lamp and
methods, to put into the market for competition
with gas. It was an extraordinarily busy year
for Mr. Edison and his whole force, which
from time to time was increased in number.
Improvement upon improvement was the order of
the day. That which was considered good to-day
was superseded by something better and more
serviceable to-morrow. Device after device,
relating to some part of the entire system, was
designed, built, and tried, only to be
rejected ruthlessly as being unsuitable; but the
pursuit was not abandoned. It was renewed over
and over again in innumerable ways until success
had been attained.
During the year 1880 Edison had made
application for sixty patents, of which
thirty-two were in relation to incandescent
lamps; seven covered inventions relating to
distributing systems (including the two above
particularized); five had reference to
inventions of parts, such as motors, sockets,
etc.; six covered inventions relating to
dynamo-electric machines; three related to
electric railways, and seven to miscellaneous
apparatus, such as telegraph relays, magnetic
ore separators, magneto signalling apparatus,
etc.
The list of Mr. Edison's patents (see
Appendices) is not only a monument to his
life's work, but serves to show what subjects
he has worked on from year to year since
1868. The reader will see from an
examination of this list that the years
1880, 1881, 1882, and 1883
were the most prolific periods of invention. It
is worth while to scrutinize this list closely to
appreciate the wide range of his activities.
Not that his patents cover his entire range of
work by any means, for his note-books reveal a
great number of major and minor inventions for
which he has not seen fit to take out patents.
Moreover, at the period now described Edison
was the victim of a dishonest patent solicitor,
who deprived him of a number of patents in the
following manner:
"Around 1881-82 I had several
solicitors attending to different classes of
work. One of these did me a most serious
injury. It was during the time that I was
developing my electric-lighting system, and I
was working and thinking very hard in order to
cover all the numerous parts, in order that it
would be complete in every detail. I filed a
great many applications for patents at that
time, but there were seventy-eight of the
inventions I made in that period that were
entirely lost to me and my company by reason of
the dishonesty of this patent solicitor.
Specifications had been drawn, and I had
signed and sworn to the application for patents
for these seventy-eight inventions, and
naturally I supposed they had been filed in the
regular way.
"As time passed I was looking for some action
of the Patent Office, as usual, but none
came. I thought it very strange, but had no
suspicions until I began to see my inventions
recorded in the Patent Office Gazette as being
patented by others. Of course I ordered an
investigation, and found that the patent
solicitor had drawn from the company the fees for
filing all these applications, but had never
filed them. All the papers had disappeared,
however, and what he had evidently done was to
sell them to others, who had signed new
applications and proceeded to take out patents
themselves on my inventions. I afterward found
that he had been previously mixed up with a
somewhat similar crooked job in connection with
telephone patents.
"I am free to confess that the loss of these
seventy- eight inventions has left a sore spot
in me that has never healed. They were
important, useful, and valuable, and
represented a whole lot of tremendous work and
mental effort, and I had had a feeling of pride
in having overcome through them a great many
serious obstacles, One of these inventions
covered the multipolar dynamo. It was an
elaborated form of the type covered by my patent
No. 219,393 which had a ring armature.
I modified and improved on this form and had a
number of pole pieces placed all around the
ring, with a modified form of armature winding.
I built one of these machines and ran it
successfully in our early days at the Goerck
Street shop.
"It is of no practical use to mention the
man's name. I believe he is dead, but he may
have left a family. The occurrence is a matter
of the old Edison Company's records."
It will be seen from an examination of the list
of patents in the Appendix that Mr. Edison
has continued year after year adding to his
contributions to the art of electric lighting,
and in the last twenty- eight
years--1880-1908--has taken out no
fewer than three hundred and seventy-five
patents in this branch of industry alone. These
patents may be roughly tabulated as follows:
Incandescent lamps and their
manufacture....................149
Distributing systems and their control and
regulation....... 77 Dynamo-electric
machines and
accessories....................106
Minor parts, such as sockets, switches,
safety catches, meters, underground conductors
and parts, etc...............
43
Quite naturally most of these patents cover
inventions that are in the nature of improvements
or based upon devices which he had already
created; but there are a number that relate to
inventions absolutely fundamental and original in
their nature. Some of these have already been
alluded to; but among the others there is one
which is worthy of special mention in connection
with the present consideration of a complete
system. This is patent No. 274,290,
applied for November 27, 1882, and is
known as the "Three-wire" patent. It is
described more fully in the Appendix.
The great importance of the "Feeder" and
"Three- wire" inventions will be apparent
when it is realized that without them it is a
question whether electric light could be sold to
compete with low-priced gas, on account of the
large investment in conductors that would be
necessary. If a large city area were to be
lighted from a central station by means of copper
conductors running directly therefrom to all
parts of the district, it would be necessary to
install large conductors, or suffer such a drop
of pressure at the ends most remote from the
station as to cause the lights there to burn with
a noticeable diminution of candle-power. The
Feeder invention overcame this trouble, and
made it possible to use conductors ONLY
ONE-EIGHTH THE SIZE that would
otherwise have been necessary to produce the same
results.
A still further economy in cost of conductors
was effected by the "Three-wire" invention,
by the use of which the already diminished
conductors could be still further reduced TO
ONE-THIRD of this smaller size, and at
the same time allow of the successful operation
of the station with far better results than if it
were operated exactly as at first conceived.
The Feeder and Three-wire systems are at this
day used in all parts of the world, not only in
central-station work, but in the installation
and operation of isolated electric-light plants
in large buildings. No sensible or efficient
station manager or electric contractor would ever
think of an installation made upon any other
plan. Thus Mr. Edison's early conceptions
of the necessities of a complete system, one of
them made even in advance of practice, have
stood firm, unimproved, and unchanged during
the past twenty- eight years, a period of time
which has witnessed more wonderful and rapid
progress in electrical science and art than has
been known during any similar art or period of
time since the world began.
It must be remembered that the complete system
in all its parts is not comprised in the few of
Mr. Edison's patents, of which specific
mention is here made. In order to comprehend
the magnitude and extent of his work and the
quality of his genius, it is necessary to
examine minutely the list of patents issued for
the various elements which go to make up such a
system. To attempt any relation in detail of
the conception and working-out of each part or
element; to enter into any description of the
almost innumerable experiments and investigations
that were made would entail the writing of
several volumes, for Mr. Edison's
close-written note-books covering these
subjects number nearly two hundred.
It is believed that enough evidence has been
given in this chapter to lead to an appreciation
of the assiduous work and practical skill
involved in "inventing a system" of lighting
that would surpass, and to a great extent, in
one single quarter of a century, supersede all
the other methods of illumination developed
during long centuries. But it will be ap-
propriate before passing on to note that on
January 17, 1908, while this biography
was being written, Mr. Edison became the
fourth recipient of the John Fritz gold medal
for achievement in industrial progress. This
medal was founded in 1902 by the professional
friends and associates of the veteran American
ironmaster and metallurgical inventor, in honor
of his eightieth birthday. Awards are made by a
board of sixteen engineers appointed in equal
numbers from the four great national engineering
societies --the American Society of Civil
Engineers, the American Institute of Mining
Engineers, the American Society of
Mechanical Engineers, and the American
Institute of Electrical Engineers, whose
membership embraces the very pick and flower of
professional engineering talent in America. Up
to the time of the Edison award, three others
had been made. The first was to Lord Kelvin,
the Nestor of physics in Europe, for his work
in submarine-cable telegraphy and other
scientific achievement. The second was to
George Westinghouse for the air-brake. The
third was to Alexander Graham Bell for the
invention and introduction of the telephone.
The award to Edison was not only for his
inventions in duplex and quadruplex telegraphy,
and for the phonograph, but for the development
of a commercially practical incandescent lamp,
and the development of a complete system of
electric lighting, including dynamos,
regulating devices, underground system,
protective devices, and meters. Great as has
been the genius brought to bear on electrical
development, there is no other man to whom such
a comprehensive tribute could be paid.
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