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WE have now seen the Edison lighting system
given a complete, convincing demonstration in
Paris, London, and New York; and have
noted steps taken for its introduction elsewhere
on both sides of the Atlantic. The Paris
plant, like that at the Crystal Palace, was a
temporary exhibit. The London plant was less
temporary, but not permanent, supplying before
it was torn out no fewer than three thousand
lamps in hotels, churches, stores, and
dwellings in the vicinity of Holborn Viaduct.
There Messrs. Johnson and Hammer put into
practice many of the ideas now standard in the
art, and secured much useful data for the work
in New York, of which the story has just been
told.
As a matter of fact the first Edison commercial
station to be operated in this country was that
at Appleton, Wisconsin, but its only serious
claim to notice is that it was the initial one of
the system driven by water-power. It went into
service August 15, 1882, about three
weeks before the Pearl Street station. It
consisted of one small dynamo of a capacity of
two hundred and eighty lights of 10 c.p.
each, and was housed in an unpretentious wooden
shed. The dynamo-electric machine, though
small, was robust, for under all the varying
speeds of water- power, and the vicissitudes of
the plant to which it, belonged, it continued
in active use until 1899-- seventeen
years.
Edison was from the first deeply impressed with
the possibilities of water-power, and, as this
incident shows, was prompt to seize such a very
early opportunity. But his attention was in
reality concentrated closely on the supply of
great centres of population, a task which he
then felt might well occupy his lifetime; and
except in regard to furnishing isolated plants he
did not pursue further the development of
hydro-electric stations. That was left to
others, and to the application of the
alternating current, which has enabled engineers
to harness remote powers, and, within
thoroughly economical limits, transmit thousands
of horse-power as much as two hundred miles at
pressures of 80,000 and 100,000
volts. Owing to his insistence on low
pressure, direct current for use in densely
populated districts, as the only safe and truly
universal, profitable way of delivering
electrical energy to the consumers, Edison has
been frequently spoken of as an opponent of the
alternating current. This does him an
injustice. At the time a measure was before the
Virginia legislature, in 1890, to limit
the permissible pressures of current so as to
render it safe, he said: "You want to allow
high pressure wherever the conditions are such
that by no possible accident could that pressure
get into the houses of the consumers; you want
to give them all the latitude you can." In
explaining this he added: "Suppose you want to
take the falls down at Richmond, and want to
put up a water-power? Why, if we erect a
station at the falls, it is a great economy to
get it up to the city. By digging a cheap
trench and putting in an insulated cable, and
connecting such station with the central part of
Richmond, having the end of the cable come up
into the station from the earth and there
connected with motors, the power of the falls
would be transmitted to these motors. If now
the motors were made to run dynamos conveying
low-pressure currents to the public, there is
no possible way whereby this high-pressure
current could get to the public." In other
words, Edison made the sharp fundamental
distinction between high pressure alternating
current for transmission and low pressure direct
current for distribution; and this is exactly
the practice that has been adopted in all the
great cities of the country to-day. There
seems no good reason for believing that it will
change. It might perhaps have been altogether
better for Edison, from the financial
standpoint, if he had not identified himself so
completely with one kind of current, but that
made no difference to him, as it was a matter of
conviction; and Edison's convictions are
granitic. Moreover, this controversy over the
two currents, alternating and direct, which has
become historical in the field of
electricity--and is something like the
"irrepressible conflict" we heard of years ago
in national affairs--illustrates another aspect
of Edison's character. Broad as the prairies
and free in thought as the winds that sweep
them, he is idiosyncratically opposed to loose
and wasteful methods, to plans of empire that
neglect the poor at the gate. Every- thing he
has done has been aimed at the conservation of
energy, the contraction of space, the
intensification of culture. Burbank and his
tribe represent in the vegetable world, Edison
in the mechanical. Not only has he developed
distinctly new species, but he has elucidated
the intensive art of getting $1200 out of an
electrical acre instead of $12--a manured
market-garden inside London and a ten- bushel
exhausted wheat farm outside Lawrence,
Kansas, being the antipodes of
productivity--yet very far short of
exemplifying the difference of electrical yield
between an acre of territory in Edison's
"first New York district" and an acre in some
small town.
Edison's lighting work furnished an excellent
basis-- in fact, the only one--for the
development of the alternating current now so
generally employed in central- station work in
America; and in the McGraw Electrical
Directory of April, 1909, no fewer than
4164 stations out of 5780 reported its
use. When the alternating current was
introduced for practical purposes it was not
needed for arc lighting, the circuit for which,
from a single dynamo, would often be twenty or
thirty miles in length, its current having a
pressure of not less than five or six thousand
volts. For some years it was not found feasible
to operate motors on alternating-current
circuits, and that reason was often urged
against it seriously. It could not be used for
electroplating or deposition, nor could it
charge storage batteries, all of which are
easily within the ability of the direct current.
But when it came to be a question of lighting a
scattered suburb, a group of dwellings on the
outskirts, a remote country residence or a
farm-house, the alternating current, in all
elements save its danger, was and is ideal.
Its thin wires can be carried cheaply over vast
areas, and at each local point of consumption
the transformer of size exactly proportioned to
its local task takes the high-voltage
transmission current and lowers its potential at
a ratio of 20 or 40 to 1, for use in
distribution and consumption circuits. This
evolution has been quite distinct, with its own
inventors like Gaulard and Gibbs and Stanley,
but came subsequent to the work of supplying
small, dense areas of population; the art thus
growing from within, and using each new gain as
a means for further achievement.
Nor was the effect of such great advances as
those made by Edison limited to the electrical
field. Every department of mechanics was
stimulated and benefited to an extraordinary
degree. Copper for the circuits was more highly
refined than ever before to secure the best
conductivity, and purity was insisted on in
every kind of insulation. Edison was intolerant
of sham and shoddy, and nothing would satisfy
him that could not stand cross-examination by
microscope, test-tube, and galvanometer. It
was, perhaps, the steam-engine on which the
deepest imprint for good was made, referred to
already in the remarks of Mr. F. J.
Sprague in the preceding chapter, but best
illustrated in the perfection of the modern
high- speed engine of the Armington & Sims
type. Unless he could secure an engine of
smoother running and more exactly governed and
regulated than those avail- able for his dynamo
and lamp, Edison realized that he would find it
almost impossible to give a steady light. He
did not want his customers to count the
heart-beats of the engine in the flicker of the
lamp. Not a single engine was even within
gunshot of the standard thus set up, but the
emergency called forth its man in Gardiner C.
Sims, a talented draughtsman and designer who
had been engaged in locomotive construction and
in the engineering department of the United
States Navy. He may be quoted as to what
happened: "The deep interest, financial and
moral, and friendly backing I received from
Mr. Edison, together with valuable
suggestions, enabled me to bring out the
engine; as I was quite alone in the
world--poor--I had found a friend who knew
what he wanted and explained it clearly. Mr.
Edison was a leader far ahead of the time. He
compelled the design of the successful engine.
"Our first engine compelled the inventing and
making of a suitable engine indicator to indicate
it--the Tabor. He obtained the desired speed
and load with a friction brake; also regulator
of speed; but waited for an indicator to verify
it. Then again there was no known way to
lubricate an engine for continuous running, and
Mr. Edison informed me that as a marine engine
started before the ship left New York and
continued running until it reached its home
port, so an engine for his purposes must produce
light at all times. That was a poser to me,
for a five-hours' run was about all that had
been required up to that time.
"A day or two later Mr. Edison inquired:
`How far is it from here to Lawrence; it is a
long walk, isn't it?' `Yes, rather.' He
said: `Of course you will understand I meant
without oil.' To say I was deeply perplexed
does not express my feelings. We were at the
machine works, Goerck Street. I started for
the oil-room, when, about entering, I saw a
small funnel lying on the floor. It had been
stepped on and flattened. I took it up, and it
had solved the engine- oiling problem--and my
walk to Lawrence like a tramp actor's was off!
The eccentric strap had a round glass oil-cup
with a brass base that screwed into the strap.
I took it off, and making a sketch, went to
Dave Cunningham, having the funnel in my hand
to illustrate what I wanted made. I requested
him to make a sheet-brass oil-cup and solder it
to the base I had. He did so. I then had a
standard made to hold another oil-cup, so as to
see and regulate the drop-feed. On this
combination I obtained a patent which is now
universally used."
It is needless to say that in due course the
engine builders of the United States developed
a variety of excellent prime movers for
electric-light and power plants, and were
grateful to the art from which such a stimulus
came to their industry; but for many years one
never saw an Edison installation without
expecting to find one or more Armington & Sims
high- speed engines part of it. Though the
type has gone out of existence, like so many
other things that are useful in their day and
generation, it was once a very vital part of the
art, and one more illustration of that intimate
manner in which the advances in different fields
of progress interact and co-operate.
Edison had installed his historic first great
central- station system in New York on the
multiple arc system covered by his feeder and
main invention, which resulted in a notable
saving in the cost of conductors as against a
straight two-wire system throughout of the
"tree" kind. He soon foresaw that still
greater economy would be necessary for commercial
success not alone for the larger territory
opening, but for the compact districts of large
cities. Being firmly convinced that there was a
way out, he pushed aside a mass of other work,
and settled down to this problem, with the
result that on November 20, 1882, only
two months after current had been sent out from
Pearl Street, he executed an application for a
patent covering what is now known as the
"three-wire system." It has been universally
recognized as one of the most valuable inventions
in the history of the lighting art.[13] Its
use resulted in a saving of over 60 per cent.
of copper in conductors, figured on the most
favorable basis previously known, inclusive of
those calculated under his own feeder and main
system. Such economy of outlay being effected
in one of the heaviest items of expense in
central-station construction, it was now made
possible to establish plants in towns where the
large investment would otherwise have been quite
prohibitive. The invention is in universal use
today, alike for direct and for alternating
current, and as well in the equipment of large
buildings as in the distribution system of the
most extensive central-station networks. One
cannot imagine the art without it.
The strong position held by the Edison system,
under the strenuous competition that was already
springing up, was enormously improved by the
introduction of the three-wire system; and it
gave an immediate impetus to incandescent
lighting. Desiring to put this new system into
practical use promptly, and receiving
applications for licenses from all over the
country, Edison selected Brockton,
Massachusetts, and Sunbury, Pennsylvania,
as the two towns for the trial. Of these two
Brockton required the larger plant, but with
the conductors placed underground. It was the
first to complete its arrangements and close its
contract. Mr. Henry Villard, it will be
remembered, had married the daughter of
Garrison, the famous abolitionist, and it was
through his relationship with the Garrison
family that Brockton came to have the honor of
exemplifying so soon the principles of an
entirely new art. Sunbury, however, was a
much smaller installation, employed overhead
conductors, and hence was the first to "cross
the tape." It was specially suited for a trial
plant also, in the early days when a yield of
six or eight lamps to the horse-power was
considered subject for congratulation. The town
being situated in the coal region of
Pennsylvania, good coal could then be obtained
there at seventy-five cents a ton.
The Sunbury generating plant consisted of an
Armington & Sims engine driving two small
Edison dynamos having a total capacity of about
four hundred lamps of 16 c.p. The indicating
instruments were of the crudest construction,
consisting of two voltmeters connected by
"pressure wires" to the centre of electrical
distribution. One ammeter, for measuring the
quantity of current output, was interpolated in
the "neutral bus" or third-wire return circuit
to indicate when the load on the two machines was
out of balance. The circuits were opened and
closed by means of about half a dozen roughly
made plug-switches.[14] The "bus-bars"
to receive the current from the dynamos were made
of No. 000 copper line wire, straightened
out and fastened to the wooden sheathing of the
station by iron staples without any presence to
insulation. Commenting upon this Mr. W.
S. Andrews, detailed from the central staff,
says: "The interior winding of the Sunbury
station, including the running of two
three-wire feeders the entire length of the
building from back to front, the wiring up of
the dynamos and switchboard and all instruments,
together with bus-bars, etc.--in fact, all
labor and material used in the electrical wiring
installation--amounted to the sum of $90.
I received a rather sharp letter from the New
York office expostulating for this
EXTRAVAGANT EXPENDITURE,
and stating that great economy must be observed
in future!" The street conductors were of the
overhead pole-line construction, and were
installed by the construction company that had
been organized by Edison to build and equip
central stations. A special type of street pole
had been devised by him for the three-wire
system.
Supplementing the story of Mr. Andrews is
that of Lieut. F. J. Sprague, who also
gives a curious glimpse of the glorious
uncertainties and vicissitudes of that formative
period. Mr. Sprague served on the jury at the
Crystal Palace Exhibition with Darwin's
son-- the present Sir Horace--and after the
tests were ended left the Navy and entered
Edison's service at the suggestion of Mr.
E. H. Johnson, who was Edison's shrewd
recruiting sergeant in those days: "I resigned
sooner than Johnson expected, and he had me on
his hands. Meanwhile he had called upon me to
make a report of the three-wire system, known
in England as the Hopkinson, both Dr. John
Hopkinson and Mr. Edison being independent
inventors at practically the same time. I
reported on that, left London, and landed in
New York on the day of the opening of the
Brooklyn Bridge in 1883--May 24--
with a year's leave of absence.
"I reported at the office of Mr. Edison on
Fifth Avenue and told him I had seen
Johnson. He looked me over and said: `What
did he promise you?' I replied:
`Twenty-five hundred dollars a year.' He
did not say much, but looked it. About that
time Mr. Andrews and I came together. On
July 2d of that year we were ordered to
Sunbury, and to be ready to start the station
on the fourth. The electrical work had to be
done in forty-eight hours! Having travelled
around the world, I had cultivated an
indifference to any special difficulties of that
kind. Mr. Andrews and I worked in
collaboration until the night of the third. I
think he was perhaps more appreciative than I
was of the discipline of the Edison
Construction Department, and thought it would
be well for us to wait until the morning of the
fourth before we started up. I said we were
sent over to get going, and insisted on starting
up on the night of the third. We had an
Armington & Sims engine with sight-feed
oiler. I had never seen one, and did not know
how it worked, with the result that we soon
burned up the babbitt metal in the bearings and
spent a good part of the night getting them in
order. The next day Mr. Edison, Mr.
Insull, and the chief engineer of the
construction department appeared on the scene and
wanted to know what had happened. They found an
engine somewhat loose in the bearings, and there
followed remarks which would not look well in
print. Andrews skipped from under; he obeyed
orders; I did not. But the plant ran, and it
was the first three-wire station in this
country."
Seen from yet another angle, the worries of
this early work were not merely those of the men
on the "firing line." Mr. Insull, in
speaking of this period, says: "When it was
found difficult to push the central- station
business owing to the lack of confidence in its
financial success, Edison decided to go into
the business of promoting and constructing
central-station plants, and he formed what was
known as the Thomas A. Edison Construction
Department, which he put me in charge of. The
organization was crude, the steam-engineering
talent poor, and owing to the impossibility of
getting any considerable capital subscribed, the
plants were put in as cheaply as possible. I
believe that this construction department was
unkindly named the `Destruction Department.'
It served its purpose; never made any money;
and I had the unpleasant task of presiding at
its obsequies."
On July 4th the Sunbury plant was put into
commercial operation by Edison, and he remained
a week studying its conditions and watching for
any unforeseen difficulty that might arise.
Nothing happened, however, to interfere with
the successful running of the station, and for
twenty years thereafter the same two dynamos
continued to furnish light in Sunbury. They
were later used as reserve machines, and
finally, with the engine, retired from service
as part of the "Collection of Edisonia"; but
they remain in practically as good condition as
when installed in 1883.
Sunbury was also provided with the first
electro- chemical meters used in the United
States outside New York City, so that it
served also to accentuate electrical practice in
a most vital respect--namely, the measurement
of the electrical energy supplied to customers.
At this time and long after, all arc lighting
was done on a "flat rate" basis. The arc lamp
installed outside a customer's premises, or in
a circuit for public street lighting, burned so
many hours nightly, so many nights in the
month; and was paid for at that rate, subject
to rebate for hours when the lamp might be out
through accident. The early arc lamps were
rated to require 9 to 10 amperes of current,
at 45 volts pressure each, receiving which
they were estimated to give 2000 c.p.,
which was arrived at by adding together the light
found at four different positions, so that in
reality the actual light was about 500 c.p.
Few of these data were ever actually used,
however; and it was all more or less a matter of
guesswork, although the central-station
manager, aiming to give good service, would
naturally see that the dynamos were so operated
as to maintain as steadily as possible the normal
potential and current. The same loose methods
applied to the early attempts to use electric
motors on arc-lighting circuits, and contracts
were made based on the size of the motor, the
width of the connecting belt, or the amount of
power the customer thought he used-- never on
the measurement of the electrical energy
furnished him.
Here again Edison laid the foundation of
standard practice. It is true that even down to
the present time the flat rate is applied to a
great deal of incandescent lighting, each lamp
being charged for individually according to its
probable consumption during each month. This
may answer, perhaps, in a small place where the
manager can gauge pretty closely from actual
observation what each customer does; but even
then there are elements of risk and waste; and
obviously in a large city such a method would
soon be likely to result in financial disaster to
the plant. Edison held that the electricity
sold must be measured just like gas or water,
and he proceeded to develop a meter. There was
infinite scepticism around him on the subject,
and while other inventors were also giving the
subject their thought, the public took it for
granted that anything so utterly intangible as
electricity, that could not be seen or weighed,
and only gave secondary evidence of itself at the
exact point of use, could not be brought to
accurate regis- tration. The general attitude
of doubt was exemplified by the incident in Mr.
J. P. Morgan's office, noted in the last
chapter. Edison, however, had satisfied
himself that there were various ways of
accomplishing the task, and had determined that
the current should be measured on the premises of
every consumer. His electrolytic meter was very
successful, and was of widespread use in
America and in Europe until the perfection of
mechanical meters by Elihu Thomson and others
brought that type into general acceptance.
Hence the Edison electrolytic meter is no
longer used, despite its excellent qualities.
Houston & Kennelly in their Electricity in
Everyday Life sum the matter up as follows:
"The Edison chemical meter is capable of
giving fair measurements of the amount of current
passing. By reason, however, of
dissatisfaction caused from the inability of
customers to read the indications of the meter,
it has in later years, to a great extent, been
replaced by registering meters that can be read
by the customer."
The principle employed in the Edison
electrolytic meter is that which exemplifies the
power of electricity to decompose a chemical
substance. In other words it is a deposition
bath, consisting of a glass cell in which two
plates of chemically pure zinc are dipped in a
solution of zinc sulphate. When the lights or
motors in the circuit are turned on, and a
certain definite small portion of the current is
diverted to flow through the meter, from the
positive plate to the negative plate, the latter
increases in weight by receiving a deposit of
metallic zinc; the positive plate meantime
losing in weight by the metal thus carried away
from it. This difference in weight is a very
exact measure of the quantity of electricity, or
number of ampere-hours, that have, so to
speak, passed through the cell, and hence of
the whole consumption in the circuit. The
amount thus due from the customer is ascertained
by removing the cell, washing and drying the
plates, and weighing them in a chemical
balance. Associated with this simple form of
apparatus were various ingenious details and
refinements to secure regularity of operation,
freedom from inaccuracy, and immunity from such
tampering as would permit theft of current or
damage. As the freezing of the zinc sulphate
solution in cold weather would check its
operation, Edison introduced, for example,
into the meter an incandescent lamp and a
thermostat so arranged that when the temperature
fell to a certain point, or rose above another
point, it was cut in or out; and in this manner
the meter could be kept from freezing. The
standard Edison meter practice was to remove the
cells once a month to the meter-room of the
central-station company for examination,
another set being substituted. The meter was
cheap to manufacture and install, and not at all
liable to get out of order.
In December, 1888, Mr. W. J. Jenks
read an interesting paper before the American
Institute of Electrical Engineers on the six
years of practical experience had up to that time
with the meter, then more generally in use than
any other. It appears from the paper that
twenty-three Edison stations were then equipped
with 5187 meters, which were relied upon for
billing the monthly current consumption of
87,856 lamps and 350 motors of 1000
horse-power total. This represented about 75
per cent. of the entire lamp capacity of the
stations. There was an average cost per lamp
for meter operation of twenty- two cents a
year, and each meter took care of an average of
seventeen lamps. It is worthy of note,
as to the promptness with which the Edison
stations became paying properties, that four of
the metered stations were earning upward of 15
per cent. on their capital stock; three others
between 8 and 10 per cent.; eight between 5
and 8 per cent.; the others having been in
operation too short a time to show definite
results, although they also went quickly to a
dividend basis. Reports made in the discussion
at the meeting by engineers showed the simplicity
and success of the meter. Mr. C. L.
Edgar, of the Boston Edison system, stated
that he had 800 of the meters in service cared
for by two men and three boys, the latter
employed in collecting the meter cells; the
total cost being perhaps $2500 a year.
Mr. J. W. Lieb wrote from Milan,
Italy, that he had in use on the Edison system
there 360 meters ranging from 350 ampere-
hours per month up to 30,000.
In this connection it should be mentioned that
the Association of Edison Illuminating
Companies in the same year adopted resolutions
unanimously to the effect that the Edison meter
was accurate, and that its use was not expensive
for stations above one thousand lights; and that
the best financial results were invariably
secured in a station selling current by meter.
Before the same association, at its meeting in
September, 1898, at Sault Ste. Marie,
Mr. C. S. Shepard read a paper on the
meter practice of the New York Edison
Company, giving data as to the large number of
Edison meters in use and the transition to other
types, of which to-day the company has several
on its circuits: "Until October, 1896,
the New York Edison Company metered its
current in consumer's premises exclusively by
the old-style chemical meters, of which there
were connected on that date 8109. It was
then determined to purchase no more." Mr.
Shepard went on to state that the chemical
meters were gradually displaced, and that on
September 1, 1898, there were on the
system 5619 mechanical and 4874
chemical. The meter continued in general
service during 1899, and probably up to the
close of the century.
Mr. Andrews relates a rather humorous meter
story of those early days: "The meter man at
Sunbury was a firm and enthusiastic believer in
the correctness of the Edison meter, having
personally verified its reading many times by
actual comparison of lamp-hours. One day, on
making out a customer's bill, his confidence
received a severe shock, for the meter reading
showed a consumption calling for a charge of over
$200, whereas he knew that the light
actually used should not cost more than
one-quarter of that amount. He weighed and
reweighed the meter plates, and pursued every
line of investigation imaginable, but all in
vain. He felt he was up against it, and that
perhaps another kind of a job would suit him
better. Once again he went to the customer's
meter to look around, when a small piece of
thick wire on the floor caught his eye. The
problem was solved. He sud- denly remembered
that after weighing the plates he went and put
them in the customer's meter; but the wire
attached to one of the plates was too long to go
in the meter, and he had cut it off. He picked
up the piece of wire, took it to the station,
weighed it carefully, and found that it
accounted for about $150 worth of
electricity, which was the amount of the
difference."
Edison himself is, however, the best repertory
of stories when it comes to the difficulties of
that early period, in connection with metering
the current and charging for it. He may be
quoted at length as follows: "When we started
the station at Pearl Street, in September,
1882, we were not very commercial. We put
many customers on, but did not make out many
bills. We were more interested in the technical
condition of the station than in the commercial
part. We had meters in which there were two
bottles of liquid. To prevent these
electrolytes from freezing we had in each meter a
strip of metal. When it got very cold the metal
would contract and close a circuit, and throw a
lamp into circuit inside the meter. The heat
from this lamp would prevent the liquid from
freezing, so that the meter could go on doing
its duty. The first cold day after starting the
station, people began to come in from their
offices, especially down in Front Street and
Water Street, saying the meter was on fire.
We received numerous telephone messages about
it. Some had poured water on it, and others
said: `Send a man right up to put it out.'
"After the station had been running several
months and was technically a success, we began
to look after the financial part. We started to
collect some bills; but we found that our books
were kept badly, and that the person in charge,
who was no business man, had neglected that part
of it. In fact, he did not know anything about
the station, anyway. So I got the directors
to permit me to hire a man to run the station.
This was Mr. Chinnock, who was then
superintendent of the Metropolitan Telephone
Company of New York. I knew Chinnock to be
square and of good business ability, and induced
him to leave his job. I made him a personal
guarantee, that if he would take hold of the
station and put it on a commercial basis, and
pay 5 per cent. on $600,000, I would
give him $10,000 out of my own pocket.
He took hold, performed the feat, and I paid
him the $10,000. I might remark in this
connection that years afterward I applied to the
Edison Electric Light Company asking them if
they would not like to pay me this money, as it
was spent when I was very hard up and made the
company a success, and was the foundation of
their present prosperity. They said they `were
sorry'--that is, `Wall Street sorry'--
and refused to pay it. This shows what a nice,
genial, generous lot of people they have over in
Wall Street.
"Chinnock had a great deal of trouble getting
the customers straightened out. I remember one
man who had a saloon on Nassau Street. He had
had his lights burning for two or three months.
It was in June, and Chinnock put in a bill
for $20; July for $20; August about
$28; September about $35. Of course the
nights were getting longer. October about
$40; November about $45. Then the man
called Chinnock up. He said: `I want to see
you about my electric-light bill.' Chinnock
went up to see him. He said: `Are you the
manager of this electric-light plant?'
Chinnock said: `I have the honor.'
`Well,' he said, my bill has gone from
$20 up to $28, $35, $45. I want
you to understand, young fellow, that my limit
is $60.'
"After Chinnock had had all this trouble due
to the incompetency of the previous
superintendent, a man came in and said to him:
`Did Mr. Blank have charge of this
station?' `Yes.' `Did he know anything
about running a station like this?' Chinnock
said: `Does he KNOW anything about running
a station like this? No, sir. He doesn't
even suspect anything.'
"One day Chinnock came to me and said: `I
have a new customer.' I said: `What is
it?' He said: `I have a fellow who is going
to take two hundred and fifty lights.' I
said: `What for?' `He has a place down
here in a top loft, and has got two hundred and
fifty barrels of "rotgut" whiskey. He puts a
light down in the barrel and lights it up, and
it ages the whiskey.' I met Chinnock several
weeks after, and said: `How is the whiskey
man getting along?' `It's all right; he is
paying his bill. It fixes the whiskey and takes
the shudder right out of it.' Somebody went
and took out a patent on this idea later.
"In the second year we put the Stock Exchange
on the circuits of the station, but were very
fearful that there would be a combination of
heavy demand and a dark day, and that there
would be an overloaded station. We had an index
like a steam-gauge, called an ampere-meter,
to indicate the amount of current going out. I
was up at 65 Fifth Avenue one afternoon. A
sudden black cloud came up, and I telephoned to
Chinnock and asked him about the load. He
said: `We are up to the muzzle, and
everything is running all right.' By-and-by
it became so thick we could not see across the
street. I telephoned again, and felt something
would happen, but fortunately it did not. I
said to Chinnock: `How is it now?' He
replied: `Everything is red-hot, and the
ampere- meter has made seventeen revolutions.'
"
In 1883 no such fittings as "fixture
insulators" were known. It was the common
practice to twine the electric wires around the
disused gas-fixtures, fasten them with tape or
string, and connect them to lamp- sockets
screwed into attachments under the gas-
burners--elaborated later into what was known
as the "combination fixture." As a result it
was no uncommon thing to see bright sparks
snapping between the chandelier and the lighting
wires during a sharp thunder-storm. A
startling manifestation of this kind happened at
Sunbury, when the vivid display drove nervous
guests of the hotel out into the street, and the
providential storm led Mr. Luther Stieringer
to invent the "insulating joint." This
separated the two lighting systems thoroughly,
went into immediate service, and is universally
used to-day.
Returning to the more specific subject of
pioneer plants of importance, that at Brockton
must be considered for a moment, chiefly for the
reason that the city was the first in the world
to possess an Edison station distributing
current through an underground three-wire
network of conductors--the essentially modern
contemporaneous practice, standard twenty- five
years later. It was proposed to employ
pole-line construction with overhead wires, and
a party of Edison engineers drove about the town
in an open barouche with a blue-print of the
circuits and streets spread out on their knees,
to determine how much tree-trimming would be
necessary. When they came to some heavily
shaded spots, the fine trees were marked "T"
to indicate that the work in getting through them
would be "tough." Where the trees were sparse
and the foliage was thin, the same cheerful band
of vandals marked the spots "E" to indicate
that there it would be "easy" to run the
wires. In those days public opinion was not so
alive as now to the desirability of preserving
shade-trees, and of enhancing the beauty of a
city instead of destroying it. Brockton had a
good deal of pride in its fine trees, and a
strong sentiment was very soon aroused against
the mutilation proposed so thoughtlessly. The
investors in the enterprise were ready and
anxious to meet the extra cost of putting the
wires underground. Edison's own wishes were
altogether for the use of the methods he had so
carefully devised; and hence that bustling home
of shoe manufacture was spared this infliction of
more overhead wires.
The station equipment at Brockton consisted at
first of three dynamos, one of which was so
arranged as to supply both sides of the system
during light loads by a breakdown switch
connection. This arrangement interfered with
correct meter registra- tion, as the meters on
one side of the system registered backward during
the hours in which the combination was employed.
Hence, after supplying an all-night customer
whose lamps were on one side of the circuits,
the company might be found to owe him some thing
substantial in the morning. Soon after the
station went into operation this ingenious plan
was changed, and the third dynamo was replaced
by two others. The Edison construction
department took entire charge of the installation
of the plant, and the formal opening was
attended on October 1, 1883, by Mr.
Edison, who then remained a week in ceaseless
study and consultation over the conditions
developed by this initial three-wire underground
plant. Some idea of the confidence inspired by
the fame of Edison at this period is shown by
the fact that the first theatre ever lighted from
a central station by incandescent lamps was
designed this year, and opened in 1884 at
Brockton with an equipment of three hundred
lamps. The theatre was never piped for gas!
It was also from the Brockton central station
that current was first supplied to a fire-engine
house--another display of remarkably early
belief in the trustworthiness of the service,
under conditions where continuity of lighting was
vital. The building was equipped in such a
manner that the striking of the fire-alarm would
light every lamp in the house automatically and
liberate the horses. It was at this central
station that Lieutenant Sprague began his
historic work on the electric motor; and here
that another distinguished engineer and
inventor, Mr. H. Ward Leonard, installed
the meters and became meter man, in order that
he might study in every intimate detail the
improvements and refinements necessary in that
branch of the industry.
The authors are indebted for these facts and
some other data embodied in this book to Mr.
W. J. Jenks, who as manager of this plant
here made his debut in the Edison ranks. He
had been connected with local telephone
interests, but resigned to take active charge of
this plant, imbibing quickly the traditional
Edison spirit, working hard all day and
sleeping in the station at night on a cot brought
there for that purpose. It was a time of
uninterrupted watchfulness. The difficulty of
obtaining engineers in those days to run the
high-speed engines (three hundred and fifty
revolutions per minute) is well illustrated by
an amusing incident in the very early history of
the station. A locomotive engineer had been
engaged, as it was supposed he would not be
afraid of anything. One evening there came a
sudden flash of fire and a spluttering, sizzling
noise. There had been a short-circuit on the
copper mains in the station. The fireman hid
behind the boiler and the engineer jumped out of
the window. Mr. Sprague realized the
trouble, quickly threw off the current and
stopped the engine.
Mr. Jenks relates another humorous incident in
connection with this plant: "One night I
heard a knock at the office door, and on opening
it saw two well-dressed ladies, who asked if
they might be shown through. I invited them
in, taking them first to the boiler-room,
where I showed them the coal-pile, explaining
that this was used to generate steam in the
boiler. We then went to the dynamo-room,
where I pointed out the machines converting the
steam- power into electricity, appearing later
in the form of light in the lamps. After that
they were shown the meters by which the
consumption of current was measured. They
appeared to be interested, and I proceeded to
enter upon a comparison of coal made into gas or
burned under a boiler to be converted into
electricity. The ladies thanked me effusively
and brought their visit to a close. As they
were about to go through the door, one of them
turned to me and said: `We have enjoyed this
visit very much, but there is one question we
would like to ask: What is it that you make
here?' "
The Brockton station was for a long time a show
plant of the Edison company, and had many
distinguished visitors, among them being Prof.
Elihu Thomson, who was present at the
opening, and Sir W. H. Preece, of
London. The engineering methods pursued formed
the basis of similar installations in Lawrence,
Massachusetts, in November, 1883; in
Fall River, Massachusetts, in December,
1883; and in Newburgh, New York, the
following spring.
Another important plant of this period deserves
special mention, as it was the pioneer in the
lighting of large spaces by incandescent lamps.
This installation of five thousand lamps on the
three-wire system was made to illuminate the
buildings at the Louisville, Kentucky,
Exposition in 1883, and, owing to the
careful surveys, calculations, and preparations
of H. M. Byllesby and the late Luther
Stieringer, was completed and in operation
within six weeks after the placing of the order.
The Jury of Awards,
in presenting four medals to the Edison
company, took occasion to pay a high compliment
to the efficiency of the system. It has been
thought by many that the magnificent success of
this plant did more to stimulate the growth of
the incandescent lighting business than any other
event in the history of the Edison company. It
was literally the beginning of the electrical
illumination of American Expositions, carried
later to such splendid displays as those of the
Chicago World's Fair in 1893, Buffalo
in 1901, and St. Louis in 1904.
Thus the art was set going in the United
States under many difficulties, but with every
sign of coming triumph. Reference has already
been made to the work abroad in Paris and
London. The first permanent Edison station in
Europe was that at Milan, Italy, for which
the order was given as early as May, 1882,
by an enterprising syndicate. Less than a year
later, March 3, 1883, the installation
was ready and was put in operation, the Theatre
Santa Radegonda having been pulled down and a
new central- station building erected in its
place--probably the first edifice constructed
in Europe for the specific purpose of
incandescent lighting. Here "Jumbos" were
installed from time to time, until at last there
were no fewer than ten of them; and current was
furnished to customers with a total of nearly ten
thousand lamps connected to the mains. This
pioneer system was operated continuously until
February 9, 1900, or for a period of
about seventeen years, when the sturdy old
machines, still in excellent condition, were
put out of service, so that a larger plant could
be installed to meet the demand. This new plant
takes high-tension polyphase current from a
water-power thirty or forty miles away at
Paderno, on the river Adda, flowing from the
Apennines; but delivers low-tension direct
current for distribution to the regular Edison
three-wire system throughout Milan.
About the same time that southern Europe was
thus opened up to the new system, South
America came into line, and the first Edison
central station there was installed at
Santiago, Chile, in the summer of 1883,
under the supervision of Mr. W. N.
Stewart. This was the result of the success
obtained with small isolated plants, leading to
the formation of an Edison company. It can
readily be conceived that at such an extreme
distance from the source of supply of apparatus
the plant was subject to many peculiar
difficulties from the outset, of which Mr.
Stewart speaks as follows: "I made an
exhibition of the `Jumbo' in the theatre at
Santiago, and on the first evening, when it
was filled with the aristocracy of the city, I
discovered to my horror that the binding wire
around the armature was slowly stripping off and
going to pieces. We had no means of boring out
the field magnets, and we cut grooves in them.
I think the machine is still running
(1907). The station went into operation
soon after with an equipment of eight Edison
`K' dynamos with certain conditions inimical
to efficiency, but which have not hindered the
splendid expansion of the local system. With
those eight dynamos we had four belts between
each engine and the dynamo. The steam pressure
was limited to seventy-five pounds per square
inch. We had two-wire underground feeders,
sent without any plans or specifications for
their installation. The station had neither
voltmeter nor ammeter. The current pressure was
regulated by a galvanometer. We were using coal
costing $12 a ton, and were paid for our
light in currency worth fifty cents on the
dollar. The only thing I can be proud of in
connection with the plant is the fact that I did
not design it, that once in a while we made out
to pay its operating expenses, and that
occasionally we could run it for three months
without a total breakdown."
It was not until 1885 that the first Edison
station in Germany was established; but the art
was still very young, and the plant represented
pioneer lighting practice in the Empire. The
station at Berlin comprised five boilers, and
six vertical steam-engines driving by belts
twelve Edison dynamos, each of about
fifty-five horse-power capacity. A model of
this station is preserved in the Deutschen
Museum at Munich. In the bulletin of the
Berlin Electricity Works for May, 1908,
it is said with regard to the events that led up
to the creation of the system, as noted already
at the Rathenau celebration: "The year
1881 was a mile-stone in the history of the
Allgemeine Elektricitaets Gesellschaft. The
International Electrical Exposition at Paris
was intended to place before the eyes of the
civilized world the achievements of the century.
Among the exhibits of that Exposition was the
Edison system of incandescent lighting. IT
BECAME THE BASIS OF MODERN
HEAVY CURRENT TECHNICS."
The last phrase is italicized as being a happy
and authoritative description, as well as a
tribute.
This chapter would not be complete if it failed
to include some reference to a few of the earlier
isolated plants of a historic character. Note
has already been made of the first Edison plants
afloat on the Jeannette and Columbia, and the
first commercial plant in the New York
lithographic establishment. The first mill
plant was placed in the woollen factory of James
Harrison at Newburgh, New York, about
September 15, 1881. A year later,
Mr. Harrison wrote with some pride: "I
believe my mill was the first lighted with your
electric light, and therefore may be called
No. 1. Besides being job No. 1 it is a
No. 1 job, and a No. 1 light, being
better and cheaper than gas and absolutely safe
as to fire." The first steam-yacht lighted by
incandescent lamps was James Gordon Bennett's
Namouna, equipped early in 1882 with a
plant for one hundred and twenty lamps of eight
candlepower, which remained in use there many
years afterward.
The first Edison plant in a hotel was started
in October, 1881, at the Blue Mountain
House in the Adirondacks, and consisted of two
"Z" dynamos with a complement of eight and
sixteen candle lamps. The hotel is situated at
an elevation of thirty-five hundred feet above
the sea, and was at that time forty miles from
the railroad. The machinery was taken up in
pieces on the backs of mules from the foot of the
mountain. The boilers were fired by wood, as
the economical transportation of coal was a
physical impossibility. For a six-hour run of
the plant one- quarter of a cord of wood was
required, at a cost of twenty-five cents per
cord.
The first theatre in the United States to be
lighted by an Edison isolated plant was the
Bijou Theatre, Boston. The installation of
boilers, engines, dynamos, wiring, switches,
fixtures, three stage regulators, and six
hundred and fifty lamps, was completed in eleven
days after receipt of the order, and the plant
was successfully operated at the opening of the
theatre, on December 12, 1882.
The first plant to be placed on a United
States steamship was the one consisting of an
Edison "Z" dynamo and one hundred and twenty
eight-candle lamps installed on the Fish
Commission's steamer Albatross in 1883.
The most interesting feature of this
installation was the employment of special deep-
sea lamps, supplied with current through a cable
nine hundred and forty feet in length, for the
purpose of alluring fish. By means of the
brilliancy of the lamps marine animals in the
lower depths were attracted and then easily
ensnared.
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