Thomas Alva Edison (February
11, 1847 – October
18, 1931) was
an Americaninventor
and businessman
who developed many devices which greatly influenced life worldwide into the 21st
century. Dubbed "The Wizard of Menlo
Park" by a newspaper reporter, he was one of the first inventors to
apply the principles of mass
production to the process of invention,
and can therefore be credited with the creation of the first industrial
research laboratory.
Some of the inventions attributed to him were not completely original but
amounted to improvements of earlier inventions or were actually created by
numerous employees working under his direction. Nevertheless, Edison is
considered one of the most prolific inventors in history, holding 1,097
U.S. patents
in his name, as well as many patents in the United
Kingdom, France,
and Germany.
He lived to the age of 84.
Thomas Edison was born in Milan,
Ohio, the seventh and last child of Samuel Ogden Edison, Jr. (1804–1896)
(born in Marshalltown, Nova Scotia, Canada) and the former Nancy Matthews
Elliott (1810–1871). His family was of Dutch
origin.[1]
His mind often wandered and his teacher the Reverend Engle was overheard
calling him "addled." This ended Edison's three months of official
schooling. His mother had been a school teacher in Canada and happily took
over the job of schooling her son. She encouraged and taught him to read and
experiment. He recalled later, "My mother was the making of me. She was
so true, so sure of me; and I felt I had something to live for, someone I must
not disappoint."[2]
Many of his lessons came from reading R.G. Parker's School
of Natural Philosophy. Edison lost much of his hearing at the age of
twelve. There are many theories of what caused this; according to Edison it
was because he was pulled up to a train car by his ears.[3]
Edison's family was forced to move to Port
Huron, Michigan
when the railroad bypassed Milan, but his life there was bittersweet. He sold
candy and newspapers on trains running from Port Huron to Detroit. Partially deaf
since adolescence, he became a telegraph
operator after he saved Jimmie Mackenzie from being struck by a runaway train.
Jimmie's father, station agent J.U. Mackenzie of Mount
Clemens, Michigan, was so grateful that he took Edison under his wing and
trained him as a telegraph operator. Edison's deafness aided him as it blocked
out noises and prevented Edison from hearing the telegrapher sitting next to
him. One of his mentors during those early years was a fellow telegrapher and
inventor named Franklin
Leonard Pope, who allowed the then impoverished youth to live and work in
the basement of his Elizabeth,
New
Jersey home.
Some of his earliest inventions related to telegraphy, including a stock
ticker. Edison applied for his first patent, the electric vote recorder,
on October
28, 1868.
Thomas Edison began his career as an inventor in Newark,
New Jersey, with the automatic repeater and his other improved telegraphic
devices, but the invention which first gained him fame was the phonograph
in 1877. This accomplishment was so unexpected by the public at large as to
appear almost magical. Edison became known as "The Wizard of Menlo
Park," New Jersey, where he lived. His first phonograph recorded on
tinfoil around a grooved cylinder and had poor sound quality. The tinfoil
recordings could only be replayed a few times. In the 1880s, a redesigned
model using wax-coated cardboard cylinders was produced by Alexander
Graham Bell, Chichester
Bell, and Charles
Tainter. This was one reason that Thomas Edison continued work on his own
"Perfected Phonograph."
Thomas Edison was a freethinker,
and was most likely a deist,
claiming he did not believe in "the God of the theologians," but did
not doubt that "there is a Supreme Intelligence." He is quoted,
"I believe that the science of chemistry alone almost proves the
existence of an intelligent creator." However, he rejected the idea of
the supernatural, along with such ideas as the soul, immortality, and a
personal God. He maintained a position on the supernatural and the Christian
religion that was best described as "truculent agnosticism."[5]
"Nature," he said, "is not merciful and loving, but wholly
merciless, indifferent."[6]
Edison's Menlo Park Laboratory, removed to Greenfield
Village in Dearborn, MI. (Note the organ against the back wall)
Thomas Edison's first light bulb used to demonstrate his invention at
Menlo Park.
U.S. Patent #223898 Electric Lamp
Edison's major innovation was the first industrial research lab, which was
built in Menlo
Park, New Jersey. It was the first institution set up with the specific
purpose of producing constant technological innovation and improvement. Edison
was legally attributed with most of the inventions produced there, though many
employees carried out research and development work under his direction.
William Joseph Hammer, a consulting electrical
engineer, began his duties as a laboratory assistant to Edison in December
1879. He assisted in experiments on the telephone,
phonograph,
electric
railway, iron
ore separator, electric
lighting, and other developing inventions. However, Hammer worked
primarily on the incandescent electric lamp and was put in charge of tests and
records on that device. In 1880 he was appointed Chief Engineer of the Edison
Lamp Works. In his first year, the plant under general manager Francis
Robbins Upton turned out 50,000 lamps. According to Edison, Hammer was
"a pioneer of incandescent electric lighting."
Most of Edison's patents were utility patents, which during Edison's
lifetime protected for a 17 year period inventions or processes that are
electrical, mechanical, or chemical in nature. About a dozen were design
patents, which protect an ornamental design for a 14 year period. Like most
inventions, his were not typically completely original, but improvements to
prior art. The phonograph patent, on the other hand, was unprecedented as the
first device to record and reproduce sounds. Edison did not invent the first electric
light bulb, but instead invented the first commercially practical
incandescent light. Several designs had already been developed by earlier
inventors including the patent he purchased from Henry
Woodward and Mathew
Evans, Moses
G. Farmer,[7]Joseph
Swan, James
Bowman Lindsay, William Sawyer, Sir
Humphry Davy, and Heinrich
Göbel. Some of these early bulbs had such flaws as extremely short life,
high expense to produce, and high current draw, making them difficult to apply
on a large scale commercially. In 1878, Edison applied the term filament
to the element
of glowing wire carrying the current, although English inventor Joseph
Swan had used the term prior to this. Edison took the features of these
earlier designs and set his workers to the task of creating longer-lasting
bulbs. By 1879, he had produced a new concept: a high resistance lamp in a
very high vacuum, which would burn for hundreds of hours. While the earlier
inventors had produced electric lighting in laboratory
conditions dating back to a demonstration of a glowing wire by Alessandro
Volta in 1800, Edison concentrated on commercial application and was able
to sell the concept to homes and businesses by mass-producing relatively
long-lasting light bulbs and creating a complete system for the generation and
distribution of electricity.
The Menlo Park research lab was made possible by the sale of the quadruplex
telegraph that Edison invented in 1874, which could send four simultaneous
telegraph signals over the same wire. When Edison asked Western
Union to make an offer, he was shocked at the unexpectedly large amount
that Western Union offered; the patent rights were sold for $10,000. The
quadruplex telegraph was Edison's first big financial success.
In just over a decade Edison's Menlo Park laboratory had expanded to
consume two city blocks. Edison said he wanted the lab to have "a stock
of almost every conceivable material." A newspaper article printed in
1887 reveals the seriousness of his claim, stating the lab contained
"eight thousand kinds of chemicals, every kind of screw made, every size
of needle, every kind of cord or wire, hair of humans, horses, hogs, cows,
rabbits goats, minx, camels...silk in every texture, cocoons, various kinds of
hoofs, shark's teeth, deer horns, tortoise shell...cork, resin, varnish and
oil, ostrich feathers, a peacock's tail, jet, amber, rubber, all ores..."
and the list goes on. [8]
With Menlo Park Edison had created the first industrial laboratory
concerned with creating knowledge and then controlling its application.
In 1878, Edison formed the Edison
Electric Light Company in New York City with several financiers, including
J. P.
Morgan and the members of the Vanderbilt
family. Edison made the first public demonstration of his incandescent
light bulb on December 31, 1879, in Menlo Park. On January
27, 1880, he
filed a patent in the United States for the electric incandescent lamp; it was
during this time that he said, "We will make electricity so cheap that
only the rich will burn candles."[9]
On October
8, 1883, the
U.S. patent office ruled that Edison's patent was based on the work of William
Sawyer and was therefore invalid. Litigation continued for nearly six
years, until October
6, 1889, when
a judge ruled that Edison's electric light improvement claim for "a
filament of carbon of high resistance" was valid. To avoid a possible
court battle with Joseph
Swan, whose English patent had been awarded a year before Edison's, he and
Swan formed a joint company called Ediswan to market the invention in Britain.
Edison patented an electric
distribution system in 1880, which was critical to capitalize on the
invention of the electric lamp. The first investor-owned electric utility was
the 1882 Pearl
Street Station, New
York City. It was on September
4, 1882, that
Edison switched on his Pearl
Street generating station's electrical power distribution system, which
provided 110 voltsdirect
current (DC) to 59 customers in lower Manhattan.
Earlier in the year, in January 1882 he had switched on the first steam
generating power station at Holborn
Viaduct in London
in the UK. The DC
supply system provided electricity supplies to street lamps and a number of
private dwellings within a short distance of the station.
On January
19, 1883, the
first standardized incandescent electric lighting system employing overhead
wires began service in Roselle,
New
Jersey.
In 1877 and 1878 Edison invented and developed the carbon
microphone used in all telephones along with the Bell receiver until the
1980s. After protracted patent litigation, a federal court ruled in 1892 that
Edison and not Emile
Berliner was the inventor of the carbon microphone. (Josephson, p146). The
carbon microphone was also used in radio broadcasting and public address work
through the 1920s.
Extravagant displays of electric lights quickly became a feature of
public events, as this picture from the 1897 Tennessee Centennial
Exposition shows.
George
Westinghouse and Edison became adversaries due to Edison's promotion of direct
current (DC) for electric power distribution over the more easily
transmitted alternating
current (AC) system invented by Nikola
Tesla and promoted by Westinghouse. Unlike DC, AC could be stepped up to
very high voltages with transformers,
sent over thinner and less expensive wires, and stepped down again at the
destination for distribution
to users.
Despite Edison's contempt for capital
punishment, the war against AC led Edison to become involved in the
development and promotion of the electric
chair as a demonstration of AC's greater lethal potential versus the
"safer" DC. Edison went on to carry out a brief but intense campaign
to ban the use of AC or to limit the allowable voltage for safety purposes. As
part of this campaign, Edison's employees publicly electrocuted dogs, cats,
and in one case, an elephant[10]
to demonstrate the dangers of AC. AC replaced DC in most instances of
generation and power distribution, enormously extending the range and
improving the efficiency of power distribution.
Though widespread use of DC ultimately lost favor for distribution, it
exists today primarily in long-distance high-voltage
direct current (HVDC) transmission systems. Low voltage DC distribution
continued to be used in high density downtown areas for many years and was
replaced by AC low voltage network distribution in many central business
districts. DC had the advantage that large battery banks could maintain
continuous power through brief interruptions of the electric supply from
generators and the transmission system. Utilities such as Commonwealth
Edison in Chicago had rotary converters, also known as motor-generator
sets, which could change DC to AC and AC to various frequencies in the early
to mid 20th century. Utilities supplied rectifiers to convert the low voltage
AC to DC for such DC loads as elevators, fans and pumps. There were still 1600
DC customers in downtown New York City when the service was discontinued in
2005.
Frank
J. Sprague, a competent mathematician and former naval
officer, was recruited by Edward
H. Johnson, and joined the Edison organization in 1883. One of Sprague's
significant contributions to the Edison Laboratory at Menlo
Park was to expand Edison's mathematical methods. (Despite the common
belief that Edison did not use mathematics, analysis of his notebooks
reveal that he was an astute user of mathematical analysis, for example,
determining the critical parameters of his electric lighting system including
lamp resistance by a sophisticated analysis of Ohm's
Law, Joule's
Law and economics.)
A key to Edison's success was a holistic
rather than reductionist
approach to invention,
making extensive use of trial
and error when no suitable theory existed. (See Edisonian
approach). Since Sprague joined Edison in 1883 and Edison's output of
patents peaked
in 1880 it could be interpreted that the shift towards a reductionist
analytical approach may not have been a positive move for Edison. Sprague's
important analytical contributions, including correcting Edison's system of
mains and feeders for central station distribution, form a counter argument to
this. In 1884, Sprague decided his interests in the exploitation of
electricity lay elsewhere, and he left Edison to found the Sprague
Electric Railway & Motor Company. However, Sprague, who later
developed many electrical innovations, always credited Edison for their work
together.
Another of Edison's assistants was Nikola
Tesla who claimed that Edison promised him $50,000 if he succeeded in
making improvements to his DC generation plants. Several months later, when he
had finished the work and asked to be paid, Tesla claimed that Edison said,
"When you become a full-fledged American you will appreciate an American
joke."[11]
Tesla immediately resigned. This anecdote is somewhat doubtful, since at
Tesla's salary of $18 per week the bonus would have amounted to over 53 years
pay, and the amount was equal to the initial capital of the company. Tesla
resigned when he was refused a raise to $25 per week (Jonnes, p110). Although
Tesla accepted an Edison
Medal later in life and professed a high opinion of Edison as an inventor
and engineer, he remained bitter. The day after Edison died the New
York Times contained extensive coverage of Edison's life, with the only
negative opinion coming from Tesla who was quoted as saying, "He had no
hobby, cared for no sort of amusement of any kind and lived in utter disregard
of the most elementary rules of hygiene" and that, "His method was
inefficient in the extreme, for an immense ground had to be covered to get
anything at all unless blind chance intervened and, at first, I was almost a
sorry witness of his doings, knowing that just a little theory and calculation
would have saved him 90 percent of the labor. But he had a veritable contempt
for book learning and mathematical knowledge, trusting himself entirely to his
inventor's instinct and practical American sense." When Edison was a very
old man and close to death, he said, in looking back, that the biggest mistake
he had made was that he never respected Tesla or his work.[12]
The key to Edison's fortunes was telegraphy. With knowledge gained from
years of working as a telegraph operator, he learned the basics of
electricity. This allowed him to make his early fortune with the stock
ticker, the first electricity-based broadcast system. Edison patented the
sound recording and reproducing phonograph
(or gramophone in British English) in 1878. Edison was also granted a patent
for the motion
picture camera, although the invention itself was the work of Edison's
British employee, W.K.
Dickson. In 1891, Thomas Edison built a Kinetoscope,
or peep-hole viewer. This device was installed in penny arcades, where people
could watch short, simple films.
On August
9, 1892,
Edison received a patent for a two-way telegraph.
In April 1896, Thomas
Armat's Vitascope,
manufactured by the Edison factory and marketed in Edison's name, was used to
project motion
pictures in public screenings in New York City. Later he exhibited motion
pictures with voice soundtrack on cylinder recordings, mechanically
synchronized with the film. In 1908 Edison started the Motion
Picture Patents Company, which was a conglomerate of nine major film
studios (commonly known as the Edison Trust). Thomas Edison was the first
honorary fellow of the Acoustical
Society of America, which was founded in 1929.
Edison became the owner of his Milan,
Ohio, birthplace in 1906, and, on his last visit, in 1923, he was shocked
to find his old home still lit by lamps and candles. Influenced by a fad diet
that was popular in the day, in his last few years "the only liquid he
consumed was a pint of milk every three hours."[13]
He believed this diet would restore his health.
Edison was active in business right up to the end. Just months before his
death in 1931, the Lackawanna Railroad implemented electric trains in suburban
service from Hoboken to Gladstone, Montclair and Dover in New Jersey.
Transmission was by means of an overhead catenary system, with the entire
project under the guidance of Thomas Edison. To the surprise of many, Thomas
Edison was at the throttle of the very first MU (Multiple-Unit) train to
depart Lackawanna Terminal in Hoboken, driving the train all the way to Dover.
As another tribute to his lasting legacy, the very same fleet of cars Edison
deployed on the Lackawanna in 1931 served commuters until their retirement in
1984. A special plaque commemorating the joint achievement of both the railway
and Edison, can be seen today in the waiting room of Lackawanna Terminal in
Hoboken, presently operated by New Jersey Transit.{fact}
Edison purchased a home known as "Glenmont" in 1886 as a wedding
gift for Mina in Llewellyn
Park in West
Orange, New Jersey. The remains of Edison and his wife, Mina, are now
buried there. The 13.5 acre (55,000 m˛) property is maintained by the National
Park Service as the Edison
National Historic Site. Thomas Edison died on October
18, 1931, in
New Jersey at the age of 84. His final words to his wife were "It is very
beautiful over there."[14]
Mina died in 1947. Edison's last breath is reportedly contained in a test tube
at the Henry
Ford Museum. Ford reportedly convinced Charles Edison to seal a test tube
of air in the inventor's room shortly after his death, as a memento. A plaster
death
mask was also made.
In the 1880s, Thomas Edison bought property in Fort
Myers, Florida,
and built Seminole Lodge as a winter retreat. Henry
Ford, the automobile magnate, later lived a few hundred feet away from
Edison at his winter retreat, The Mangoes. Edison even contributed technology
to the automobile. They were friends until Edison's death.
Although in his early years Edison worked alone, he built up a research and
development team to a considerable number while at his Menlo Park research
laboratory. His staff were generally told to carry out his directions in
conducting research and he drove them hard to produce results. When he was
absent from the lab, the pace of work slowed greatly. The large research
group, which included engineers and other workers, based much of their
research on work done by others before them.
Many other inventors had worked on the development of an incandescent
light bulb and some had even patented it before Edison. Edison's own
inventions are often mistakenly credited as Edison's work alone, when in fact
a number of employees actually worked under his direction. Many people refer
to Edison's work as the first incandescent
light bulb with high resistance, a small radiating area, and a
commercially and uninhibitally but still useful lifetime. In other words his
application for patent was presented as the only design suitable for use by
large energy companies like the one he owned and ran. However, the US Patent
Office ruled on October 8, 1883 that Edison's design was based on the prior
work of William Sawyer and his application was thus invalid. Edison had
already lost an earlier patent dispute in British court when it was found that
Joseph Swan received a patent in 1878 for the same bulb that Edison tried to
claim as his own in the US in 1879. [2]
Edison stood to make significantly more money by manufacturing and selling
a lightbulb that he could patent rather than licensing it. For example, in
1880 Edison's company had produced 130,000 handmade lamps in the 1850s vision
of John Wellington Starr but he sold them as Edison lamps[3].
Edison's true success, like his friend Henry Ford, was in his ability to
maximize profits through establishment of mass-production systems and
intellectual property rights. This dampened the success of less profitable
work by others who were focused on inventing longer-lasting high-efficiency
technology.[4][5]
Edison was often an opponent to technological innovation and change,
perhaps because they threatened his business model. In 1887 there were 121
Edison power stations in the United States that delivered DC electricity to
customers. When the limitations of Direct
Current (DC) were discussed by the public, Edison launched a propaganda
campaign to convince people that Alternating
Current (AC) was far too dangerous to use. The problem with DC was that
the power plants could only economically deliver DC electricity to customers
about one and a half miles from the generating station, so it was only
suitable for central business districts. When George
Westinghouse suggested using high-voltage AC instead, as it could carry
electricity hundreds of miles with marginal loss of power, Edison waged a
"War
of Currents" to prevent AC from being adopted. He repeatedly
electrocuted animals with 1000V of alternating current to 'prove' that AC was
unsafe, even though protection from electrocution by AC or DC is essentially
the same. One of the more notable occasions when Edison electrocuted animals
was when in 1903, his workers electrocuted Tipsy
the elephant at Luna Park, near Coney
Island, after she had killed several men and her owners wanted her put to
death. His company filmed the electrocution. Thomas Edison thus introduced the
practice of execution by electrocution.
The AC system was eventually adopted, despite Edison staging public
electrocutions. The system used today was devised by many contributors
including Nikola Tesla, George Westinghouse, Lucien Gaillard, John Dixon Gibbs,
and Oliver Challenger from 1881 to 1889.
The Edison
Medal was created on February
11, 1904, by
a group of Edison's friends and associates. Four years later the American
Institute of Electrical Engineers (AYE), later IEEE,
entered into an agreement with the group to present the medal as its highest
award. The first medal was presented in 1909 to Elisha
Thomson, and ironically, was awarded to Nikola
Tesla in 1917. The Edison
Medal is the oldest award in the area of electrical
and electronics engineering, and is presented annually "for a career
of meritorious achievement in electrical science, electrical engineering or
the electrical arts."
Several landmarks exist in honor of Edison. The Port
Huron Museums, in Port
Huron, Michigan,
restored the original depot that Thomas Edison worked out of as a young news butcher.
The depot has appropriately been named the Thomas
Edison Depot Museum. The town has many Edison historical landmarks
including the gravesites of Edison's parents.
In Detroit,
the Edison Memorial Fountain in Grand Circus Park was created to honor his
achievements. The limestone fountain was dedicated October
21, 1929.
In recognition of the enormous contribution inventors make to the nation
and the world, the Congress, pursuant to Senate Joint Resolution 140 (Public
Law 97 - 198), has designated February
11, the anniversary of the birth of Thomas Alva Edison, as National
Inventor's Day.
Edison was a strong supporter of Montessori
schools in the United States.[15]
While working with Alexander
Graham Bell to discover words of greeting, Edison is credited as
creating the word "Hello" in the English dictionary. Bell,
however, preferred "Ahoy-hoy" as a greeting. (As stated in the
book "QI: The Book of General Ignorance")
Thomas Edison, was employed in his early years, as a telegraph operator
at Indianapolis's
Union
Station, one of the busiest rail depots of its time.
"Working at Inventing: Thomas A. Edison and the Menlo Park
Experience," edited by William S. Pretzer, Henry Ford Museum &
Greenfield Village, Dearborn, Michigan, 1989, ISBN
0-933728-33-6 (cloth) ISBN
0-933728-34-4 (paper)
Ernst Angel: Edison. Sein Leben und Erfinden. Berlin: Ernst Angel
Verlag, 1926.
Mark Essig: Edison & the Electric Chair: A Story of Light and
Death. New York: Walker & Company, 2003. ISBN
0-8027-1406-4
Jill Jonnes, Empires of Light: Edison, Tesla, Westinghouse, and the
Race to Electrify the World. New York: Random House, 2003. ISBN
0-375-50739-6
"Menlo Park Reminiscences, Volume 1," by Francis Jehl,
originally published by Edison Institute, Dearborn, Michigan, 1937.
Reprinted by Dover Publications, Mineola, NY, 1990. ISBN
0-486-26357-6
Phonograph Catalog/Advertisement:
"I want a phonograph in every home...".
The phonograph was developed as a result of Thomas Edison's work on two
other inventions, the telegraph and the telephone. In 1877, Edison was working
on a machine that would transcribe telegraphic messages through indentations on
paper tape, which could later be sent over the telegraph repeatedly. This
development led Edison to speculate that a telephone message could also be
recorded in a similar fashion. He experimented with a diaphragm which had an
embossing point and was held against rapidly-moving paraffin paper. The speaking
vibrations made indentations in the paper. Edison later changed the paper to a
metal cylinder with tin foil wrapped around it. The machine had two
diaphragm-and-needle units, one for recording, and one for playback. When one
would speak into a mouthpiece, the sound vibrations would be indented onto the
cylinder by the recording needle in a vertical (or hill and dale) groove
pattern. Edison gave a sketch of the machine to his mechanic, John Kreusi, to
build, which Kreusi supposedly did within 30 hours. Edison immediately tested
the machine by speaking the nursery rhyme into the mouthpiece, "Mary had a
little lamb." To his amazement, the machine played his words back to him.
Although it was later stated that the date for this event was on August 12,
1877, some historians believe that it probably happened several months later,
since Edison did not file for a patent until December 24, 1877. Also, the diary
of one of Edison's aides, Charles Batchelor, seems to confirm that the
phonograph was not constructed until December 4, and finished two days later.
The patent on the phonograph was issued on February 19, 1878. The invention was
highly original. The only other recorded evidence of such an invention was in a
paper by French scientist Charles Cros, written on April 18, 1877. There were
some differences, however, between the two men's ideas, and Cros's work remained
only a theory, since he did not produce a working model of it.
Original Edison Tin Foil Phonograph. Photo courtesy of U.S. Department
of the Interior, National Park Service, Edison National Historic Site.
Edison took his new invention to the offices of Scientific American
in New York City and showed it to staff there. As the December 22, 1877, issue
reported, "Mr. Thomas A. Edison recently came into this office, placed a
little machine on our desk, turned a crank, and the machine inquired as to our
health, asked how we liked the phonograph, informed us that it was very well,
and bid us a cordial good night." Interest was great, and the invention was
reported in several New York newspapers, and later in other American newspapers
and magazines.
The Edison Speaking Phonograph Company was established on January 24, 1878,
to exploit the new machine by exhibiting it. Edison received $10,000 for the
manufacturing and sales rights and 20% of the profits. As a novelty, the machine
was an instant success, but was difficult to operate except by experts, and the
tin foil would last for only a few playings.
Ever practical and visionary, Edison offered the following possible future
uses for the phonograph in North American Review in June 1878:
Letter writing and all kinds of dictation without the aid of a
stenographer.
Phonographic books, which will speak to blind people without effort on
their part.
The teaching of elocution.
Reproduction of music.
The "Family Record"--a registry of sayings, reminiscences,
etc., by members of a family in their own voices, and of the last words of
dying persons.
Music-boxes and toys.
Clocks that should announce in articulate speech the time for going
home, going to meals, etc.
The preservation of languages by exact reproduction of the manner of
pronouncing.
Educational purposes; such as preserving the
explanations made by a
teacher, so that the pupil can refer to them at any moment, and spelling or
other lessons placed upon the phonograph for convenience in committing to
memory.
Connection with the telephone, so as to make that instrument an
auxiliary in the transmission of permanent and invaluable records, instead
of being the recipient of momentary and fleeting communication.
Eventually, the novelty of the invention wore off for the public, and Edison
did no further work on the phonograph for a while, concentrating instead on
inventing the incandescent light bulb.
In the void left by Edison, others moved forward to improve the phonograph.
In 1880, Alexander Graham Bell won the Volta Prize of $10,000 from the French
government for his invention of the telephone. Bell used his winnings to set up
a laboratory to further electrical and acoustical research, working with his
cousin Chichester A. Bell, a chemical engineer, and Charles Sumner Tainter, a
scientist and instrument maker. They made some improvements on Edison's
invention, chiefly by using wax in the place of tin foil and a floating stylus
instead of a rigid needle which would incise, rather than indent, the cylinder.
A patent was awarded to C. Bell and Tainter on May 4, 1886. The machine was
exhibited to the public as the graphophone. Bell and Tainter had representatives
approach Edison to discuss a possible collaboration on the machine, but Edison
refused and determined to improve the phonograph himself. At this point, he had
succeeded in making the incandescent lamp and could now resume his work on the
phonograph. His initial work, though, closely followed the improvements made by
Bell and Tainter, especially in its use of wax cylinders, and was called the New
Phonograph.
The Edison Phonograph Company was formed on October 8, 1887, to market
Edison's machine. He introduced the Improved Phonograph by May of 1888, shortly
followed by the Perfected Phonograph. The first wax cylinders Edison used were
white and made of ceresin, beeswax, and stearic wax.
Edison Home Phonograph
Businessman Jesse H. Lippincott assumed control of the phonograph companies
by becoming sole licensee of the American Graphophone Company and by purchasing
the Edison Phonograph Company from Edison. In an arrangement which eventually
included most other phonograph makers as well, he formed the North American
Phonograph Company on July 14, 1888. Lippincott saw the potential use of the
phonograph only in the business field and leased the phonographs as office
dictating machines to various member companies which each had its own sales
territory. Unfortunately, this business did not prove to be very profitable,
receiving significant opposition from stenographers.
Meanwhile, the Edison Factory produced talking dolls in 1890 for the Edison
Phonograph Toy Manufacturing Co. The dolls contained tiny wax cylinders.
Edison's relationship with the company ended in March of 1891, and the dolls are
very rare today. The Edison Phonograph Works also produced musical cylinders for
coin-slot phonographs which some of the subsidiary companies had started to use.
These proto-"jukeboxes" were a development which pointed to the future
of phonographs as entertainment machines.
In the fall of 1890, Lippincott fell ill and lost control of the North
American Phonograph Co. to Edison, who was its principal creditor. Edison
changed the policy of rentals to outright sales of the machines, but changed
little else.
Edison increased the entertainment offerings on his cylinders, which by 1892
were made of a wax known among collectors today as "brown wax."
Although called by this name, the cylinders could range in color from off-white
to light tan to dark brown. An announcement at the beginning of the cylinder
would typically indicate the title, artist, and company.
Advertisement for the Edison New Standard Phongraph, in Harper's,
September 1898.
In 1894, Edison declared bankruptcy for the North American Phonograph
Company, a move that enabled him to buy back the rights to his invention. It
took two years for the bankruptcy affairs to be settled before Edison could move
ahead with marketing his invention. The Edison Spring Motor Phonograph appeared
in 1895, even though technically Edison was not allowed to sell phonographs at
this time because of the bankruptcy agreement. In January 1896, he started the
National Phonograph Company which would manufacture phonographs for home
entertainment use. Within three years, branches of the company were located in
Europe. Under the aegis of the company, he announced the Spring Motor Phonograph
in 1896, followed by the Edison Home Phonograph, and he began the commercial
issue of cylinders under the new company's label. A year later, the Edison
Standard Phonograph was manufactured, and then exhibited in the press in 1898.
This was the first phonograph to carry the Edison trademark design. Prices for
the phonographs had significantly diminished from its early days of $150 (in
1891) down to $20 for the Standard model and $7.50 for a model known as the Gem,
introduced in 1899.
Standard-sized cylinders, which tended to be 4.25" long and
2.1875" in diameter, were 50 cents each and typically played at 120 r.p.m.
A variety of selections were featured on the cylinders, including marches,
sentimental ballads, coon songs, hymns, comic monologues and descriptive
specialities, which offered sound reenactments of events.
The early cylinders had two significant problems. The first was the short
length of the cylinders, only 2 minutes. This necessarily narrowed the field of
what could be recorded. The second problem was that no mass method of
duplicating cylinders existed. Most often, performers had to repeat their
performances when recording in order to amass a quantity of cylinders. This was
not only time-consuming, but costly.
The Edison Concert Phonograph, which had a louder sound and a larger
cylinder measuring 4.25" long and 5" in diameter, was introduced in
1899, retailing for $125 and the large cylinders for $4. The Concert Phonograph
did not sell well, and prices for it and its cylinders were dramatically
reduced. Their production ceased in 1912.
Catalog for Edison cylinder records, September 1911.
A process for mass-producing duplicate wax cylinders was put into effect in
1901. The cylinders were molded, rather than engraved by a stylus, and a harder
wax was used. The process was referred to as Gold Moulded, because of a gold
vapor given off by gold electrodes used in the process. Sub-masters were created
from the gold master, and the cylinders were made from these molds. From a
single mold, 120 to 150 cylinders could be produced every day. The new wax used
was black in color, and the cylinders were initially called New High Speed Hard
Wax Moulded Records until the name was changed to Gold Moulded. By mid-1904, the
savings in mass duplication was reflected in the price for cylinders which had
been lowered to 35 cents each. Beveled ends were made on the cylinders to
accommodate titles.
A new business phonograph was introduced in 1905. Similar to a standard
phonograph, it had alterations to the reproducer and mandrel. The early machines
were difficult to use, and their fragility made them prone to failure. Even
though improvements were made to the machine over the years, they still cost
more than the popular, inexpensive Dictaphones put out by Columbia. Electrical
motors and controls were later added to the Edison business machine, which
improved their performance. (Some Edison phonographs made before 1895 also had
electric motors, until they were replaced by spring motors.)
At this point, the Edison business phonograph became a dictating system.
Three machines were used: the executive dictating machine, the secretarial
machine for transcribing, and a shaving machine used to recycle used cylinders.
This system can be seen in the Edison advertising film, The
Stenographer's Friend, filmed in 1910. An improved machine, the Ediphone,
was introduced in 1916 and steadily grew in sales after World War I and into the
1920's.
Catalog for Edison moulded cylinder records, March 1903.
In terms of playing time, the 2-minute wax cylinder could not compete well
against competitors' discs, which could offer up to four minutes. In response,
the Amberol Record was presented in November 1908, which had finer grooves than
the two-minute cylinders, and thus, could last as long as 4 minutes. The
two-minute cylinders were then referred to in the future as Edison Two-Minute
Records, and then later as Edison Standard Records. In 1909, a series of Grand
Opera Amberols (a continuation of the two-minute Grand Opera Cylinders
introduced in 1906) was put on the market to attract the higher-class clientele,
but these did not prove successful. The Amberola I phonograph was introduced in
1909, a floor-model luxury machine with high-quality performance, and was
supposed to compete with the Victrola and Grafonola.
In 1910, the company was reorganized into Thomas A. Edison, Inc. Frank L.
Dyer was initially president, then Edison served as president from December 1912
until August 1926, when his son, Charles, became president, and Edison became
chairman of the board.
Columbia, one of Edison's chief competitors, abandoned the cylinder market
in 1912. (Columbia had given up making its own cylinders in 1909, and until 1912
was only releasing cylinders which it had acquired from the Indestructible
Phonographic Record Co.) The United States Phonograph Co. ceased production of
its U.S. Everlasting cylinders in 1913, leaving the cylinder market to Edison.
The disc had steadily grown in popularity with the consumer, thanks especially
to the popular roster of Victor artists on disc. Edison refused to give up the
cylinder, introducing instead the Blue Amberol Record, an unbreakable cylinder
with what was arguably the best available sound on a recording at the time. The
finer sound of the cylinder was partly due to the fact that a cylinder had
constant surface speed from beginning to end in contrast to the inner groove
distortion that occurred on discs when the surface speed slowed down. Partisans
of Edison also argued that the vertical cut in the groove produced a superior
sound to the lateral cut of Victor and other disc competitors. Cylinders,
though, had truly peaked by this time, and even the superior sound of the Blue
Amberols could not persuade the larger public to buy cylinders. Edison conceded
to this reality in 1913 when he announced the manufacture of the Edison Disc
Phonograph. The Edison Company did not desert its faithful cylinder customers,
however, and continued to make Blue Amberol cylinders until the demise of the
company in 1929, although most from 1915 on were dubbed from the Diamond Discs.
Information for this section was culled from the following sources:
Gelatt, Roland. The Fabulous Phonograph: From Tin Foil to High Fidelity.
Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company, 1955.
According to the USA Census of 1880, Thomas Edison age
32 was a scientist born in Ohio of parents also born in Ohio. He lived with his
wife Mary, then 24. She and her parents were born in New Jersey.
Their children included Marion age 7, Thomas age 5,
and William age 1. They had three house servants. Alice Stillman WF26, Maria
Morison BF44, and Susan Casani BF40.
Source 1880 NJ Series T9 Roll 790 Page 278 microfilm.
In the census page 29 Supervisors District 21 ED 1321, 1st District, Raritan
Township, Middlesex, New Jersey.
Over Five Million Pages of Documents...
chronicle one of the most creative technical innovators in the history
of the world—Thomas Alva Edison. Thanks to the tireless work of the
Thomas A. Edison Papers at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey,
the daily record of Edison's extraordinary life and achievements is
coming to light.
While Edison’s genius spawned many seminal
inventions of the modern world, his greatest invention may have been the
first industrial research laboratory—a prototype for today’s large
corporate research and development centers.
Edison was also a savvy businessman and shrewd
manager with enormous talent for transferring technology from laboratory
to market. He designed economic considerations into nearly all of his
inventions and recognized the critical role that promotion and hustle
play in a product’s success. His insight sets a powerful, instructive
model for corporate leaders even today.
He represents the "Heroic Age" of
Invention, holding 1093 domestic patents, the most ever granted to one
person, plus 1300 foreign patents
He represents the transition from the Paleotechnic
to the Neotechnic, from production to consumption, from the pastoral to the
technological ideal
He reflects the ambivalence of technology, as a
Good that serves mankind and exists in harmony with nature (myth of the
Garden), and as an Evil that serves itself and exists to dominate nature
(myth of the Machine)
He was known as the "Wizard of Menlo
Park" but was in fact a plodder who once said that genius was "1%
inspiration and 99% perspiration"
He was more experimenter than true scientist, had
no math training, was empirical rather than theoretical
auto repeating telegraph 1872 for "robber
baron" Jay Gould
quadraplex telegraph 1874
mutograph 1874 for Gould to replace the page relay
electrical pen 1874
mimeograph 1875 sold to A. B. Dick
Menlo Park 1876-1887
Menlo
Park lab was pastoral "village of science" and tabernacle and
monastery; buildings painted in winter scene as quaint, geometric, sleigh
tracks out the gate, white picket fence
was a community, with Pennsy Railroad station,
hotel, Sarah Jordan's boarding house, several homes
workers were artisans, "muckers" who
shared bouts of intense labor and idleness, shared leisure such as fishing
expeditions
traditional break at midnight, snacks, cigars,
jokes, tales, dancing and singing, organ on 2nd floor, electric toy railroad
pet bear kept outside front door, to separate
outside world from the exclusively male world of craftsman inside
lab was 100 ft. long, 30 ft. wide, no partitions,
administration, hierarchy, dirt on floor, allowed to spit, two rows of
tables and cabinets
after the electric light developed, Menlo Park
dispersed, more workers came for new Lamp Factory, skilled workers became
managers, Edison went to NY to install his system, new companies were formed
1877 telephone transmitter with carbon button
1877 cylinder phonograph became Edison's 1st
important invention and symbol of the neotechnic era, not a mammoth brute
device but small and delicate and "magical" reflecting new concept
of the machine as intellectual control of nature, created myth of
"wizard' who used his mind rather than muscles and waved a simple wand
1878 electric light system due to momentum of the
Menlo Park lab activities, was an idea "in the air" ready to
develop by analogy and transfer, had generated public excitement
problem of the filament: carbonized cotton thread,
then bamboo, sent explorers around the world on an empirical quest on a
global scale, a war of science on nature, by 1889 replaced bamboo with
Joseph Swan's squirted cellulose
Pearl Street power station 1882, became a
businessman
Purchased vacation home in Fort Myers FL 1885,
Glenmont home in Llewellyn Park NJ 1886, land in West Orange NJ for new lab
1887
1887 organized Edison Phonograph Company and
George E. Gouraud began international sales
West Orange 1887-1931
The new research and manufacturing complex was
more factory than self-contained community, with unstable, specialized
labor, regimented by administration, time clock. Edison became a director
rather than participant, presided over managers and college-educated
researchers, seldom worked with his hands, began to wear gray lab coat, not
his old worker clothes; lived at nearby Glenmont mansion with 23 rooms, 8
servants, 1 coachman, new wife Mina, 3 step-children
1888 improved phonograph after 72-hour work
stretch in June, the "phonograph
vigil" that was photographed and painted and caught American
imagination, distributed as an advertising poster for the Edison Phonograph
Co.
1888 recordings by George Gouraud in London are
the oldest surviving recorded music; listen to excerpts
and documentary
recordinngs at Edison NHS
1889 motion picture camera perfected, another
"idea in the air"
1889-1899 major effort to develop a magnetic ore
separator at Ogdensburg, world's largest steam shovel, 200 unskilled workers
in shifts by the clock to operate huge ugly machines, Corliss engine powered
ore crushers, 130-ton giant rollers and rubberized conveyor belts running by
electricity, but plant not profitable, closed at loss of $2 million
1892 formation of General Electric Co. by Henry
Villard for German investors consolidated Edison's GE and Thomson-Huston;
Edison sold out most of his interest
1893 Black Maria studio began production of kinetographs
- "The
Sneeze" of 1894 is the first copyrighted motion picture
1901 formation of the Edison Storage Battery
Company, made batteries for electric car (1902), alkaline battery (1903),
submarine battery (1910)
1906 plan for the concrete house
1929 Golden Jubilee of the invention of the
electric light
1931 died Oct. 18 at Glenmont
Legacy
Edison's light bulb and Bell's telephone began the
"long wave" of the electrical revolution 1890-1940 that produced
cycles of development out of clusters of key inventions; the phonograph
revolution followed the 1877 cylinder; the power revolution followed Pearl
Street 1882; the "electrical city" followed Samuel
Insull; the radio
revolution followed the vacuum tube.
Electricity was seen as a more humane capital
punishment than hanging, especially after George L. Smith was instantly
killed in an accident at a generator for arc lights in Buffalo NY Aug. 7,
1881. Physicians endorsed the idea of an electric chair rather than lethal
injection because they were trying to gain public acceptance of hypodermic
needles. A bill authorizing the electric chair was stalled in the NY
legislature during 1888 due to a dispute between George Westinghouse and
Edison over which electrical system was best for city lights, AC or DC. In
order to discredit the Westinghouse AC system, Edison in late 1887 set up a
1000 volt generator in his lab to show how AC was so dangerous that it could
kill cats and dogs, and even an 830-pound horse in 1888 in a test by Edison
agent Harold P. Brown. The NY bill was signed June 4, 1888, and went into
effect June 1, 1889, for anyone convicted of murder in 1889. William Kemmler
killed his wife with an axe March 29, 1889, admitted his guilt and was found
guilty at a quick trial in May. Westinghouse filed a lawsuit to prevent the
use of the electric chair, and presented evidence that electricity did not
cause a quick and painless death. But Kemmler was executed (painfully) on
Aug. 6, 1890, at Auburn prison in New York, with 1600 volts from a
Westinghouse AC generator supervised by Harold P. Brown.
MGM released two "heroic" film
biographies of Edison in 1940: The Boy Edison with Mickey Rooney and Edison
the Man with Spencer Tracy