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American Heritage MagazineOctober 2004    Volume 55, Issue 5
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Time Machine


1879 125 Years Ago

Let There Be Light
By Frederic D. Schwarz

AT 9:00 A.M. ON October 22, Charles Batchelor, a researcher in Thomas Edison’s “invention factory” in Menlo Park, New Jersey, sat down to record the results of the previous day’s work. “We made some very interesting experiments on straight carbons made from cotton thread . . . ,” he began. The results were interesting indeed. Earlier that month, after more than a year of frustrating efforts trying to make an incandescent light with platinum wire, Edison and his colleagues had struck out in a different direction, using filaments made of carbon instead. That had proved to be the key decision in the invention of Edison’s light bulb.

The experiments of October 21 yielded the first truly promising results for the weary lab workers. Most notably, when a filament made of ordinary thread was carbonized and hooked up to an electrical circuit, it glowed from 1:30 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. After the power was increased, it shone even brighter for another hour before finally breaking. Here was the first clear evidence that Edison and his men were on the right track, and they worked eagerly to improve and refine their design. By the end of the year, they had the technology well enough under control to make a grand public demonstration with more than 50 shining bulbs.

Little of what went into Edison’s electric light was completely new. Researchers had been trying to make incandescent lights since 1820, mostly with spirals of thin platinum wire, which was chosen for its high melting point. In 1860 the British scientist Joseph Swan patented an incandescent lamp with a carbonized paper filament, and by the late 1870s he, too, was getting excellent results with carbonized cotton thread.

Still, there was enough novelty in Edison’s design to justify a patent, which he quickly took out. Until it expired, he dominated the American market for electric lighting, supplying about 75 percent of the nation’s bulbs along with, in many cases, the power to light them. Swan controlled most of Britain’s electric-lighting business until his company and Edison’s British subsidiary merged in 1883. Edison rolled up 1,093 patents before he was finished inventing, while Swan, who had previously invented the dry photographic plate, did not do badly either, developing a process for making artificial fibers that remains in use in the textile industry to this day.

 
25 Years Ago

October 1, 1979 The Canal Zone, an American possession for 76 years, ceases to exist, as sovereignty of the territory is handed over to Panama.


50 Years Ago

October 28, 1954 Ernest Hemingway becomes the fifth American to win the Nobel Prize in Literature, following Sinclair Lewis, Eugene O’Neill, Pearl S. Buck, and William Faulkner.


75 Years Ago

October 24, 1929 Prices plunge on the New York Stock Exchange as 13 million shares are traded. A few days later 16 million shares will be traded. By mid-November, prices will have lost nearly 40 percent of their September peak value.


100 Years Ago

October 27, 1904 The first section of the New York City subway system opens for business. It runs from City Hall to Grand Central Terminal, then to Times Square and up the West Side to 145th Street and Broadway.


200 Years Ago

October 26, 1804 The members of Lewis and Clark’s Corps of Discovery settle in at winter quarters in a Mandan Indian village on the Missouri River, near the site of present-day Bismarck, North Dakota.


225 Years Ago

October 17, 1779 Gen. George Washington installs his troops in winter quarters in Morristown, New Jersey, where they will endure an even more miserable winter than they did at Valley Forge.

October 28, 1779 Gen. Benjamin Lincoln withdraws his Continental troops after a failed attempt to capture Savannah, Georgia, from the British. The campaign cost the Continentals 800 men, including Gen. Casimir Pulaski, who had led a checkered career since arriving from Poland to join the Continental Army two years earlier.


250 Years Ago

October 31, 1754 King George II grants a royal charter to King’s College, to be established in the city of New York. After closing during the Revolution, it will be reopened under the more patriotic name Columbia College.


 
 
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