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| + | ====== George Westinghouse defeated Thomas Edison in War of Currents ====== | ||
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| + | The War of Currents was a great science and technology feud in the late 1800s between the Edison Electric Light Company and Westinghouse Electric Company over what electric power transmission system should be used. The Westinghouse Electric Company supported AC (alternating current) and the Edison Electric Light Company supported DC (direct current). | ||
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| + | The internet loves to portray the battle as one between rival inventors Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla. | ||
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| + | The battle for public opinion over which system should be used to power America turned into a nasty smear campaign by Edison. An inventor and electrical engineer named Harold Brown became the front man for a campaign to show the world the dangers of alternating current. Stories are told of how Brown paid local children to collect stray dogs off the street that he used for experiments showing the dangers of alternating current. Despite publicly denouncing capital punishment, Edison secretly financed the alternating current electric chair developed by Brown. Edison launched a media campaign telling the world AC was deadly, using the word " | ||
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| + | The concept of AC power distribution was not a new concept for Westinghouse, | ||
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| + | In 1885 Westinghouse became interested in the inventions of European Inventors Gaulard and Gibbs and purchased the American rights to their patents for AC current transformers. Westinghouse and his staff worked on improving and redesigning the transformers, | ||
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| + | **The Tesla and Westinghouse partnership** | ||
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| + | In 1888 Nikola Tesla presented to the American Institute of Electrical Engineers his polyphase alternating current system in the report A New System of Alternating Current Motors and Transformers. | ||
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| + | George Westinghouse was working with AC for years before meeting up with Tesla. | ||
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| + | The first major event in Tesla' | ||
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| + | In 1892, after a fierce battle versus Edison, Westinghouse won the contract to power the Columbian Exposition. | ||
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| + | Since his childhood, Tesla had dreamed of harnessing the power of the great natural wonder Niagara Falls. | ||
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| + | Adding insult to his defeat in the War of Currents, Edison would also lose control of his electric power business in 1892. Notorious financier J.P. Morgan arranged the merger of Edison General Electric and Thomson-Houston Electric Company to form General Electric. | ||
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| + | **How much money did Tesla get?** | ||
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| + | The saga of Nikola Tesla talks about the man who died broke and alone in a New York hotel. | ||
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| + | Various versions of the story tell of how the deal went down and how the two men met. The generally accepted story states that Westinghouse paid Tesla around $60,000 for his patents for AC motors and generators, that's roughly the equivalent of $1.4 million in today' | ||
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| + | One condition of the Tesla and Westinghouse partnership was that Tesla received royalties of $2.50 per horsepower of electrical capacity sold. As AC power slowly became more widely adopted, Westinghouse paid Tesla hundreds of thousands of dollars in royalties each year. By 1890, one year before his 35th birthday, Tesla had become a millionaire. | ||
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| + | Tesla did not simply walk away from the contract and get nothing in return. | ||
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| + | Regardless of the methods used to calculate the numbers, when Tesla walked away from his partnership with Westinghouse, | ||
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| + | **Tesla after the War of Currents** | ||
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| + | Nikola Tesla was very much a working partner with George Westinghouse in defeating Edison in the War of Currents. Tesla had the visions, he could see the problems and solve them in his head. Westinghouse had the business and management skills to build the team to accomplish the mission. | ||
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| + | The success of Tesla and Westinghouse working together as a team also illustrates the reason for many of Tesla' | ||
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| + | Tesla seemed to respect the part that Westinghouse played in their victory in the War of Currents. According to the Westinghouse website Nikola Tesla said, " | ||
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| + | George Westinghouse died in 1914. Here just a few of the words from Tesla about Westinghouse as they appeared March 21, 1914 in Electrical world. | ||
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| + | //"His was a wonderful career filled with remark- able achievements. He gave to the world a number of valuable inventions and improvements, | ||
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| + | Various accounts claim different reasons for the Westinghouse Corporation coming to Tesla' | ||
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| + | **The ultimate irony** | ||
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| + | Thomas Edison' | ||
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| + | The IEEE Edison Medal is presented by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers is most coveted medal in this field of engineering in the United States and is named after the inventor Thomas Edison. | ||
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| + | From the realms of geek history is George Westinghouse receiving the Edison Medal is the ultimate irony. | ||
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| + | **The REAL War of the Currents: Not Edison vs. Tesla (The Westinghouse Story)** | ||
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| + | {{ youtube> | ||
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| + | # | ||
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| + | #Pittsburgh #History | ||
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| + | http:// | ||
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The collection of material for the study of geek history dates back to my early days in technology as far back as the 1970s. You will find specific footnotes and references on many pages with links to current websites. Anytime a claim is made, or a fact is stated from a website or blog that does not appear to have firsthand knowledge of the subject I make a note to follow up on it. I can assure you that anything I have written is based on verification of facts from a source as close to the events and individuals as possible or multiple sources of information from leading publications or references.
