The story of Nikola Tesla
The story of Nikola Tesla is one of the great personal
tragedies of modern history. Arguably one of the greatest scientific geniuses of
all time, Tesla faced poverty, slander and persecution during his lifetime. His
numerous inventions and discoveries offered the potential to revolutionize the
world, and when and where they were implemented, they did so. But Telsa came
into conflict with Thomas Edison, America’s foremost inventor at the time, and
Edison’s superior sense of business and advertising destroyed Tesla’s reputation
and left him and many of his ideas frustrated and unfulfilled. Thankfully, with
the rise of steampunk and a renewed interest in nineteenth century science,
Tesla has come back into the public eye and, one hopes, will finally get the
recognition he deserves.
Tesla was born in 1856 into a Serbian family living in the Austro-Hungarian
Empire. From an early age, Tesla was fascinated with science and endeavored to
become an engineer. When he immigrated to the United States in the 1880s, he
brought with him an idea for a new and more efficient method of power generation
known as Alternating Current (AC). He was introduced to Thomas Edison, then one
of America’s most prestigious inventors and the man responsible for the
incandescent light bulb being used increasingly throughout the United States.
But Edison was not interested in helping Tesla develop Alternating Current,
which would have represented a direct challenge to the Direct Current (DC)
system of generation already in use by Edison. Instead, Edison hired Tesla to
make improvements to the DC generation plants, allegedly offering $50,000 if the
seemingly impossible task could be accomplished. When, far from failing, Tesla
made an impressive overhaul of the generator design, Edison claimed that the
offer of $50,000 had been a joke. Tesla promptly resigned.
Faced with financial hardship, Tesla was eventually reduced to digging ditches
for the Edison company. In 1887, Tesla filed patents for his AC power generation
technology. Soon after, he joined with industrialist George Westinghouse to try
and realize the dream of AC power. Because of AC’s superior qualities, this
represented a direct attack on Edison’s DC power. What followed was a
competition known as the “War of the Currents.” Edison, already extremely adept
at advertising and self-promotion, launched into a vicious propaganda campaign
as he tried to brand AC power as inherently dangerous. In addition to his
slander, Edison had a man named Professor Harold Brown travel around giving
demonstrations of animals being electrocuted with Alternating Current on stage
in front of audiences. (He even killed an elephant with it once) In 1890, Brown
conducted the first electric chair execution, using an AC generator. Efforts
were then made to have the technique of electrocution named “Westinghousing.”
In spite of Edison’s horrendous propaganda, in 1893, the Columbian Exhibition (a
World’s Fair held in Chicago) was lit by a hundred thousand lamps powered by AC
generators. In the end, Tesla and Westinghouse persevered, but the monetary
damages imposed by the War of Currents robbed Tesla of his financial security.
The radical development of Alternating Current that set him so at odds with
Edison was but one of Tesla’s many scientific accomplishments. Others included
the discovery of wireless energy transmission, experiments with long-distance
radio, x-ray photography, radio-based remote control, proto-robotics, radar, and
even a death ray (which he invented with hope of ending war by making the
invasion of a country impossible).
The tragedy of Tesla is profound. He was truly a genius and a visionary, and his
death, alone and penniless, is both heartbreaking and unworthy of a man of his
accomplishments and life-long altruism.
To learn more: Nikola Tesla vs Thomas Edison: How The Course Of History Was
Changed -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0iU7tOLGDa0
Nikola Tesla vs Thomas Edison -
http://theoatmeal.com/comics/tesla