"In almost every step of progress in electrical engineering, as well as radio, we can trace

the spark of thought back to Nikola Tesla" - Ernst F. W. Alexanderson



Tesla with one of his famous "wireless" lamps. Published on the cover of the Electrical Experimenter in 1919.

Few inventors contributed more to advances in science and engineering in the early 20th century than Nikola Tesla. As one of the Fathers of Electricity, Tesla did groundbreaking work on alternating current (AC) power system, electromagnetism, hydroelectric power, radio, and radar to name a few. Many of his inventions (Tesla obtained some 300 patents in his lifetime) became the stuff we take for granted today: when we flip a switch to turn on the light, we owe a lot of that electrical magic to Tesla.

As fate would have it, Tesla, one of the world's greatest inventors, died penniless and in obscurity. Even today, many people mistakenly attribute many of his inventions to others (Edison, for example, is in the name of many power companies in the United States - ironically, they use the AC system devised by Tesla rather than the more inefficient direct current or DC system espoused by Thomas Edison; Tesla also invented the fundamentals of radio transmissions before Gugliegmo Marconi).

Today, there's quite a bit of resurgence in Tesla's popularity, which is helped in part by his mystique as a "mad scientist." Amongst his more outlandish ideas, Tesla worked on death rays to knock out enemy airplanes out of the skies, pocket-sized resonance machine that could topple buildings, ways to send electricity through the upper atmosphere, force-fields to protect cities, and so on.



Tesla Company letterhead. Note the words "World Wireless Telephone Transmitter."

In their book, Tesla: Master of Lightning, authors Margaret Cheney and Robert Uth tell the story of the enigmatic genius from his birth in a little village in what is Croatia today, to his lonely death in a New York hotel room. The book, years in the making, combines archival documents and hundreds of photographs, compiled from the Tesla Museum in Belgrade (previously inaccessible to Western writers during much of the Cold War era), excerpts from Tesla's writings, as well as interviews with people who knew the man personally, to paint detailed snapshots of Tesla's life and to provide clear explanations of his (often very technical) work.

On a personal note, it has taken me far longer than I expected to write this excerpt for Neatorama Spotlight. Margaret and Robert's book was so fascinating that on many nights, I ended up reading late pass my bedtime. It seems like on every single page there were neat details about Tesla that were just too good not to share! I highly recommend Tesla: Master of Lightning to anyone interested in learning more about the legendary Nikola Tesla.

Excerpts from Tesla: Master of Lightning, by Margaret Cheney and Robert Uth:

An Old World Childhood

As a youth, Tesla exhibited a peculiar trait that he considered the basis

of all his invention. He had an abnormal ability, usually involuntary,

to visualize scenes, people, and things so vividly that he was sometimes

unsure of what was real and what imaginary. Strong flashes of light often

accompanied these images. Tormented, he would move his hand in front of

his eyes to determine whether the objects were simply in his mind or outside.

He considered the strange ability an affliction at first, but for an inventor

it could be a gift.

Tesla wrote of these phenomena and of his efforts to find an explanation

for them, since no psychologist or physiologist was ever able to help

him. "The theory I have formulated," he wrote much later, is

that the images were the result of a reflex action from the brain on the

retina under great excitation. They certainly were not hallucinations,

for in other respects I was normal and composed. To give an idea of my

distress, suppose that I had witnessed a funeral or some such nerve-wracking

spectacle. Then, inevitably, in the stillness of the night, a vivid picture

of the scene would thrust itself before my eyes and persist despite all

my efforts to banish it. Sometimes it would even remain fixed in space

though I pushed my hand through it. (Tesla, My inventions: My early life.

Electrical Experimenter; February 1919)





Tesla in his Houston Street laboratory. Caption for this photo in Electrical

Review, March 29, 1899 reads: "The operator's body, in this

experiment, is charged to a high potential by means of a coil responsive

to the waves transmitted to it from a distant oscillator."

Geniuses Collide

On the summer day in 1884 when Tesla, carefully dressed in his bowler

hat, striped trousers, and cut-away coat (the whole of his wardrobe),

dropped in to see the famous Mr. Edison, there had been an emergency at

the Vanderbilt mansion on Fifth Avenue. Two wires had shorted behind a

metallic-threaded wall hanging and started a fire. Mrs. Vanderbilt herself

had smothered the flames, only to learn that the problem emanated from

a steam engine and boiler in her basement. Now the angry socialite was

demanding that Edison remove the whole apparatus. No sooner had he rushed

back to Pearl Street than the manager of a shipping firm called to remind

him that the SS Oregon had been tied up for days awaiting electrical

repairs and was losing money by the hour. Unfortunately Edison had no

more engineers to assign to the job.

At this juncture he became aware of the tall foreign gentleman hovering

politely in the doorway, bowler hat in gloved hand, a letter in his pocket

from Charles Batchelor, the English engineer who managed the Continental

Edison Company in Europe. Few American colleges then trained electrical

engineers, so prospects were good for the rare immigrant who was qualified.

But Mr. Edison was not in a congenial mood.

Tesla spoke up, knowing the famous man had a had a hearing problem, and

introduced himself. He produced the brief message from Batchelor. Edison

glanced at the few lines and snorted. "I know two great men and you

are one of them," Batchelor had written. "The other is this

young man!"

Thomas Edison, rumpled, weary, and deeply skeptical, asked Tesla what

he could do. While the American inventor was only eight years older than

his visitor, and lacked his formal education, he was already world-renowned

for his inventions. Tesla recalled their meeting:

When I saw this wonderful man, who had had no training at all, no advantages,

and who did it all himself, and saw the great results by virtue of his

industry and application - you see, I had studied a dozen languages

... and had spent the best years of my life ruminating through libraries.

I thought to myself what a terrible thing it was to have wasted my life

on those useless things, and if I had only come to America right then

and there and devoted all of my brain power and inventiveness to my

work, what could I not have done? (Tesla, My inventions: My early life.

Electrical Experimenter; February 1919)

In awe of Edison, Tesla proceeded to describe the engineering work he

had done in France and Germany, and spoke of his plans for induction motors

made to run smoothly and powerfully on alternating current. That invention,

he reckoned, was worth many fortunes.

Edison knew little of alternating current, chose to believe it the work

of the devil, and did not care to learn more about it. Did this dandified

"Parisian" realize that was he was suggesting could make a whole

industry obsolete? In the past Edison had waged a propaganda war against

the gas companies on the grounds that the possibility of explosions made

gas too dangerous for human use as a power source. He was therefore experienced

in recognizing and heading off any threat of industrial competition.

Tesla, unprepared for the force of Edison's passion, thanked him and

turned to leave. As he did so a breathless boy rushed into the plant to

report that a junction box at Pearl and Nassau streets was leaking electricity

and had injured a carter and his horse. Edison bellowed at his foreman.

Then he turned to Tesla and said, "Hold up a minute, Mister. Can

you fix a ship's lighting plant?"

So began this historic collision of geniuses. Eventually it would spark

the bitter and long-running "War of the Currents," the taste

of which still lingers today in corporate memories.





Laboratory where TEsla and Westinghouse engineers developed apparatus

for AC systems.





Tesla's exhibit with his "Egg of Columbus," which stood on end

when the table it rested on was magnetically excited by AC.



Another smaller table with ball can be seen to the left; to the right,

an early high-frequency machine.

The Executioner's Current

It is strange but true that the introduction of the electric chair in

America came purely out of a commercial battle over light bulb sales.

Or, more accurately, over what kind of power supply would energize the

nation's early lighting. Orders to Edison's lighting companies had fallen

behind those for Westinghouse's newer AC systems. With progress marching

right past him, Edison and his Wall Street investors opened a delaying

campaign to block AC systems in any way possible, the DC interests took

up the idea that AC would fail if it was perceived as deadly. One shadowy

figure associated with Edison, Harold P. Brown, became a very public advocate

of "humane" death - to be inflicted on animals or humans - by

AC electricity. Brown electrocuted dogs and horses under questionable

experimental conditions. After Edison provided him with research facilities

at his West Orange, New Jersey, laboratory, neighbors began to complain

of disappearing household pets.

Brown's efforts inspired New York State prison officials to try the idea

on a human being. A law was passed in New York (1887) to abandon hanging

in favor of electrocution as of January 1, 1889.

Brown, predictably, had a hand in providing apparatus to the state -

a 2,000-volt Westinghouse alternator purchased secondhand - since Westinghouse

refused to sell when approached. First to die by the newly prescribed

capital punishment was William Kemmler, convicted of killing his wife.

He was executed at the Auburn Prison, August 6, 1890. Several jolts were

delivered, one for seventeen seconds and another for three and a half

minutes. Witnesses reported that the victim's spinal cord burst into flames.

The method hasn't worked very predictably, even up to today.

A number of terms were suggested for this new method of execution, including

"thanelectrize," "electrophon," "electroctasy,"

"electrotony," and "fulmenvoltacuss." And why "electrocute,"

also on the list, should have come to be preferred over the straightforward

"electrocize" is anyone's guess. The vested interest in DC current,

however, made a point of saying victims of electric shocks had been "Westinghoused."





Tesla in a thoughtful pose in front of his "web" coil, May 1896.

Lionized and Ionized





(L) Mark Twain and Joseph ("Jo") Jefferson in Tesla's South

Fifth Avenue laboratory, 1894, with blurred image of TEsla between.



(R) Mark Twain in Tesla's laboratory at 35 South Fifth Avenue, early 1895

Perhaps Tesla's most famous friend was the writer Mark Twain, with whom

the Serb's literary connections went back to childhood. In his autobiography,

Tesla described how Twain helped him recover from a dangerous illness

when he was brought the early novels from his local public library and

found them "so captivating as to make me utterly forget my hopeless

state." He attributed the miraculous recovery that followed to the

humorist. Tesla claims that twenty-five years later, when he met Twain

in New York, he told him the touching story "and was amazed to see

that great man of laughter burst into tears" (Tesla, My inventions:

My later endeavors. Electrical Experimenter; 1919)

In Mark Twain's Notebooks & Journals, the author mentions

reading about the sale to Westinghouse of Tesla's electrical patents,

"which will revolutionize the whole electric business of the world."

Twain had made a bad investment - one of many - in the development of

a new DC motor, and was drawn to Tesla for answers. The answer was that

this motor had been rendered obsolete by Tesla's polyphase AC. Because

this appears to have been the occasion for their first meeting, Twain's

tears may have had a more pecuniary cause.

On that basis, the two men became lifelong friends and, incidentally,

fellow members of the posh Players Club. Twain later was instrumental

in encouraging Tesla to pursue his futuristic weapons for shifting war's

destructiveness from men to machines, it then being innocently thought

that wars would cease when weapons became too horrible to contemplate.

Mark Twain was one of the friends most often invited to Tesla's laboratory

for the improvisational shows of fright and delight. On one particular

evening Twain himself inadvertently furnished the entertainment when he

insisted upon experiencing the gyrations of a platform mounted on an electrical

oscillator. Tesla pretended to dissuade him, which of course made Twain

all the more desirous of prolonging the test. Once on the machine he kept

saying, "More, Tesla, more!" But soon he was crying for help,

since an undesired effect of the oscillations on the human body was to

create a turmoil in the bowels.

When he was next invited to the laboratory, a wiser Twain wrote: "Friday,

Midnight. Dear Mr. Tesla: I am desperately sorry, but a matter of unavoidable

business has intruded itself and bars me from coming down ... I am very,

very sorry. Do forgive me." (Twain n.d.).

Colorado Springs





This publicity photo taken at Colorado Springs was a double exposure.

Tesla poses with his "magnifying transmitter" capable of producing





millions of volts of electricity. The discharge here is twenty-two feet

in length.

In a patent filed the previous year, "System of Transmission of

Electrical Energy" (number 645,576), [Tesla] claimed "it has

become possible to transmit through even moderately rarefied strata of

atmosphere electrical energy to practically any amount and to any distance."

[...] A friend and patent lawyer, Leonard E. Curtis, on being advised

of Tesla's scheme, offered to find land and provide power for his research

from the El Paso Power Company of Colorado Springs [...]

The laboratory that began to rise from the prairie floor was both wired

and weird, a contraption with a roof that rolled back to prevent it from

catching fire, and a wooden tower that soared up to eighty feet. Above

it was a 142-foot metal mast supporting a large copper ball. Inside the

strange wooden structure, technicians began to assemble an enormous Tesla

coil. The frame on which the heavy primary and 17-turn secondary coils

were wound had a diameter of fifty-one feet. The third coil within it

was eight feet in diameter, with a hundred turns of wire. This enormous

air-core transformer could deliver a current of 1,100 amperes. The mysterious

"extra coil" in the center magnified the electrical effects

through a process called "resonant rise." The function of this

coil was not understood until the 1970s.

Builders erected a high fence around the site, and signs appeared on

every post - KEEP OUT. GREAT DANGER - in hopes of keeping the curious

at a distance. Fritz Löwenstein could not resist posting at the door

another sign, quoting Dante's Inferno: "Abandon hope, all

ye who enter here." [...]





Caption in Century Magazine, June 1900, reads: "The photograph

shows three ordinary incandescent lamps lighted to full candle-power by

currents induced in a local loop consisting of a single wire forming a

square of fifty feet each side, which includes the lamps, and which is

at a distance of one hundred feet from the primary circuit energized by

the oscillator."

To test his theory, Tesla had to become the first man to make electrical

effects on the scale of lightning. The giant transmitter was arranged

accordingly. On the evening of the experiment, he dressed for the occasion

in a Prince Albert coat, white gloves, and a derby hat. To avoid electrocution,

he took the precaution of wearing shoes with four-inch cork soles. One

of his assistants described him as looking like a "gaunt Mephistopheles."

Each item of equipment, every wire and connection, had been carefully

checked. Tesla instructed his mechanic, Czito, to open the switch for

only one second. The secondary coil began to sparkle and crack and an

eerie blue corona formed in the air around it. Satisfied with the result,

he ordered Czito to close the switch until told to cease. Huge arcs of

blue electricity snaked up and down the center coil. Exploding discharges

could be heard outside (Cheney, Margaret. 1981. Tesla: Man Out of Time.

New York: Prentice-Hall. Reprint, 1991. New York: Barnes & Noble Books)

Bolts of man-made lightning more than a hundred feet in length shot out

from the mast atop the station. The commotion could be heard in the mining

town of Cripple Creek, fifteen miles away. Tesla thrilled to the sight

of great rods of flame. Then suddenly the lightning stopped. The experimental

station went black. He shouted to Czito to turn the power on again, but

nothing happened. His experiment had burned out the dynamo at the El Paso

Electric Company. Not only Tesla, but the entire city had lost power.

The power station manager was livid and the local population began to

have second thoughts about the famous inventor. But a week after the blackout,

both Tesla and the power station were back in business. However, Tesla

received no more free power.

A Weapon to End War





(L) Postcard illustration of the Hotel New Yorker, New York City. (Collection

of The New-York Historical Society)



(R) Tesla announced his new beam weapon in numerous newspaper interviews

on his seventy-eighth birthday.



This article is from The New York Times, July 11, 1934.

In 1934 Tesla moved to his final residence, room 3327 (still divisible

by three) of the recently completed Hotel New Yorker. There he lived alone

with his ideas and his pigeons for the next decade. He posted a typewritten

note on the door: "Please Do Not Disturb The Occupant Of This Room."

In Tesla's mind, it was time to reveal his greatest invention: a perfect

and impossible idea, a weapon to prevent World War II.

On July 11, 1934, the headline on the front page of the New York

Times screamed, "TESLA AT 78 BARES NEW DEATH-BEAM." The

invention, the article reported,

will send concentrated beams of particles through the free air, of

such tremendous energy that they will bring down a fleet of 10,000 enemy

airplanes at a distance of 250 miles from a defending nation's border

and will cause armies of millions to drop dead in their tracks. When put in operation, Dr. Tesla said, this latest invention of his

would make war impossible. This death-beam, he asserted would surround

each country like an invisible Chinese wall, only a million times more

impenetrable. It would make every nation impregnable against attack

by airplanes or by large invading armies. [...]

Joseph Butler, a U.S. Air Force expert on beam weapons, has said of Tesla's

idea, "Definitely, he had the concept of a charged particle beam

weapon back in the 1930s. The concept was right on the mark ... particles

projected out long distances to do damage to some enemy airplanes, in

his particular case." But Butler added, "I haven't a clue how

he meant to actually do it" (interview with the authors, 1998).





Tesla's system of transmission of power to aircraft by radio. Illustrated

by Frank Paul for Radio News, December 1925.

Enigmatic to the End

Tesla's friend Kenneth Swezey also visited and was equally alarmed by

his condition, particularly when he saw that Tesla was subsisting on warm

milk and Nabisco crackers. He noted that the empty enameled cracker cans

were stacked on shelves and used to hold various things. Word began to

spread that the great inventor was near death.

Late in December of 1942, with the war at its height, two young men identifying

themselves as U.S. government agents suddenly entered Tesla's life. One

was a member of the OSS (predecessor to the CIA) named Ralph Bergstresser.

The other, Bloyce Fitzgerald, was an expert on ballistics technology working

with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. According to Bergstresser,

Tesla agreed to share his most sensitive documents with them and allowed

them to carry stacks of material away for microfilming. Based on their

review, the two men were able to arrange a meeting at the White House

on January 8, 1943, with Roosevelt's science advisor and other high-ranking

officials. Tesla was too ill to attend (interview with the authors, 1993).

Meanwhile a prominent Yugoslav writer, Louis Adamic (The Immigrant's

Return), wrote a letter to Eleanor Roosevelt on December 29 describing

the inventor's circumstances:

Today he is ... worse than penniless. He is extremely frail, weighing

less than 90 pounds. His health is poor; he has grown somewhat bitter

against his country, the United States ... He suffers, too, to the point

of bitterness, because he feels that everyone in America, including

beneficiaries of fortunes created by his inventions, has forgotten him.

... The fact now is that he is up against it ... This letter is not

an appeal to help him financially. ... This is merely to suggest that

the President write him a letter which will indicate that America has

not forgotten [him]. Perhaps this coming New Year is a good occasion

for such a letter (Adamic 1942).

New Year's Eve came and went, and there was no letter. Tesla's loyal

associate, George Scherff, visited him on January 4 to help him prepare

for an experiment. The final project, its nature unknown, was terminated

when Tesla complained of sharp pains in his chest. He refused medical

aid. Scherff left the hotel, bidding him goodbye for the last time.

On the night of January 7, 1943, the eve of the Orthodox Christmas, snow

fell on New York City. In a darkened room on the thirty-third floor of

the Hotel New Yorker, Tesla lay listening to the clamor of traffic below.

His great legacy, the technological world he had helped create, would

continue without him. There would be no more riveting announcements, or

shrieks of "Eureka," or terrifying bolts of lightning leaping

in his laboratory. The pigeons on the window ledge stirred their feet

and ruffled their feathers. Hard times lay ahead for the pigeons; he had

nothing to leave them.

Nikola Tesla, aged eighty-six, died in his sleep. The coroner's report

read: "No suspicious circumstances."

The Cosmic Signature





Nikola Tesla monument installed at Goat Island, Niagara Falls, a gift

to the United States on the occasion of its bicentennial and Tesla's 120th

anniversary, July 23, 1976. The monument is a second casting of the sculpture

by Fran Krsinic.



The first casting is installed in front of the Faculty of Electrical Engineering

Building, University of Belgrade.

The world would be a very different place without the ideas and inventions

of Nikola Tesla. With the flick of a switch the power of the waterfall

and the coal furnace is transported to our fingertips. Worldwide communication

reach nearly every person on the planet. A remote-controlled device has

explored the surface of Mars. And at this moment, receivers are pointed

at the heavens waiting for a message from afar. One can picture the inventor

nodding, then shrugging, and perhaps wondering what took us so long. In

the end, Tesla was one of our greatest dreamers, and great dreams have

a way of becoming reality. The inventor consoled himself by saying, "The

scientific man does not aim at an immediate result. He does not expect

that his advanced ideas will be readily taken up. His work is like that

of a planter - for the future. His duty is to lay the foundation for those

who are to come, and point the way. (Tesla, My inventions: My early life.

Electrical Experimenter; February 1919)

_____

The

article above is an excerpt of Tesla:

Master of Lightning

by Margaret Cheney and Robert Uth. It is reproduced here with permission.

There are many parts of Tesla's life that we didn't talk about - for example,

the details about the War of Currents, his contributions to the Niagara

Falls hydroelectric power station, his mysterious work at the Wardenclyffe

Tower - that are illustrated in great details in the book.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

MARGARET CHENEY is the author

of three previous books, including the classic biography Tesla: Man Out of Time for which she received the first International

Tesla Award. A former Associated Press editor, she is currently a member

of the executive board of the Tesla Memorial Society. She resides in California.

ROBERT UTH is a documentary

film producer and writer. With his wife, Simonida, he has spent years

researching the life of Nikola Tesla. This research is also reflected

in his documentary Tesla:

Master of Lightning.