The Era of Giants   (1837 – 1879)

Getting Electricity to Work for Man


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Pixii's magneto-electric machine, developed in 1832, was the first practical mechanical generator of electrical current that used concepts demonstrated by Faraday.

The development of electricity as a motive power was taken up by a host of inventors as early as 1832, when a rotary electromagnetic engine was constructed in England by William Sturgeon. It was exhibited in London the following spring.

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Henry Wilde's generator of 1866, considered to be "a machine of enormous and unprecedented power," employed a small, shaft–driven Siemens machine to energize the field coils of the larger dynamo.

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Thermo–electric generators were developed in Europe to replace costly battery power. Clamond's thermo–electric battery was heated with gas and was demonstrated in France in April, 1874.

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The first electric light was produced by "candles" and arc lights. Charles F. Brush invented an arc–lamp system that could light a greater number of lamps in a single circuit than could any competition,

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When two of Gramme's dynamos were accidentally connected together in 1873, with the first machine driven by a steam engine, the second began rotating backwards as a motor. It was the first demonstration of the transmission of mechanical power through electrical means.

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The vast improvements in dynamos of the late 1870s, and Gramme's discovery that they could be run as motors, led inventors to renewed interest in an electric railway. Edison's locomotive was demonstrated at Menlo Park, NJ, in 1880.

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Edison's improvements on the dynamos of his contemporaries led to his efficient 1888 machine, which initiated the practical application of electricity throughout America.

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The mirror galvanometer, invented by Sir William Thomson, was the only instrument sensitive enough to receive messages over the early transatlantic cables. A typical setup is shown. In 1867 he invented a new receiver that recorded signals by spurting ink from a fine glass siphon, upon a moving paper ribbon.

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By the 1890s electricity was powering many of the same basic household lighting, cooking and appliances we have today. A wiring plan of that period shows the many items serviced by electricity.


Based on the bicentennial issue of

Electronic Design
for engineers and engineering managers

Vol 24, number 4   Feb. 16, 1976
© 1976   Hayden Publishing Company Inc.
50 Essex St.   Rochelle Park, NJ   07662


Historical Time Line — Introduction

The Foundation Years   The Era of Giants   The Communications Era

The Vacuum Tube Era   The Transistor Era   The Integrated Circuit Era

AM Broadcast Basics
The Original Theory for Radio was Presented by James Clerk Maxwell in 1873.
Nikola Tesla was the first to patent a workable system.

Gravity   Site Link List   Crossed-Field AM Antenna  

Magnetism   Maxwell's Equations in Magnetic Media

The Tortoise Shell Life Science Puzzle Box Front Page