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Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that on January 7, 1943 Serbian-American inventor, physicist, electrical engineer, and futurist Nikola Tesla died at the age of 86.

Discovery History Science - Nikola Tesla: The Genius History Forgot - Technology Documentary 2017
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wyK7nroZoKA

Images:
1. Nikola Tesla inventor Library of Congress.
2. The inventor Nikola Tesla at rest, with a Tesla coil (thanks to a double exposure).
3. AC electric lights lit up the night at the Chicago World’s Fair.jpg
4. Tesla Broadcast Tower Wardenclyffe Tower.jpeg


Background from {[ https://www.pbs.org/newshour/science/5-things-you-didnt-know-about-nikola-tesla]}
"8 Things You Didn’t Know About Nikola Tesla
Science Jul 10, 2013 6:02 PM EDT
In honor of inventor Nikola Tesla‘s 157th birthday, we’ve turned to two Tesla experts and historians to help us compile a list of interesting facts you probably never knew about the guy. The information below comes from interviews with W. Bernard Carlson, author of “Tesla: Inventor of the Electrical Age,” and Marc Seifer, author of “Wizard: Life and Times of Nicola Tesla.”

1. HE WAS BORN DURING A LIGHTNING STORM
Nikola Tesla was born around midnight, between July 9 and July 10, 1856 during a fierce lightning storm. According to family legend, midway through the birth, the midwife wrung her hands and declared the lightning a bad omen. This child will be a child of darkness, she said, to which his mother replied: “No. He will be a child of light.”

2. HE WAS REALLY FUNNY
Most people don’t know that Tesla had a terrific sense of humor, Seifer said. For example, after dining with writer and poet Rudyard Kipling, he wrote this in a correspondence to a close friend:
April 1, 1901
My dear Mrs. Johnson, What is the matter with inkspiller Kipling? He actually dared to invite me to dine in an obscure hotel where I would be sure to get hair and cockroaches in the soup.
Yours truly, N. Tesla

3. HE AND EDISON WERE RIVALS, BUT NOT SWORN ENEMIES
Many have characterized Tesla and inventor Thomas Edison as enemies (see this and this,) but Carlson says this relationship has been misrepresented. Early in his career, Tesla worked for Edison, designing direct current generators, but famously quit to pursue his own project: the alternating current induction motor. Sure, they were on different sides of the so-called “Current Wars,” with Edison pushing for direct current and Tesla for alternating current. But Carlson considers them the Steve Jobs and Bill Gates of their time: one the brilliant marketer and businessman and the other a visionary and “tech guy.”
On a rare occasion, Edison attended a conference where Tesla was speaking. Edison, hard of hearing and not wanting to be spotted, slipped into the back of the auditorium to listen to the lecture. But Tesla spotted Edison in the crowd, called attention to him and led the audience in giving him a standing ovation.
Seifer qualifies it more, saying the two had a love/hate relationship. At first Edison dismissed Tesla, but came to eventually respect him, he said.
“When there were fires at Tesla’s laboratory, Edison provided him a lab, so clearly there was some mutual respect,” Seifer said

4. HE DEVELOPED THE IDEA FOR SMARTPHONE TECHNOLOGY IN 1901
Tesla may have had a brilliant mind, but he was not as good at reducing his ideas to practice, Carlson said. In the race to develop transatlantic radio, Tesla described to his funder and business partner, J.P. Morgan, a new means of instant communication that involved gathering stock quotes and telegram messages, funneling them to his laboratory, where he would encode them and assign them each a new frequency. That frequency would be broadcast to a device that would fit in your hand, he explained. In other words, Tesla had envisioned the smart phone and wireless internet, Carlson said, adding that of all of his ideas, that was the one that stopped him in his tracks.
This tesla coil snuffed out the power in Colorado Springs when this photo was taken. Photo by Dickenson V. Alley, photographer at the Century Magazines via Wikimedia Commons.
“He was the first to be thinking about the information revolution in the sense of delivering information for each individual user,” Carlson said.
He also conceived of, but never developed technology for radar, X-rays, a particle beam “death ray” and radio astronomy.

5. ‘HE SHOOK THE POOP OUT OF MARK TWAIN’
One famous legend surrounding the eccentric Tesla was that he had an earthquake machine in his Manhattan laboratory that shook his building and nearly brought down the neighborhood during experiments.
Tesla’s device wasn’t actually an earthquake machine, Carlson said, but a high frequency oscillator. A piston set underneath a platform in the laboratory shook violently as it moved, another experiment in more efficient electricity.
It didn’t bring the block to ruins, Carlson said, but it did “shake the poop out of Mark Twain.” Twain was known for having digestive problems, so Tesla, who knew Twain through their gentlemen’s club, invited him over. He instructed Twain to stand on the platform while he flipped on the oscillator. After about 90 seconds, Twain jumped off the platform and ran for the facilities.

6. HE HAD FAMOUS FRIENDS
People aren’t aware that he was close friends with conservationist John Muir, Seifer said. Muir, one of the founders of the Sierra Club, loved that Tesla’s hydroelectric power system was a clean energy system. It runs on waterfalls, which Tesla referred to as “running on the wheelwork of nature.” Also among his friends: financiers Henry Clay Frick and Thomas Fortune Ryan. “He lived in the Waldorf Astoria, at the height of the gilded age,” Seifer said, adding that his fame later in life lessened.

7. PEARLS DROVE HIM CRAZY
Tesla could not stand the sight of pearls, to the extent that he refused to speak to women wearing them. When his secretary wore pearl jewelry, he sent her home for the day. No one knows why he had such an aversion, but Tesla had a very particular sense of style and aesthetics, Carlson said, and believed that in order to be successful, one needed to look successful. He wore white gloves to dinner every night and prided himself on being a “dapper dresser.”
Every photograph of Tesla, he said, is very carefully constructed to capture his “good side.”

8. HE HAD A PHOTOGRAPHIC MEMORY AND A FEAR OF GERMS
Tesla had what’s known as a photographic memory. He was known to memorize books and images and stockpile visions for inventions in his head. He also had a powerful imagination and the ability to visualize in three dimensions, which he used to control the terrifying vivid nightmares he suffered from as a child. It’s in part what makes him such a mystical and eccentric character in popular culture, Carlson said. He was also known for having excessive hygiene habits, born out of a near-fatal bout of cholera as a teenager."

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LTC Stephen F.
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Idea and Illusion: The Rise and Fall of Nikola Tesla - W.B. Carlson - 11/12/2020
THE WILLIAM AND MYRTLE HARRIS DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES IN SCIENCE AND CIVILIZATION
IDEAL AND ILLUSION: THE RISE AND FALL OF NIKOLA TESLA
Speaker: W. Bernard Carlson
Joseph L. Vaughan Professor of Humanities; Chair, Engineering and Society Department;
Professor of History, University of Virginia
Participating faculty: Jed Z. Buchwald; Doris and Henry Dreyfuss Professor of History, Caltech
In the late 19th century, Nikola Tesla made significant contributions to both the development of AC power technology and the basic ideas underlying radio. Yet at the same time, Tesla was an incredible showman, happy to give dazzling demonstrations and make outrageous predictions in newspaper interviews. To explain these two sides of Tesla, this lecture explores how he was an "ìdealist" inventor who sought the perfect experimental realization of a great idea or principle while skillfully selling his inventions to the public through mythmaking and illusion.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ksF2Tobjrc

Images:
1. Nikola Tesla 1943
2. Nikola Tesla's family - his father Milutin, his mother Duka, his older brother Dane, and his three sisters, Milka, Angelina and Marica. Nikola sits alone on the far left.
3. Nikola Tesla's AC induction motor (1888). It remains one of the most important inventions in modern history.
4. Thomas Edison electrocutes an elephant as part of his smear campaign again alternating current.

Background from {[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-rise-and-fall-of-nikola-tesla-and-his-tower-11074324/]}
The Rise and Fall of Nikola Tesla and his Tower
The inventor’s vision of a global wireless-transmission tower proved to be his undoing
By Gilbert King
SMITHSONIANMAG.COM
FEBRUARY 4, 2013
By the end of his brilliant and tortured life, the Serbian physicist, engineer and inventor Nikola Tesla was penniless and living in a small New York City hotel room. He spent days in a park surrounded by the creatures that mattered most to him—pigeons—and his sleepless nights working over mathematical equations and scientific problems in his head. That habit would confound scientists and scholars for decades after he died, in 1943. His inventions were designed and perfected in his imagination.
Tesla believed his mind to be without equal, and he wasn’t above chiding his contemporaries, such as Thomas Edison, who once hired him. “If Edison had a needle to find in a haystack,” Tesla once wrote, “he would proceed at once with the diligence of the bee to examine straw after straw until he found the object of his search. I was a sorry witness of such doing that a little theory and calculation would have saved him ninety percent of his labor.”
But what his contemporaries may have been lacking in scientific talent (by Tesla’s estimation), men like Edison and George Westinghouse clearly possessed the one trait that Tesla did not—a mind for business. And in the last days of America’s Gilded Age, Nikola Tesla made a dramatic attempt to change the future of communications and power transmission around the world. He managed to convince J.P. Morgan that he was on the verge of a breakthrough, and the financier gave Tesla more than $150,000 to fund what would become a gigantic, futuristic and startling tower in the middle of Long Island, New York. In 1898, as Tesla’s plans to create a worldwide wireless transmission system became known, Wardenclyffe Tower would be Tesla’s last chance to claim the recognition and wealth that had always escaped him.
Nikola Tesla was born in modern-day Croatia in 1856; his father, Milutin, was a priest of the Serbian Orthodox Church. From an early age, he demonstrated the obsessiveness that would puzzle and amuse those around him. He could memorize entire books and store logarithmic tables in his brain. He picked up languages easily, and he could work through days and nights on only a few hours sleep.
At the age of 19, he was studying electrical engineering at the Polytechnic Institute at Graz in Austria, where he quickly established himself as a star student. He found himself in an ongoing debate with a professor over perceived design flaws in the direct-current (DC) motors that were being demonstrated in class. “In attacking the problem again I almost regretted that the struggle was soon to end,” Tesla later wrote. “I had so much energy to spare. When I undertook the task it was not with a resolve such as men often make. With me it was a sacred vow, a question of life and death. I knew that I would perish if I failed. Now I felt that the battle was won. Back in the deep recesses of the brain was the solution, but I could not yet give it outward expression.”
He would spend the next six years of his life “thinking” about electromagnetic fields and a hypothetical motor powered by alternate-current that would and should work. The thoughts obsessed him, and he was unable to focus on his schoolwork. Professors at the university warned Tesla’s father that the young scholar’s working and sleeping habits were killing him. But rather than finish his studies, Tesla became a gambling addict, lost all his tuition money, dropped out of school and suffered a nervous breakdown. It would not be his last.
In 1881, Tesla moved to Budapest, after recovering from his breakdown, and he was walking through a park with a friend, reciting poetry, when a vision came to him. There in the park, with a stick, Tesla drew a crude diagram in the dirt—a motor using the principle of rotating magnetic fields created by two or more alternating currents. While AC electrification had been employed before, there would never be a practical, working motor run on alternating current until he invented his induction motor several years later.
In June 1884, Tesla sailed for New York City and arrived with four cents in his pocket and a letter of recommendation from Charles Batchelor—a former employer—to Thomas Edison, which was purported to say, “My Dear Edison: I know two great men and you are one of them. The other is this young man!”
A meeting was arranged, and once Tesla described the engineering work he was doing, Edison, though skeptical, hired him. According to Tesla, Edison offered him $50,000 if he could improve upon the DC generation plants Edison favored. Within a few months, Tesla informed the American inventor that he had indeed improved upon Edison’s motors. Edison, Tesla noted, refused to pay up. “When you become a full-fledged American, you will appreciate an American joke,” Edison told him.
Tesla promptly quit and took a job digging ditches. But it wasn’t long before word got out that Tesla’s AC motor was worth investing in, and the Western Union Company put Tesla to work in a lab not far from Edison’s office, where he designed AC power systems that are still used around the world. “The motors I built there,” Tesla said, “were exactly as I imagined them. I made no attempt to improve the design, but merely reproduced the pictures as they appeared to my vision, and the operation was always as I expected.”
Tesla patented his AC motors and power systems, which were said to be the most valuable inventions since the telephone. Soon, George Westinghouse, recognizing that Tesla’s designs might be just what he needed in his efforts to unseat Edison’s DC current, licensed his patents for $60,000 in stocks and cash and royalties based on how much electricity Westinghouse could sell. Ultimately, he won the “War of the Currents,” but at a steep cost in litigation and competition for both Westinghouse and Edison’s General Electric Company.
Fearing ruin, Westinghouse begged Tesla for relief from the royalties Westinghouse agreed to. “Your decision determines the fate of the Westinghouse Company,” he said. Tesla, grateful to the man who had never tried to swindle him, tore up the royalty contract, walking away from millions in royalties that he was already owed and billions that would have accrued in the future. He would have been one of the wealthiest men in the world—a titan of the Gilded Age.
His work with electricity reflected just one facet of his fertile mind. Before the turn of the 20th century, Tesla had invented a powerful coil that was capable of generating high voltages and frequencies, leading to new forms of light, such as neon and fluorescent, as well as X-rays. Tesla also discovered that these coils, soon to be called “Tesla Coils,” made it possible to send and receive radio signals. He quickly filed for American patents in 1897, beating the Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi to the punch.
Tesla continued to work on his ideas for wireless transmissions when he proposed to J.P. Morgan his idea of a wireless globe. After Morgan put up the $150,000 to build the giant transmission tower, Tesla promptly hired the noted architect Stanford White of McKim, Mead, and White in New York. White, too, was smitten with Tesla’s idea. After all, Tesla was the highly acclaimed man behind Westinghouse’s success with alternating current, and when Tesla talked, he was persuasive.
“As soon as completed, it will be possible for a business man in New York to dictate instructions, and have them instantly appear in type at his office in London or elsewhere,” Tesla said at the time. “He will be able to call up, from his desk, and talk to any telephone subscriber on the globe, without any change whatever in the existing equipment. An inexpensive instrument, not bigger than a watch, will enable its bearer to hear anywhere, on sea or land, music or song, the speech of a political leader, the address of an eminent man of science, or the sermon of an eloquent clergyman, delivered in some other place, however distant. In the same manner any picture, character, drawing or print can be transferred from one to another place. Millions of such instruments can be operated from but one plant of this kind.”
White quickly got to work designing Wardenclyffe Tower in 1901, but soon after construction began it became apparent that Tesla was going to run out of money before it was finished. An appeal to Morgan for more money proved fruitless, and in the meantime investors were rushing to throw their money behind Marconi. In December 1901, Marconi successfully sent a signal from England to Newfoundland. Tesla grumbled that the Italian was using 17 of his patents, but litigation eventually favored Marconi and the commercial damage was done. (The U.S. Supreme Court ultimately upheld Tesla’s claims, clarifying Tesla’s role in the invention of the radio—but not until 1943, after he died.) Thus the Italian inventor was credited as the inventor of radio and became rich. Wardenclyffe Tower became a 186-foot-tall relic (it would be razed in 1917), and the defeat—Tesla’s worst—led to another of his breakdowns. ”It is not a dream,” Tesla said, “it is a simple feat of scientific electrical engineering, only expensive—blind, faint-hearted, doubting world!”
By 1912, Tesla began to withdraw from that doubting world. He was clearly showing signs of obsessive-compulsive disorder, and was potentially a high-functioning autistic. He became obsessed with cleanliness and fixated on the number three; he began shaking hands with people and washing his hands—all done in sets of three. He had to have 18 napkins on his table during meals, and would count his steps whenever he walked anywhere. He claimed to have an abnormal sensitivity to sounds, as well as an acute sense of sight, and he later wrote that he had “a violent aversion against the earrings of women,” and “the sight of a pearl would almost give me a fit.”
Near the end of his life, Tesla became fixated on pigeons, especially a specific white female, which he claimed to love almost as one would love a human being. One night, Tesla claimed the white pigeon visited him through an open window at his hotel, and he believed the bird had come to tell him she was dying. He saw “two powerful beans of light” in the bird’s eyes, he later said. “Yes, it was a real light, a powerful, dazzling, blinding light, a light more intense than I had ever produced by the most powerful lamps in my laboratory.” The pigeon died in his arms, and the inventor claimed that in that moment, he knew that he had finished his life’s work.
Nikola Tesla would go on to make news from time to time while living on the 33rd floor of the New Yorker Hotel. In 1931 he made the cover of Time magazine, which featured his inventions on his 75th birthday. And in 1934, the New York Times reported that Tesla was working on a “Death Beam” capable of knocking 10,000 enemy airplanes out of the sky. He hoped to fund a prototypical defensive weapon in the interest of world peace, but his appeals to J.P. Morgan Jr. and British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain went nowhere. Tesla did, however, receive a $25,000 check from the Soviet Union, but the project languished. He died in 1943, in debt, although Westinghouse had been paying his room and board at the hotel for years.
Sources
Books: Nikola Tesla, My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla, Hart Brothers, Pub., 1982. Margaret Cheney, Tesla: Man Out of Time, Touchstone, 1981.
Articles: “The Problem of Increasing Human Energy With Special References to the Harnessing of the Sun’s Energy,” by Nikola Tesla, Century Magazine, June, 1900. “Reflections on the Mind of Nikola Tesla,” by R. (Chandra) Chandrasekhar, Centre for Intelligent Information Processing Systems, School of Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering, Augst 27, 2006, http://www.ee.uwa.edu.au/~chandra/Downloads/Tesla/MindOfTesla.html”Tesla: Live and Legacy, Tower of Dreams,” PBS.org, http://www.pbs.org/tesla/ll/ll_todre.html. ”The Cult of Nikola Tesla,” by Brian Dunning, Skeptoid #345, January 15, 2003. http://skeptoid.com/episodes/4345. “Nikola Tesla, History of Technology, The Famous Inventors Worldwide,” by David S. Zondy, Worldwide Independent Inventors Association, http://www.worldwideinvention.com/articles/details/474/Nikola-Tesla-History-of-Technology-The-famous-Inventors-Worldwide.html. “The Future of Wireless Art by Nikola Tesla,” Wireless Telegraphy & Telephony, by Walter W. Massid & Charles R. Underhill, 1908. http://www.tfcbooks.com/tesla/1908-00-00.htm

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BBC Documentary 2014 Nikola Tesla's Life New Documentary Full
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jtewnD7LyEI

Images:
1. An early Tesla Coil (1891). One of several designs, capable of creating very high voltages at low currents.
2. A newspaper cutting from the New York Journal stating 'The Wizard of Science Says He Has Enslaved Earth's Mightiest Force for the Use of Man.'
3. Nikola Tesla in his 20s, and later in his 70s.
4. Tesla's Wardenclyffe Tower in Long Island (1902).

Background from {[https://scienceme.com/the-life-of-nikola-tesla.php]}
Nikola Tesla is sometimes referred to as the man who invented the 20th century. And why not? He developed breakthroughs in alternating current motors, wireless radio transmission, x-ray generation, radar, hydroelectric power and transistors.
But the troubled Tesla had a host of obstacles to overcome—and reinvesting all his profits into new inventions made life extraordinarily difficult on several occasions.
Discover the fascinating personal and business life of Nikola Tesla and how he came to be one of the most under-rated inventors of modern history.
In the twenty-first century, the robot will take the place which slave labor occupied in ancient civilization.

Early Life
Born during an electrical storm in 1856 in the Austrian Empire—now modern day Croatia—Nikola Tesla was curious from the start.
He pondered the little static shocks he got from stroking his cat, Macak, and drew comparison to the summer lightning storms that threaded the sky. It was as "if nature was like a giant cat," he recalled in his memoirs years later.
His father, Miluten, was an Orthodox priest, while his mother, Duka, had a knack for making craft tools and mechanical appliances for the home. She also boasted an eidetic memory which she passed on to her son.
It is not true, as Descartes taught, that the brain is an accumulator. There is no permanent record in the brain, there is no stored knowledge. Knowledge is something akin to an echo that needs a disturbance to be called into being.

The young Nikola had some unusual quirks, perhaps early signs of his OCD. He refused to touch anyone's hair, and was drawn to shiny objects and jewellery. He compulsively calculated the cubic content of his food, and counted his steps wherever he went.
Tesla experienced vivid synaesthesia linked to his photographic memory. In My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla he describes how certain words triggered visions to flash into his mind. Vivid as it was, he couldn't always tell whether the images were real or imaginary.
The fourth of five children, Nikola's older brother, Dane, died in a horse riding accident when Nikola was five. He was witness to the accident and some claim it was him who spooked the horse.
At high school, his interest in electricity was inspired by his physics teacher, whose demonstrations of "mysterious phenomena" made him want to "know more of this wonderful force".
Our senses enable us to perceive only a minute portion of the outside world.

Dark Days
After graduating from high school in 1873, Tesla returned to his hometown and promptly contracted cholera.
It was a terrible time for Tesla, leaving him bedridden for nine months, and bringing him close to death on several occasions.
People knew nothing of the character of the disease and the means of sanitation were of the poorest kind. They burned huge piles of odorous shrubbery to purify the air, but drank freely of the infected water and died in crowds like sheep.

After recovering from his extended illness, he evaded conscription to the Austro-Hungarian Army by running away to the mountains. He later explained how his time spent in nature made him both physically and mentally stronger.
[Cholera] was an agonizing experience, not so much because of physical suffering as on account of my intense desire to live. On the occasion of one of the fainting spells my father cheered me by a promise to let me study engineering... My father kept his word, and in 1877 I entered the Joanneum in Gratz, Styria, one of the oldest technical institutions of Europe.

Tesla enrolled at the college on a scholarship and achieved the highest grades possible in twice the required number of subjects. The dean wrote to his father: "your son is a star of the first rank".
Tesla worked furiously, from 3am until 11pm every day. But his exuberance led to burn-out in his second year. He became addicted to gambling, playing cards for 48 hours in a single stretch. He soon lost his scholarship altogether.
Humiliated by his failure to graduate, Tesla cut all ties with his family and moved to Maribor. His friends believed he had died, perhaps by drowning in the Mur River. In fact, he had suffered a nervous breakdown.
Only when he was accosted by police for lack of a residence permit was Nikola forced to return to his hometown and face his family.
But it was the start of another terrible chapter for Nikola. Three weeks after returning home, his father died from a sudden illness, likely a stroke.
The human being is a self-propelled automaton entirely under the control of external influences. Wilful and predetermined though they appear, his actions are governed not from within, but from without. He is like a float tossed about by the waves of a turbulent sea.

Tesla's Career
His career took off at the age of 25, when, in 1881, Tesla took to Budapest to work at the telephone exchange. He was soon promoted to chief electrician, making improvements to the station equipment and perfecting an amplifier.
Next, he took a job at the Continental Edison Company in Paris. At the forefront of a new industry, Tesla's job was to install indoor incandescent lighting citywide. His advanced knowledge of engineering and physics didn't go unnoticed and he was recruited to build improved dynamos and motors.
Instinct is something which transcends knowledge. We have, undoubtedly, certain finer fibers that enable us to perceive truths when logical deduction, or any other willful effort of the brain, is futile.

By 1884, Tesla was transferred across the Atlantic Ocean, to work at the Edison Machine Works in Manhattan's Lower East Side. His first time in America, he described the culture shock as a "painful surprise".

One of his projects was to develop an arc lamp-based street lighting system. He did so successfully, albeit with a voltage too high to be compatible with Edison's limited low-voltage system. Tesla's lighting solution never went into production.
After disputes with Thomas Edison over bonus pay for creating such inventions, he quit after six months and began freestyling his career as an inventor and engineer. The animosity between Tesla and Edison would never cease, and Edison's cut-throat competitive nature haunted Tesla for the rest of his days.
Being an honest man himself, Tesla trusted nearly everyone he met... and almost all of them ripped him off.

Robert Lomas, Tesla's biographer
Going Solo
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 the planter—for the future. His duty is to lay the foundation for those who are to come, and point the way. He lives and labors and hopes.

Tesla began work on patenting his original arc lighting system and secured finance to start his own company, the Tesla Electric Light & Manufacturing.
Soon, though, his private investors found the industry too competitive. They failed to see the potential in his inventions; namely alternating current (AC) motors and electrical transmission equipment.
Instead they only saw value in utilities. They dropped the manufacturing arm and abandoned Tesla's company to form their own utility business.
Tesla was left penniless and patent-less, for he'd signed his arc lighting patents over to the company in exchange for stock.
Of all the frictional resistances, the one that most retards human movement is ignorance, what Buddha called 'the greatest evil in the world'.

It was another low for Tesla as he was relegated to working as an electrical repairman and ditch digger for $2 a day.
[In 1886] my high education in various branches of science, mechanics and literature seemed to me like a mockery.

The following year, Tesla made a comeback. He found new private investors experienced in profiting from novel inventions. Together they formed the Tesla Electric Company where Nikola developed an AC induction motor.
The AC power system was already gaining massive ground in Europe and the US for its ability to transmit high voltages across long distances. Tesla's motor used a novel principle of polyphase current, which generated a magnetic field to turn the motor.
Tesla's AC induction motor accelerated the wheels of progress and kick-started the second industrial revolution by significantly improving energy generation efficiency. Today, the same design is used as the main power generator in industry and household appliances

Invention is the most important product of man's creative brain. The ultimate purpose is the complete mastery of mind over the material world, the harnessing of human nature to human needs.

The motor design was sold to George Westinghouse for $60,000 ($1.6 million in today's dollars) plus royalties. Tesla was also hired to work at the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company in Pittsburgh to help implement an AC system to power street cars.
The market turned, however, as competition intensified among the three big electric companies. It was a capital-intensive industry, and all were trying to undercut each other. The pressure to win-out was immense.
Tesla's ex-employer, Thomas Edison, who worked only in direct current (DC), pushed his propaganda that alternating current was dangerous. He famously electrocuted animals in the street, including dogs, horses, and one Topsy the elephant, in an attempt to publicly discredit the superior AC technology.

After brainwashing the general public, torturing animals to death, and generally holding back technological progress, Edison's scheme finally collapsed. The truth prevailed and alternating current won the market.
Westinghouse would later pay Tesla $216,000 ($5.9 million today) for the royalty-free component of his polyphase current motor.

The Tesla Coil
Outside of the AC-DC debacle, Nikola ran a series of independent laboratories in Manhattan to pursue his own interests. He became fascinated by electromagnetic radiation, including radio waves.
Attempting to run a Ruhmkorff coil with his own high speed alternator, he discovered the high frequency current overheated the iron core and melted the insulation.
His solution? The Tesla coil—an electrical resonant transformer circuit which used an air gap instead of insulating material.

Tesla used these circuits to conduct experiments in electrical lighting, phosphorescence, x-ray generation, electrotherapy, and the transmission of electricity without wires. Tesla coils would be used commercially in wireless telegraphy until the 1920s.
I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.

Today, Tesla coils are mostly used for education and entertainment, although some small coils are still used as leak detectors for high vacuum systems.
Wireless Power and Communications
Through the 1890s Tesla experimented with power transmission without the use of wires. It was an expansion of his public demonstrations where he lit Geissler tubes and incandescent light bulbs from across a stage.
His vision was to transmit not only large amounts of power around the world—but also communications via radio waves.
One of his ideas was to conduct electricity through the Earth or atmosphere, the latter based on a common idea at the time that the atmosphere was conductive. He proposed a system of suspending giant balloons to transmit and receive electrodes in the low-pressure air above 30,000 feet.

In 1899, to explore the concept further, Tesla set up an experimental station at high altitude in Colorado Springs. He explained to reporters he was conducting wireless telegraphy experiments, transmitting signals to Paris.
He used a large Tesla coil to produce artificial lightning consisting of millions of volts and 135-foot-long discharges. At one point he accidentally burned out the generator in El Paso and caused a massive power outage.

Talking to Martians
During his Colorado experiments, Tesla received some unusual radio signals which he speculated could be signals from another planet. The media was sensationalist even then, and jumped to the conclusion that Tesla was picking up messages from Mars.
The most likely explanation is he was receiving the transmissions of Guglielmo Marconi, a competing engineer in Europe who was conducting wireless transmission experiments for the navy. This would come back to haunt him.

The Wardenclyffe Project
Back in New York, Tesla wined and dined investors, seeking more money to commercialise what he thought would be a viable wireless transmission system.
In 1901, Tesla secured $150,000 ($4.4 million today) from the investor JP Morgan and began building the Wardenclyffe Tower facility in Long Island.

But this wasn't enough for Nikola.
Soon he yearned to build a more powerful transmitter that would outstrip Marconi's now-famous radio based system (which Tesla suspected was a copy of his own, based on previously published patents). He needed more money urgently to expand the build.
Morgan refused. Before the year was out, Marconi beat Tesla to the punch by sending a signal (the letter S) from England to Newfoundland. This drove Tesla crazy, who would write 50 more letters to Morgan—begging, pleading and demanding more funding for his world-changing concept.
In 1902, while Tesla was busy building his 187-foot tower, Wall Street were putting their money on Marconi. Tesla moved his lab operations into the Wardenclyffe Tower later that year, but it was already too late.
The media had turned against Tesla, slating his grand scheme as a hoax. By 1905, research at Wardenclyffe ground to a halt on the back of financial problems, and Tesla suffered another nervous breakdown.
The tower never did fulfil its destiny, and was foreclosed and later demolished to make way for more viable real estate assets.
Bankruptcy
The great inventor continued to seek funding for his wireless projects, this time by attempting to market his patents.
For instance, in 1906, on his 50th birthday, Tesla had demonstrated a 200-horsepower bladeless turbine. He later attempted to commercialise the turbine but was largely unsuccessful, except in the niche of speedometers in luxury cars.
By 1915, Tesla was effectively bankrupt, with most of his patents run out and no new inventions to commercialise.
Money does not represent such a value as men have placed upon it. All my money has been invested into experiments with which I have made new discoveries enabling mankind to have a little easier life.
Nikola Tesla
Desperate to pursue his life's ambition, he attempted to raise money by suing the Marconi Company for infringement of his wireless tuning parents. Even today, the true ownership remains murky.
Both entities had filed their original wireless radio patents in 1897, and both designs were approved. But when Marconi filed an improved patent to his design in 1900, it was rejected on the basis that it infringed Tesla's original.
The legal action some two decades later should, then, have been a win for Tesla. But the case went nowhere.
To say that Tesla was down on his luck is an understatement.
Despite his extraordinary inventions of the past, the media and Wall Street now labelled him a lunatic and a con-man. At one low point, he'd even seen his private New York lab burn to the ground. It went with such ferocity that the entire fourth floor collapsed into the second floor, and he was left devastated by the loss of copious research notes and prototypes.
Perhaps his luck was turning when, in 1915, Tesla and Edison were touted to win the Nobel Prize in Physics.
Nope, just another blow. The honour was passed to the father-and-son team, William Henry Bragg and William Lawrence Bragg, for their work in crystal structure analysis.
Some speculated that the wealthy Edison had refused the award just to spite Tesla and prevent him from receiving his share of the prize money of $20,000 ($550,000 today). The two men never did overcome their differences and were fiercely critical of each other's work.
[Thomas Edison's] method was inefficient in the extreme, for an immense ground had to be covered to get anything at all unless blind chance intervened and, at first, I was almost a sorry witness of his doings, knowing that just a little theory and calculation would have saved him ninety per cent of the labor. But he had a veritable contempt for book learning and mathematical knowledge, trusting himself entirely to his inventor's instinct and practical American sense. In view of this, the truly prodigious amount of his actual accomplishments is little short of a miracle.
Nikola Tesla
Tesla's Quirks
For forty years, Tesla lived in a series of hotels in New York. He had a habit of running up large expenses before moving on, leaving the unpaid bills behind him. This didn't help his reputation in the public eye, portraying a frivolous and reckless way of life.
But there were more endearing aspects to his personality. Every day, he walked to the park to feed the pigeons. He took to feeding them from his hotel room window and once spent $2,000 creating a device to heal a pigeon's broken wing and leg.
There was one, a beautiful bird, pure white with light grey tips on its wings; that one was different. It was a female. I had only to wish and call her and she would come flying to me. I loved that pigeon as a man loves a woman, and she loved me. As long as I had her, there was a purpose to my life.
Nikola Tesla
Tesla was a polyglot, speaking eight languages, and was able to memorise complete books.
It is paradoxical, yet true, to say, that the more we know, the more ignorant we become in the absolute sense, for it is only through enlightenment that we become conscious of our limitations. Precisely one of the most gratifying results of intellectual evolution is the continuous opening up of new and greater prospects.
Nikola Tesla
Nikola never married, viewing love and relationships as distraction from his work. He was generally asocial, although when he did engage with others, was described as having a "distinguished sweetness, sincerity, modesty, refinement, generosity, and force."
Seldom did one meet a scientist or engineer who was also a poet, a philosopher, an appreciator of fine music, a linguist, and a connoisseur of food and drink.
Julian Hawthorne, writer and friend of Tesla
In his seventies, still living out of hotels now paid for by the Westinghouse Company, Tesla celebrated his birthday with lavish spreads of his own design. He invited the press to hear about his past exploits, latest inventions, and some frankly baffling claims.
At his 1932 event, he claimed to have invented a motor that could run on cosmic rays. The following year, Tesla claimed to be on the verge of proving a new form of energy that was "violently opposed to Einsteinian physics".
He also claimed to have designed a superweapon to end all war, a camera that could photograph the retina and record a person's thoughts, and a mechanical oscillator that could destroy the Empire State Building.
Late one night in 1937, Tesla was making his rounds to feed the pigeons when he was struck by a taxi. He broke several ribs and injured his back, although refused to see a doctor, leaving him with lifelong pain.

The Death of Tesla
Nikola Tesla died of a heart attack in 1943 at the age of 86. He was alone in his room in the New Yorker Hotel and his body was discovered two days later, when a maid pushed past his Do Not Disturb sign.
The FBI seized Tesla's belongings in fear that he genuinely had conceptualised some new and exotic weapons. After a short investigation, nothing of any danger was found.
[Tesla's] thoughts and efforts during at least the past 15 years were primarily of a speculative, philosophical, and somewhat promotional character often concerned with the production and wireless transmission of power; but did not include new, sound, workable principles or methods for realizing such results.
John G Trump, MIT Professor
Two thousand people attended the state funeral held for Nikola Tesla. He had lived an extraordinary life, a rags-to-riches-to-rags tale of a prolific inventor, singularly dedicated to furthering the technological capabilities of mankind.
Today his legacy lives on in the name of the world's best-known electric car, while the magnetic field strength of MRI scanners is measured in Teslas.
His genius and eccentricity saw him reach the peak of scientific achievement, yet eventually led to his downfall, leaving him to die in old age, penniless and alone.
Let the future tell the truth, and evaluate each one according to his work and accomplishments. The present is theirs; the future, for which I have really worked, is mine.

FYI LTC John Shaw SPC Diana D. LTC Hillary Luton
1SG Steven ImermanSSG Pete FishGySgt Gary CordeiroPO1 H Gene LawrenceSPC Chris Bayner-CwikSgt Jim BelanusSGM Bill FrazerMSG Tom EarleySSgt Marian MitchellSGT Michael HearnPO2 Frederick DunnSP5 Dennis LobergerCPO John BjorgeSGT Randell RoseSSG Jimmy CernichSGT Denny EspinosaMSG Fred Bucci
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PO1 H Gene Lawrence
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A great history share.
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1SG Steven Imerman
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When asked what it felt like to be the smartest man alive, Albert Einstein said, “ I don't know, you have to ask Nikola Tesla!”
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