American History Tellers - Edison vs. Tesla | Triumph of Illumination | 3
Episode Date: May 20, 2026By 1888, the race to power America's cities had become a battle between the rival visions of Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla. But when the powerful industrialist George Westinghouse threw his ...weight behind Tesla and his AC system, what had been a personal falling out became something far larger – a war over the future of electricity itself. Their bitter fight spilled into courtrooms, ignited a national debate about capital punishment, and culminated in a fierce competition for the contract to illuminate the most ambitious event of the decade: the Chicago World’s Fair.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello American history teller listeners. I have an exciting announcement. I'm going on tour and coming to a theater near you.
This live show is a thrilling evening of history, storytelling, and music with a full band accompanying me as we look back to explore the days that made America.
And they aren't the days that you might think. Sure, everyone knows July 4, 1776. We'll be hearing a lot about that date this year. But there are many other days that are maybe even more influential.
So come out to see me live. More shows to be announced soon. So for information,
on tickets and upcoming dates, go to American History Live.com.
That's American History Live.com.
Come see my Days That Made America Tour, live on stage.
Go to American History Live.com.
Imagine it's April 17, 1888 in New York City.
You're an editor with a popular tabloid and working on the morning shift in the newsroom.
You've got a break, so you sit down at your desk for a breakfast of lukewarm coffee and a
pastrami sandwich.
As you take your first sip, you hear knock at your door. A young reporter rushes in.
Sorry to interrupt, sir, but I just got tomorrow's front page story.
Front page story, huh? Well, I'll be the judge of that, kid. What is it?
You know the corner of East Broadway and Catherine Street?
Yeah, I know it. I walk past it every morning.
Well, last night, a boy was playing around a lamppost and happened to touch a loose wire.
Zapp! He falls dead. Dead? Just like that?
Yeah, witnesses say he was just horsing around.
They saw him grab a dangling telegraph wire and danced around the pole.
But then when it came in contact with another loose wire, it sparked.
The boy staggered back and fell down on the sidewalk dead as a doornail.
So the electricity killed him?
Apparently.
And it was only a matter of time before someone got hurt.
Folks told me those wires have been damaged and hanging down for weeks.
Well, now, there are loose wires all over this city.
It's hard to tell which ones are electrified.
Everyone complains about them.
Yeah, but no one's doing it.
anything about it. And this kid, he was just 15 years old. He had eight brothers and sisters and was
selling pocket combs to help his mother put food on the table. Oh, that poor family. Yeah,
sounds like this is a final straw for folks. Yeah, what do you mean? Well, I talked to a shop owner
and a couple of witnesses who are planning march down to the mayor's office and demand that all the
wires be taken down. The shop owner's got a mess of them right over his storefront and says they
sparked in the last storm and no one came to fix them. Now, well, hold on.
Those wires supply electricity to the city.
You know those lights down on Broadway.
We ran a piece just last month, calling them a sign of progress.
We can't very well turn around and call them a menace now.
Sir, it's clear from my reporting that for many people, they've stopped being a novelty.
And have become a sign of corruption, and now, even death.
I've never seen people so angry.
And the corruption part is true, too.
I've got a pal on City Hall who says he's seen a stack of bids for more electrical contracts,
all rubber-stamped without a glance.
Is that so?
It is.
And I think our duty is to say something.
I mean, if we don't, more people could die.
Well, there are a lot of powerful men with a lot at stake in this new technology.
But I suppose we do have to report on this kid's untimely demise.
That's in the public interest for sure.
Yes, sir, I'd say it is.
Well, let's just hope we don't lose advertisers of this.
And you'd better make sure your guy at City Hall is right.
If we're going to risk upsetting some of the most powerful people in Manhattan,
I want this story airtight. You hear me?
Yes, sir, you got it.
All right, then. What are you doing standing around in my office? Get writing.
Until now, electrical lighting has been a source of pride for New York City,
but it's hard to deny that the overhead cables have become a menace.
And the death of an innocent boy changes things.
If the public is this angry and there's evidence that the city is ignoring safety,
that's a story that must be told.
And there's no way you're going to let your competitors beat you to it.
Whether you're exploring your fascinations or discovering new ones,
Ottawa has stories that will introduce you to your most fascinating self.
Tap into a whole new world of heated conversations with a saucy romantic series.
Know how true the latest blockbuster movie stayed to the sci-fi story it was based on,
or find unexpected reveals through an exclusive true crime podcast.
However you listen, Audible keeps you fascinated so you can be just as fascinating.
Select any audiobook every month, plus exclusive podcast.
Plans now start at 899.
Audible.
Be fascinated.
Be fascinating.
Whether you're exploring your fascinations or discovering new ones,
Ottawa has stories that will introduce you to your most fascinating self.
Tap into a whole new world of heated conversations with a saucy romantic series.
Know how true the latest blockbuster movie stayed to the sci-fi story it was based on
or find unexpected reveals through an exclusive true crime podcast.
However you listen, Audible keeps you fascinated.
you can be just as fascinating. Select any audiobook every month, plus exclusive podcasts. Plans now start
at 899. Audible. Be fascinated. Be fascinating. From Audible originals, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is
American history tellers. Our history, your story. By 1888, the race to power America's cities
had become a battle between two rival visions. On one side was Thomas Edison, the famed inventor of the incandescent
light bulb, who sought to expand his empire built on a system of direct current or DC. On the other,
industrialist George Westinghouse and the visionary inventor Nikola Tesla, pushing their alternating
current or AC system as a faster, cheaper, and more efficient way to bring electricity to homes,
factories, and cities across the country. But what began as a technological disagreement quickly
turned personal and ugly. Their bitter fight spilled into courtrooms, ignited a national debate about
capital punishment and culminated in a fierce competition for the contract to illuminate the most
ambitious event of the decade, the Chicago World's Fair. Whoever emerged victorious would have
the chance to seize control of America's growing electrical market and set the standard for the
nation's electrical grid for the coming century. This is the third episode in our series Edison
versus Tesla, triumph of illumination. In the spring of 1888, a series of accidental electrocutions
on the streets of New York City set off a public panic. In April, a 15-year-old boy came in contact with
a live wire on Broadway and was immediately struck dead. Less than a month later, an electrical worker
suspended beside a two-story building clearing away old wires was also struck by a powerful current.
Witnesses inside the building had to pull his charred body in through a window. And these gruesome deaths
shocked the public and heightened fears about the web of electrical wires hanging above Manhattan's busy streets.
What had once been viewed as a sign of progress and modernity increasingly began to be seen as a deadly hazard.
Electrical lighting had first been installed on Broadway in 1880, and in the years that followed,
the city's network of overhead wires had expanded rapidly. In a rush of competition,
nearly a dozen companies strung hundreds of lines above the streets to carry current for electric lights,
telegraph systems and telephones, with many of the lines carrying high voltage alternating current.
Although the city had official oversight of these lines, rampant corruption and weak enforcement
allowed dangerous conditions to persist, and as a result, when a heavy snow or high winds hit
the city, the live wires were often blown down to within striking distance of pedestrians.
Thomas Edison, the city's most famous electrical inventor, had long railed against these overhead lines.
Edison's direct current system relied on cables that ran underground, safely out of reach of the public.
His lines also operated at a voltage between 100 to 200 volts,
while some of the overhead AC lines pulsed with as much as 10 times that amount.
Edison warned that these AC lines were dangerous to life,
arguing that even momentary contact with them could cause paralysis or death.
But Edison's criticism of AC power was not just about safety.
It was also a bid to stamp out competition.
Since the successful launch of his Pearl Street power station six years earlier,
Edison's company had expanded rapidly,
installing more than 120 DC stations across the country.
And by 1888, Edison's company was the leader in the industry.
But as his network expanded,
the limitations of direct current were becoming harder for customers to ignore.
Some expressed frustration that DC could only supply electricity
within a half mile of a generating station,
meaning that any community or business beyond that range had to set up an entirely new and expensive power station.
This put electrification out of reach for many potential customers.
Seeing an opening in the market, the brilliant and eccentric inventor Nikola Tesla led the push for AC power
and was backed by industrialist George Westinghouse.
Westinghouse had built his fortune by revolutionizing railroad safety, but now was turning
that same ambition toward electricity. His company Westinghouse Electric began signing up
customers in cities where Edison had earlier staked his claim, like New Orleans. But when Edison
heard of his rival's advances, he dismissed Westinghouse curtly, suggesting that he ought to
stick to railroads. But Westinghouse had no intention of backing off. In his Pittsburgh laboratories,
he and Tesla were working to refine an alternating current system based on Tesla's designs,
and they were eager to bring it to the commercial market. Tesla's system promised to deliver
electricity to a far wider area than Edison's because it carried high-voltage AC power over long
distances and then used transformers to step the current up or down so it could be used most
efficiently. There was a problem, though. While the concept worked beautifully in theory,
so far Tesla had only demonstrated it on a small scale, and he had yet to find a way to integrate
it into Westinghouse's existing power stations. Edison, meanwhile, remained critical of Tesla's
AC model. He warned the public that if a transformer failed to reduce the current before reaching a
building, he could turn an entire structure into a death chamber. He even called on electricians to
unite in a war of extermination against AC. But AC's potential ethality would soon lead Edison to envision
a surprising new application. At the time, the state of New York had encountered a series of
mishaps with hangings of criminals and had appointed a death commission to look into
electrocution as a more humane alternative. This commission reached out to Edison to seek his advice,
and though he had long opposed capital punishment, the inventor realized that the very power he
condemned for public use could serve a grim practical purpose, ending lives swiftly and efficiently.
So he reversed his previous stance and endorsed the state's pursuit of electricity for execution,
taking it one step further by specifically recommending Westinghouse's existing AC system for the TAS.
And with Edison's recommendation, in the spring of 1888, the New York State Legislature passed a bill making death by electricity the preferred method for the next state execution.
Very soon after, on June 5, 1888, a little-known engineer and electrical consultant named Harold Brown wrote an editorial in the New York Evening Post.
He called for an outright ban on the transmission of AC power above 300 volts, a measure that would effectively outlaw the system Westinghouse and Tesla,
were working to develop. Brown, a self-styled crusader, claimed to have no ties to Edison,
but the newspaper that printed his editorial was owned by one of Edison's longtime investors,
leading some to suspect Brown's crusade wasn't just about safety. Nevertheless, with the panic
over the recent accidental deaths, Brown's letter gained traction, and just a few days later,
on June 8th, the New York City Board of Electrical Control met to consider outlawing AC power.
The board asked George Westinghouse to respond to the charges that his AC system was dangerous,
but Westinghouse declined and instead wrote directly to his rival Edison, inviting him to visit
his workshop in Pittsburgh so they could resolve their dispute. Edison refused this offer.
With his attempt to make peace rebuffed, Westinghouse launched a full-throated defense of his AC system
the following month. And when the New York board met on July 16th, the hearing included an official
response from Westinghouse in which he defended his company, saying that out of the 127 AC stations
he'd installed, not a single one had sustained a fire or accident. He called the attacks on his
company unmanly, discreditable, and untruthful. Then he went further, charging that it was Edison's
DC stations that were prone to accidents, citing a fire that had destroyed a station in Boston.
In the meantime, the engineer Harold Brown stepped up his crusade against AC power, but also joined
the call for AC to be used in executions. And then he reached out to Edison, explaining that he
wanted to prove how lethal AC power could be with scientific evidence. Edison obliged him by offering
the use of his New Jersey lab and the assistance of one of his most trusted employees, Charles Batchelor.
Together, Brown and Batchelor began a series of gruesome experiments, using high-voltage AC power
to shock and kill dogs, then a calf, and then a large horse. At Edison's lab, a member of
of the New York Death Commission looked on, as Brown shocked the animals with jolts of high-voltage
AC electricity. But back in Pittsburgh, Westinghouse was outraged when he learned of these deadly
experiments on animals, and he continued to defend the safety of his AC systems, and the public
relations issue was not his only problem. Behind the scenes, Westinghouse was struggling to integrate
Nikola Tesla's system into his own existing infrastructure. Ever the idealist, Tesla insisted that
Westinghouse's central stations be retrofitted to be compatible with his superior technology,
but Westinghouse's engineers oppose the idea.
Their company already had 200 central stations spread across the eastern and central U.S.
These engineers warned Westinghouse that retrofitting them would be an enormous undertaking,
one that would hand Edison a significant competitive advantage at a critical moment.
So Tesla found his advice going unheeded.
And by the summer of 1889, Tesla had grown frustrated,
unable to bring his system to commercial scale, he left Pittsburgh.
He later recalled, I was not free at Pittsburgh.
I was dependent and could not work.
So Tesla returned to New York to experiment on his own terms at a new laboratory on Grand
Street, just as momentum was building toward the first execution by electricity.
After campaigning for electricity as a means of execution, Harold Brown and his allies got their wish
when William Kemler, a convicted murderer from Buffalo, was sentenced to him.
to die by electric chair. Brown had even gone so far as to quietly secure a Westinghouse AC
generator to be used for the execution. But the decision to execute Kemmler immediately sparked
controversy, and Kamler's attorney appealed, arguing that electrocution amounted to cruel and unusual
punishment. The case quickly captured the public's attention, turning into a media
spectacle as business leaders, scientists, and experts were all asked to weigh in on whether
electricity should be used to take a human life. Eventually, the controversy
escalated to the point that Thomas Edison himself was called to testify. Imagine it's July 23rd, 1889 in New York City.
You're an attorney and your client is scheduled to become the first prisoner to be executed in the so-called electric chair.
Today your office is packed with newspaper reporters, legal staff, and state officials, all here to observe the expert testimony the judge has called for in this case.
Testimony you hope will prove that death by electrocution is nothing short of torture dressed up as justice.
Just then, the man everyone's been waiting for enters your office.
All eyes turned to watch Thomas Edison squeeze through the crowd
and take a seat across from you at the desk.
Remembering his near-deafness, you raise your voice as you welcome him.
Mr. Edison, thank you for taking the time to visit with us today.
We are honored to have such an esteemed expert.
Edison leans in closer with his good ear.
Between his fingers dangles an unlit, half-finished cigar.
The honor's mind, sir.
The matter before is could not be more serious,
so your expertise is much needed.
You've long championed electricity as a beacon of progress and hope for mankind.
Have you not?
Certainly.
All my efforts have been devoted to refining electrical power in order to serve the public.
Then how do you explain the fact that you are now advocating for electricity to be the instrument of death?
Edison's face narrows.
I'm here merely to offer my scientific expertise.
And you're mischaracterizing my stance.
The direct form of current that we use at the Edison General Electric Company is low-volt
and completely safe. It's the high voltage AC system that is dangerous. That's a vital distinction.
Doesn't Westinghouse use an AC system? You seem obsessed with making sure that it's his system that is
used for execution. Well, it would certainly do the trick. It's dangerous. But he is your business
rival, is he not? Well, even so, I wish him no ill will. I simply believe he's pushing a lethal
system of electricity onto the public. And what about your relationship to Mr. Harold Brown,
who called for outlawing high-voltage alternating current.
I would say Mr. Brown is an ally in the quest to protect the public, but nothing more.
Does that mean you have no business connection with him? No formal relationship?
No, of course not. But isn't it true that you allowed him to use your prestigious laboratory
to conduct his cruel experiments, electrifying and killing innocent animals?
He did use my labs, but many other scientists do as well. That's no secret.
Very well, let's move on.
precisely what effect would using alternating current have on a man?
Well, his temperature would rise several degrees above normal, and it would mummify him.
Mummify him. Could you explain?
Well, the heat would evaporate all the fluids in his body, and then leave him mummified.
That sounds horrifying.
Could you guarantee that while being mummified a man would not suffer?
Given the proper administration and the proper voltage, death would be instantaneous, so yes, it would be painless.
But Mr. Edison, are you a physician? No, I am not. A medical expert? Not that either.
Then how can you be certain that this will not be a painful and prolonged death that amounts to cruel and unusual punishment? How can you be so sure?
You pause and allow your question to linger in the air, watching as Edison contemplates his response.
This is the man who brought the world the phonograph and the incandescent lipal. His brilliance cannot be denied.
And yet you feel that even he is reaching beyond his knowledge here to.
today. You can only hope that you've done enough to demonstrate that electrocution would be anything
but a humane form of execution. At a hearing to determine whether electrocution would be a cruel
and unusual form of punishment, Kamler's attorney Burke Cochran tried to show that the advocates
for the electric chair were motivated by business competition rather than the public good,
and that no expert, not even Thomas Edison, could guarantee that electricity could kill a man
without causing suffering. But Cochran's strategy backfired.
Edison's confidence, certainty, and celebrity proved more powerful than Cochran's cross-examination.
Newspapers celebrated Edison's appearance with headlines, hailing him as the world's
foremost authority on electrical current, and his testimony ultimately bolstered the state's
case to use electricity for Kemmler's execution. And as a bonus, Edison had again managed to
associate alternating current with death in the public mind. In the end, the New York Supreme Court
rejected the argument that death by electricity was a cruel and unusual punishment. So on August 6, 1890,
after months of delays, William Kemmler was executed at Auburn Prison in New York. As more than 20 witnesses
looked on, including state officials and the press, Kamler was hooked up to electrodes and shocked
for 17 seconds with alternating current from a Westinghouse generator. But contrary to Edison's
claims that death would be instantaneous, Kemmler did not die immediately. When doctors and
examined his body, it became clear that he was still breathing, and he suffered prolonged agony
as officials' race to reattach the electrodes and shock him again, this time for several minutes.
Newspapers reported the entire ordeal in gory detail. This botched execution was a blow to
Edison's reputation, and while he responded by calling the spectacle awful, he was quick to blame
state officials for not administering the electricity properly. For his part, Westinghouse criticized the
execution as a brutal affair and argued that it justified his case that electricity should never be
used for capital punishment, while Tesla would later call the use of electricity for executions
monstrous. But if Edison had hoped that Kemmler execution would damage his rival's business,
he was mistaken. Despite the negative publicity around alternating current, Westinghouse's business
continued to grow, even managing to expand abroad with new power stations in Cuba and China.
In the meantime, while Edison and Westinghouse have been trading blows in the press,
Nikola Tesla had quietly returned to the problem that had driven him out of Pittsburgh,
how to bring his revolutionary polyphase AC system to commercial scale.
Working toward that goal, in early 1890, Tesla had filed three new patent claims related to his AC motor.
Edison was watching closely.
He understood that if Tesla succeeded, it would hand Westinghouse a decisive advantage,
one that no amount of negative press could overcome.
But Edison wasn't about to give up the fight.
He had built his empire invention by invention,
and he wasn't going to let Westinghouse take it from him.
So he gathered his lawyers and began preparing for a different kind of war.
I'm Leon Nafok, best known as the host and co-creator of podcasts,
Slow Burn, Fiasco, and Think Twice Michael Jackson.
I'm here to tell you about my show, Final Thoughts, Jerry Springer,
whose name is synonymous with outrageous guests,
taboo confessions, and vicious on-stage fights.
But before the Jerry Springer show became a symbol of cultural decline,
its namesake was a popular Midwestern politician
and a serious-minded idealist with lofty ambitions.
Through dozens of intimate and revealing interviews with those who knew Springer best,
I examined Springer's lifelong struggle to reconcile his TV persona
with his political dreams and aspirations.
Named one of the best podcasts of the year by The New Yorker and Rolling Stone,
Final Thoughts, Jerry Springer, is a story about choices, how we make them, how we justify them to ourselves, and how we transcend them or don't.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts or binge the whole series ad-free right now on Audible.
Start your Audible subscription in the Audible app.
Whether you're exploring your current fascinations or discovering new ones,
Ottawa has all the stories that will introduce you to your most fascinating self.
Tap into a whole new world of heated conversations with a saucy romantic series.
Become your friend group's sci-fi expert on the latest blockbuster book-to-screen adaptation.
Or find unexpected reveals through the exclusive episodes of a viral true crime podcast.
However you choose to listen, Audible keeps you fascinated so you can be just as fascinating.
All in one easy app, with plans now starting at 899, you'll get access to over 900,000 audiobooks and podcasts,
including trending bestsellers, the hottest new releases, and exclusive podcasts you won't find anywhere else.
Sign up now to become a member and get any audiobook every month plus exclusive podcasts.
Plans now start at 899. Audible. Be fascinated. Be fascinating.
In May 1891, Thomas Edison filed suit against his rival George Westinghouse,
arguing that Westinghouse's incandescent lighting system infringed on his light bulb patent.
The heart of the suit was Edison's uniquely designed filament, which the federal patent office had
recognized a decade earlier in 1880. The stakes in the case were high. Without access to Edison's
bulb and without a viable alternative, Westinghouse's lighting systems could collapse, and his entire
empire risked being crippled by litigation. But Westinghouse refused to be intimidated by Edison's
formidable legal team, and countersued, arguing that his AC system, based on Nikola Tesla's designs,
was a unique technology. In court, Westinghouse leaned on Tesla's patents for his motor and transformers
to bolster his claim. But even as this litigation was hoped to save his company, Edison was contending
with mounting pressures from within his own ranks. In the summer of 1889, when business was
riding high, he had agreed to consolidate his various business divisions and was paid handsomely for it.
This deal made him a millionaire, but left him holding just 10% of his own company's stock,
a trade-off that now seemed costly as the legal battle intensified
and he found himself needing to act swiftly.
But on July 14, 1891, he got some good news.
A federal judge ruled that Edison had a right to his exclusive incandescent bulb patent
on the basis of the specially designed filament he and his assistants manufactured in his New Jersey lab.
This meant that competitors like Westinghouse could no longer use similar designs
without the risk of being sued.
Westinghouse appealed this decision, but in the meantime,
time, he moved quickly to demonstrate his AC technology represented the future of electric power
with or without Edison's bulb. That summer, he got his chance when a mining operator in the
frontier town of Telluride, Colorado, needed a new electrical system to power his gold mine.
The operator was facing a dwindling supply of timber for fuel, so he signed up with Westinghouse.
Since there was no existing power station, Westinghouse and Tesla were free to design and build one
from scratch. They used Tesla's AC power design to generate electricity for the mine from a nearby
river, then transferred 3,000 volts of electricity through three miles of copper wiring to the mine site.
This system was so successful that many residents wanted to sign out for their own access to electricity
and were angry when officials informed them that the town of Telluride had already signed a contract with Edison
for his DC system. Through the winter of 1891, as the town and residents of Telluride battled in court
and a heeded public hearings over which system to adopt,
Westinghouse received reports that the AC system was performing reliably and steadily,
even in mountainous terrain.
This telluride installation became the first commercial application of Tesla's design,
and it represented a huge success.
Now no one could deny that their AC system was efficient, durable, and cheap.
And back in New Jersey, Edison viewed Westinghouse and Tesla's success with disdain
and a growing unease about his own position.
Then in February 1892, Edison was blindsided.
His company Edison General Electric merged with a competitor to create General Electric,
a deal engineer by none other than J.P. Morgan,
whose private Manhattan home had once served as a showcase for Edison's early electrical innovations.
In the intervening years, though, Morgan had steadily gained influence in Edison's company,
and now, as part of the merger, Morgan dropped Edison's name from the new company entirely,
effectively pushing the inventor aside.
An editorial, an electrical engineer, blamed Edison himself, arguing that his obsessive fight against AC technology had cost him control of his company.
The editorial declared, Mr. Edison set his face against alternating current as a flint from the first, and has sought on every possible occasion to discredit it through the weight in the community of his justly great name, but the tide would not turn back at his frown.
And when Edison learned that his name had been dropped from the company that he founded, he was stunned.
A friend later recalled that when he broke the news to Edison on a visit to his New Jersey workshop,
Edison responded with uncharacteristic resignation, saying that I've come to the conclusion that I never did know anything about electricity.
Though he quickly regained his typical confidence and pledged to reinvent himself entirely,
saying, I'm going to do something now so different and so much bigger than anything I've ever done before
that people will forget that my name was ever connected with anything electrical.
Edison's friend noted this bravado, but also sensed a bitterness in the inventor's voice.
His pride had been wounded, he said. I knew then that something had died in Edison's heart.
In the spring of 1892, the nation was abuzz with the upcoming 400-year anniversary of the arrival of Christopher Columbus and the Americas.
Politicians and business leaders were eager to mark the occasion with an event bigger than any the nation had ever seen.
Though it was delayed a year by the presidential election, the Chicago World's
Fair, formerly known as the world's Colombian exposition, was set to open in 1893.
The fair was designed to showcase the progress and technology of America's growing industry,
and nothing would be more prominently featured than electricity.
Planers envisioned a temporary but dazzling city carved out of the marshland on the shores of
Lake Michigan, a blaze with tens of thousands of electrical lights and packed with hundreds
of exhibits. And it was no secret that whoever won the contract to power the fair would have an
unprecedented stage to demonstrate their dominance in the electrical market.
Imagine it's May 1892 in Chicago.
You're a local city official and the vice president of the planning committee for next year's
World Fair.
You're in a cramped meeting room on the first floor of the fair's offices where you and your
fellow committee members have gathered in private to deliberate on an important matter.
Take a deep breath, rise from your seat.
Well, gentlemen, we're here to decide what may be the single most important question of
the fair.
who will provide the electrical system, so let us select the best bid from the best company.
Across the table, a burly committee member who never misses a chance for an argument raises his hand.
Well, in my mind, there's only one. Westinghouse. Let's not waste our time pretending we're going to consider anyone else.
You feel your face flush. Well, it's true that Mr. Westinghouse has submitted a bid, but GE has submitted an equally attractive proposal.
I have trust I don't need to remind any of you of the prominence and stellar track record of
GE, founded by the genius inventor Thomas Edison. Yeah, well, where was Edison? Mr. Westinghouse made
the trip all the way from Pittsburgh, and it's here personally. Edison's nowhere to be seen.
Presumably, he's locked in his workshop, tinkering with his next gizmo. Well, Edison might not be here
himself, but GE's top management are. You can't deny that they're the dominant player in the
electric market. So dominant that the first bid they submitted was nearly triple the price. Well, since then,
they've come down considerably, which only proves that they were trying to
rob us blind in the first place, yeah? Look, those New York suits take us for suckers. We have a
responsibility to the people of Chicago to get the best deal. Yes, but from the best company.
Westinghouse is the best company. They've installed their AC systems across the country.
They've proven their system is efficient, safe, and most importantly, economical.
You notice several committee members nod their heads approvingly.
Gentlemen, please, we're talking about the reputation of the city. This is not a time to pinch
pennies. Well, I agree that the reputation.
of the city is the most important factor in our decision, and precisely why we should choose
Westinghouse. As you look around the room, you see that many of your fellow committee members
appear to have made up their minds. Well, fine, I leave the decision to all of you, but remember,
quality requires investment. When we throw that switch next year at the fair, the nation's eyes
will be upon us, and it'll be our heads on the block if anything goes wrong.
You sit back down and wipe your brow with a handkerchief. You know,
the decision before the committee is monumental.
So you just hope that when the votes are cast,
the best company comes out on top.
After tense negotiations,
the Chicago World's Fair Committee awarded the contract to Westinghouse.
He had visited Chicago several times in the spring of 1892,
cultivating relationships with city officials
and endearing himself to the local press.
And while Thomas Edison's company had charged $11 per arc light
during the fair's construction phase,
after their merger, General Electric's bid to,
illuminate the fare itself came in at triple that rate. The committee was outraged, and ultimately
Westinghouse's lower bid and promises of speedier progress won them over. So in May 1892,
George Westinghouse returned to Pittsburgh triumphant, but with an enormous task in front of him.
In just a year, he would have to design and build an entirely new electrical system
capable of reliably powering tens of thousands of lights, all within a tight budget, but he wouldn't
have to face the challenge alone.
Nicola Tesla would soon join him, eager to seize the opportunity to finally prove on the grandest stage in the world
that their AC system was the future of electric power.
Whether you're exploring your current fascinations or discovering new ones,
Ottawa has all the stories that will introduce you to your most fascinating self.
Tap into a whole new world of heated conversations with a saucy-romanticy series.
Become your friend group's sci-fi expert on the latest blockbuster book-to-screen adaptation,
or find unexpected reveals through the exclusive episodes of a viral true crime podcast.
However you choose to listen, Audible keeps you fascinated so you can be just as fascinating.
All in one easy app, with plans now starting at 899, you'll get access to over 900,000 audiobooks and podcasts,
including trending bestsellers, the hottest new releases, and exclusive podcasts you won't find anywhere else.
Sign up now to become a member and get any audiobook every month,
Plus exclusive podcasts.
Plans now start at 899.
Audible.
Be fascinated.
Be fascinating.
I'm Leon Nefok,
best known as the host and co-creator of podcasts
Slow Burn, Fiasco, and Think Twice Michael Jackson.
I'm here to tell you about my show,
Final Thoughts, Jerry Springer,
whose name is synonymous with outrageous guests,
taboo confessions,
and vicious on-stage fights.
But before the Jerry Springer show
became a symbol of cultural decline,
its namesake was a popular Midwestern.
and politician and a serious-minded idealist with lofty ambitions.
Through dozens of intimate and revealing interviews with those who knew Springer best,
I examine Springer's lifelong struggle to reconcile his TV persona with his political dreams and
aspirations.
Named one of the best podcasts of the year by The New Yorker and Rolling Stone, final thoughts,
Jerry Springer is a story about choices, how we make them, how we justify them to ourselves,
and how we transcend them or don't.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts or binge the whole series ad-free right now on
Audible. Start your audible subscription in the Audible app.
On August 27, 1892, Nicola Tesla arrived in New York City after a seven-month tour of Europe.
In England and France, he had impressed crowds with his AC polyphase motor and demonstrated his
latest innovations to rapt audiences. After a lecture at the Royal Institution in London,
a prominent physicist declared, Mr. Tesla had to be a new president.
as the genius of a discoverer. But his most significant achievement had been securing a licensing
agreement with a leading electric company in Hungary to use his patents to develop AC power across
the continent. Excited by the prospect of introducing this new technology to Europe, Tesla wrote to George
Westinghouse about the potential for business overseas. But while Westinghouse was intrigued by the news,
he had a more immediate priority, fulfilling his ambitious contract to power the Chicago World's Fair.
Tesla understood immediately that there could be no expansion overseas without a triumphant demonstration
of his AC power at home, so he pledged to go to Pittsburgh himself to work with Westinghouse's
engineers, acknowledging it is necessary to bring the AC motor to high perfection before the
exhibition, as this is of prime importance. But once in Pittsburgh, Tesla found Westinghouse's
electricians struggling to meet the demands of the complex and demanding project, which would
require 92,000 incandescent bulbs that could light up the fairgrounds for six months.
In order to achieve what he had promised, Westinghouse's team would have to develop the largest
power-generating system ever produced, and with the fair scheduled to open in less than a year,
it would have to be completed in record time. One engineer recalled being left in a daze by the
sheer enormity of the task. His top manager warned, Westinghouse is asking the impossible, and he just
won't get it. These men, who had to design and install the generator that would run the
Ferris lights, foresaw the many obstacles ahead. After that point, the average Westinghouse
AC plant in a big city could power a maximum of 10,000 bulbs. What their boss was asking for
was 10 times that. And the bulbs themselves remained a problem. Since Edison's patent win in the
courts, Westinghouse could no longer use an incandescent bulbs similar to Edison's, although the case was
still on appeal, Westinghouse knew his chances were slim. So he had no choice but to get to work
designing a new kind of bulb, one that he could use in Chicago. So while Westinghouse and Tesla got to work
in Pittsburgh, 7,000 laborers were toiling day and night in the swampy marshland south of Chicago,
clearing land and cutting timber to build the structures that would become known as the White City. But even
as it began to take shape, the courts were about to hand Westinghouse a setback. In December 18,
the U.S. Supreme Court reaffirmed the patent ruling in Edison's favor, denying Westinghouse's
appeal. The New York Times declared the matter settled with the headline, Edison again successful,
noting that the Westinghouse company had been restrained from making, using, or selling the Edison bulb.
But in defeat, Westinghouse's lawyers were curiously nonchalant, because Westinghouse's engineers had made a
breakthrough. They had managed to design a replacement bulb for their lighting system, which they called the
stopper lamp. Instead of Edison's fused glass seal at the base of the bulb, Westinghouse used a two-piece
stopper to ensure the bulb was sealed and could contain the glowing filament. It burns just as brightly
as Edison's, though for shorter duration. But more importantly, Westinghouse's engineers were
confident that the design was different enough to avoid infringing on Edison's patent. And along with a
new incandescent bulb, they were on track to fulfill their mission of powering the World's Fair, too. They
had managed to build 12 towering generators, each weighing 75 tons. These massive machines were completed
in January 1893 and shipped to Chicago just before opening day. And on Thursday, June 1, 1893,
the gem of the fair, the electricity building opened. The building's impressive white columns
spanned nearly 700 feet in length and was surrounded by a lagoon, a fountain, and a broad esplanade.
And after more than a year of constant work and development, Westinghouse and Tesla had succeeded
in the enormous task of illuminating the sprawling white city.
In August, Tesla visited the fairgrounds and gave a demonstration to a packed and enthusiastic audience.
Using a unique type of generator called an oscillator, he generated high-frequency alternating
currents which produced dramatic electrical effects.
He made objects, spin, and whirl, fired enormous sparks into the air and lit up glass tubes
and bulbs with no wires attached.
Then, in a stunning display, he ran electricity through his own body,
causing faint glimmers of electrical light to shimmer around him.
The crowd was enthralled with his manipulation of electricity.
But for many visitors, the greater wonder was the possibility
that the power on display might be capable of changing their lives.
Imagine it's a hot summer day in 1893.
You're a corn and grain farmer with a small plot of land about 20 miles south of Chicago.
And today, you and your neighbor have made the journey north to marvel at the inventions on display at the world's fair.
You couldn't wait to see what all the excitement was about, and your first stop was the electrical building.
As you and your friends step out of a demonstration given by the famous inventor Nikola Tesla,
you can see your neighbor's eyes are wide with amazement.
I've never seen anything like that in my life. Did you see the bolts of light that flew around him?
I sure did. I mean, how did he do that? He's like conjuring magic.
It was impressive for sure, but it's...
just electricity, not magic. Mr. Tesla is a scientist, not some wizard. Yeah, but you've got to admit,
it was a wild sight. As you continue to walk through the exhibit grounds, your eyes drawn to a large
generator, roped off from the crowd and manned by a few workers. You stepped closer, gazing at a system of
copper wires and switchboards that display the electrical current running up a staircase and overhead
to power a string of brilliant lights. Now, now that's what I call impressive. Look at that. All that power
waiting to be harnessed. Well, not that does us any good. It's just for the fair, at best,
rich folk. No, no, I don't, I don't agree. You don't see the potential? Look, how many hours a day
do you work on your farm? Your friend gives you a smirk. Well, you know the answer to that,
as long as there's daylight on working in the fields. Exactly. You and me both, and we're barely
making ends meet, right? From dawn to dusk. But think about it, with technology like this,
we could light up our homes, and the barns, too. We'd be done. We'd be done. We'd be. We'd
be more productive. Well, I don't want to work day and night. Well, with more time, we could raise
more cattle. Plow bigger fields. We'd have higher yields. If we were successful, we could even hire
field hands, so it wouldn't be just us. Now about our kids. They barely managed to do their
schoolwork in the evening. They can't see properly by the dim globe and oil lamp. Well, my daughter
is having trouble with her reading, that's for sure. Yeah, so now imagine if you had electric
light in your home. She'd have a chance for something better. You watch as your friend's eyes begin to
Brighton and marvel at the prospect.
You stare up at the generator, daring to dream.
So far, it's felt like modernity and electricity is something for the wealthy,
reserved for big cities in the east.
But for the first time, this wondrous invention feels like it might be available to you, too.
During the summer of 1893, hundreds of thousands of ordinary Americans attended the Chicago
World's Fair.
And while many were impressed with the futuristic gadgets and machines that lit up the grounds,
others saw the revolutionary potential for electricity to transform their lives in practical terms.
And the demonstration of the fair's powerful and dynamic AC system made the prospect of the technology easy to grasp.
With their audacious demonstration of electrical power, Westinghouse and Tesla were the undisputed stars of the fair.
But they weren't alone in competing for the crowd's attention.
General Electric had secured its own prominent place at the exposition as well.
In the electrical building, GE presented an elaborate display of Edison's most successful inventions
designed to burnish his reputation as the era's preeminent inventor, and the crowds were dazzled
by Edison's newest invention, a moving picture camera and projector, which could capture and replay
visual images. But it would prove to be one of Edison's last great appearances in the electrical
arena. Westinghouse and Tesla's triumph at the World's Fair had successfully demonstrated that
the future belonged to alternating current, and Edison's direct current system would soon be rendered
largely obsolete. So after the world's fair, Edison turned his relentless energy elsewhere.
He helped to launch the moving picture industry and spent years further refining the phonograph.
He also spent millions of dollars of his own money on failed pursuits, such as a giant rock-crushing
machine for mining, and a search for a new material to make rubber. His bold promise to invent something
bigger than the electric light never panned out. He would forever be known as the inventor of the
light bulb and associated with its incandescent glow. Meanwhile, the system he fought so hard to defeat
would soon become the foundation of modern life. The same year that Westinghouse and Tesla won the
contract for the Chicago World's Fair, they also secured the right to develop the nation's
biggest hydroelectric project at Niagara Falls, cementing their dominance of the electrical market.
Four years later, on November 15, 1896, Tesla threw the switch that brought electricity to Buffalo, New York,
making it the first city in America to have widespread electrical power.
Tesla spent the final decades of his life consumed with grander and more elusive ambitions,
becoming obsessed with radio frequencies and even paranormal communication.
But he never lost his fascination with electricity,
continuing to stage daring demonstrations of artificial lightning and magnetic fields
in his laboratories. And despite his bitter rivalry with Edison, he reflected on their greatest
achievement, harnessing the power of electricity when he said, we are whirling through endless
space with an inconceivable speed. All around us, everything is spinning, everything is moving,
everywhere is energy. The mere contemplation of those magnificent possibilities expands our minds,
strengthens our hopes, and fills our hearts with supreme delight.
From Audible Originals, this is episode three of our
three-part series on Edison versus Tesla for American History Tellers.
In the next episode, I'll speak with Dr. Paul Israel, the director and general editor of the Thomas A.
Edison papers at Rutgers University, an author of Edison, A Life of Invention.
We'll discuss the journey Edison took to become the most famous inventor of his time and how he
assembled the team that made his biggest ideas possible.
Follow American History Tellers on the Audible app, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to all episodes of American History Tellers ad-free by joining Audible.
And to find out more about me and my other projects, including my live stage show coming to a theater near you, go to not-that-lindsayam.com.
That's not-that-lindsaymbram.com.
If you'd like to learn more, we recommend Empires of Light by Jill Jones and Edison and the electric chair by Mark Essex.
American History Tellers is hosted, edited, and produced by me, Lindsay Graham from Airship.
This episode is written by Dorian Marina.
Senior producers Alita Rosansky and Andy Beckerman.
Managing producer Desi Blaylock.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazzy.
Music by Thrum.
Sound designed by Molly Bach.
Executive producer for Audible,
Jenny Lauer Beckman.
Head of Creative Development and Audible,
Kate Naven.
Head of Audible Originals, North America,
Marshall Louis.
Chief Content Officer Rachel Giazza.
Copyright 2026 by Audible Originals LLC.
Sound recording copyright 2026 by Audible Originals LLC.
I'm Raza Jaffrey, and in the new season of The Spy Who,
we tell the story of Dr. A. Q. Khan, the spy who sold nuclear secrets to Iran.
He was the scientist's spy who stole nuclear technology from the Netherlands
and used them to give Pakistan a bomb.
But he didn't stop there.
He became a black market atomic salesman,
a fix-it man for rogue states seeking nuclear weapons,
including Iran, Libya, and North Korea.
And that left the CIA and MI6 in a race against time to put him out of business,
before the world's most wayward regimes get hold of the world's most destructive weapons.
Follow the Spy Who now, wherever you listen to podcasts.
You can also listen to the full season of the Spy Who sold nuclear sequence to Iran.
Early and at three on Audible.
