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BrochureThomas Edison |
Official Brochure of Thomas Edison National Historical Park (NHP) in New Jersey. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison National Historical Park
New Jersey
personified the
age of invention, America’s new frontier in the late 1800s. Though he was best
known for the phonograph and incandescent lamp, perhaps Edison’s greatest
invention was a new way to invent: the industrial research and development
laboratory. Today his largest lab complex is preserved at Thomas Edison National Historical Park. With his teams of scientists and technicians, he perfected
his phonograph and developed motion pictures, a nickel-iron-alkaline storage
battery, and many other devices and technologies. Edison earned 1,093 U.S.
patents in his lifetime, most for inventions that came from here.
main building were separate labs for chemistry, physics, and metallurgy. Though
Edison was the guiding force behind every project, a spirit of camaraderie prevailed among the 100 or so employees. Small teams worked independently on
aspects of projects while Edison made the rounds daily to fine-tune, offering
inspired ”guesses” that usually turned out to be right. He spent most of his time
at the labs, often working overnight and indulging in quick naps in his library.
thing from ballet to boxing. The phonograph and film businesses capitalized
on consumer demand for new forms of entertainment.
Well into old age Edison was trying new things: a technique for poured concrete buildings, a fluoroscope to view x-ray images, methods for manufacturing large quantities of chemicals, huge machines for extracting iron from ore
and for manufacturing cement. His final search was for a domestic source of
rubber. Thomas Edison died in 1931. The West Orange labs soon closed, but
reopened as a museum in 1948. Edison National Historic Site was established
in 1962; in 2009 it became Thomas Edison National Historical Park. The park
is a memorial to the man and a place where you can discover the roots of
American inspiration and innovation.
Edison the inventor was also a shrewd entrepreneur who established dozens
of companies during his career. ”I always invented to obtain money to go on
inventing,” he said. The business side of his operation centered on the phonograph. His factories in West Orange produced a variety of cylinder and disc
phonographs and recordings, plus a business phonograph for office dictation.
He introduced motion pictures, and manufactured cameras, projectors, and
films. In the Black Maria, the world’s first movie studio, his staff filmed every-
Ten times the size of the Menlo Park lab where Edison achieved early fame,
the West Orange complex looked like a small college campus. A three-story
building held a research library, machine shops for building models, space for
experiments and various research projects, and Edison’s office. Across from the
1847
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Edison Labs
NPS / MELINDA SLOATE SCHMITT
1931
An Inventive Career
1847
”talking machine”—the
phonograph. First recording
is Edison’s recital of ”Mary
had a little lamb.” Hailed as
the ”Wizard of Menlo Park.”
Thomas Alva Edison is born
in Milan, Ohio, February 11.
Educated mostly at home
by his mother.
1879
1854–63
Family moves to Port Huron,
Mich. Thomas works as a
newsboy on Grand Trunk
Railroad. Suffers permanent hearing loss.
Electric pen ad, 1870s.
1870
Invents commercially successful stock ticker. Income
finances workshop in Newark, N.J., where Edison
begins work on automatic
telegraphy.
Using carbon filaments in
a glass-enclosed vacuum,
produces practical incandescent light powered by
electric generator. Demonstrates lighting system New
Year’s Eve at Menlo Park.
Thomas Edison, age 14.
1864–69
Itinerant telegrapher in Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Memphis, and Louisville. Works
for Western Union in Boston.
Invents improved telegraph
equipment.
1869
Awarded his first patent
for legislative vote recorder.
Decides to become full-time
inventor.
1874
Invents quadruplex telegraph device that sends
four messages simultaneously along a single line.
Pursues increased message
capacity.
1875
Invents and markets electric
pen, an early document
duplication system.
Opens new lab complex in
West Orange. Experiments
with ore separation, shifting focus from gold to iron
ore. Spurred by rivals’ invention of graphophone,
resumes work on perfecting his phonograph. Builds
Edison Phonograph Works
Edison’s 1879 lamp sketch (left) near lab complex. Begins
and reproduction lamp.
work on kinetograph, a mocollection of the henry ford
1881
Moves home and office to
New York City. Begins construction of first permanent
central power station on
Pearl Street in Lower Manhattan, which opens in
September 1882.
1871
Marries Mary Stilwell,
one of his employees, on
Christmas Day.
1887–88
First phonograph, 1877.
nps / darryl Herring
1880
Experiments with magnetic
gold ore separation. Observes transfer of electrons
between electrodes within
a glass globe—the ”Edison
Effect”—which eventually
leads to development of
vacuum tubes used in radio
and television.
1884
Mary Stilwell Edison dies.
1886
Edison marries Mina Miller.
Moves to Glenmont estate
in West Orange, N.J.
1876
Builds laboratory at Menlo
Park, N.J., world’s first industrial research facility
incorporating several fields
of science and technology.
”Black Maria” at West Orange labs becomes world’s
first motion picture studio.
1894
Sells General Electric stock
to finance ore milling operation, thus exiting electrical industry by 1897. Ore
milling is ultimately a commercial failure. ”Edison
Kinetoscopic Record of a
Sneeze” becomes first
copyrighted motion picture.
Vote recorder, 1869.
New company manufactures phonographs for office dictation, later known
as the Ediphone and the
Voicewriter. Introduces Amberol cylinder recordings
that play for four minutes
rather than two. With other
film producers, forms company to control patents
and fight competitors.
tion picture camera, and kinetoscope, a boxlike device
for viewing motion pictures
through a peephole.
1890
Establishes Edison General
Electric Co., which merges
with the Thomson-Houston
Electric Co. in 1892 to form
General Electric.
Establishes Edison Portland
Cement Company; uses
waste rock and ore milling
technology to produce cement, an increasingly popular building material.
1902
Introduces “Gold Moulded”
black wax cylinder, made
by a molding process that
1891
Demonstrates kinetoscope
to the public for the first
time.
Gold Moulded cylinder and
container, 1902.
nps / jane s. Hanna
Introduces Home Projecting
Kinetoscope to show films
in homes, schools, and
churches. Introduces Diamond Disc, a vertical-cut
groove disc record made of
Condensite (a plastic).
Begins search for domestic
source of rubber that can
be grown and processed
quickly. Eventually settles
on goldenrod and continues
experiments for the rest of
his life. Menlo Park lab recreated at Henry Ford Museum
in Dearborn, Mich.
1928
Awarded Congressional
Medal, one of the highest
civilian honors.
1929
Light’s Golden Jubilee celebrates 50th anniversary of
electric lighting. Ceases
manufacture of entertainment phonographs.
Electric Servants
1915
nps / jane s. Hanna
1910
After 10 years of experimen
tation, introduces nickeliron-alkaline storage battery
for electric automobiles.
With demise of electric cars,
battery eventually used in
other industrial applications.
Demonstrates kinetophone,
a motion picture projector
synchronized with a phonograph to produce sound
films.
1911
Edison Portland Cement bag,
early 1900s.
1912
Fire damages or destroys
13 factory buildings; laboratory buildings are spared.
Edison vows to rebuild, resumes limited production
within one month.
Organizes Thomas A.
Edison, Inc., to consolidate
most of his companies.
Menlo Park lab and workers, ca. 1880.
Nickel-iron-alkaline storage
battery, 1910.
1914
1899
1877
Building on experiments to
improve Alexander Graham
Bell’s telephone, invents
1905–08
Introduces Edison Home
Phonograph, affordable
and easy to operate. Begins
experimenting with x-rays.
Mina Miller, ca. 1886.
1927
improves sound quality,
yields more recordings, and
lowers costs.
1896
1883–84
Establishes company to
build central power stations
throughout Northeast.
1893
Named chairman of Naval
Consulting Board, advisory
group that evaluates civilian inventions for military
application.
1918
Sells motion picture business.
1920
Postwar economic downturn and poor sales result
in huge layoffs at Edison
factories and dismissals of
many managers and office
workers.
All photographs NPS / THOMAS edison National HistoricAL PARK unless otherwise credited
COFFEE MAKER, ABOVE RIGHT, collection of the henry ford
In the 1920s, the Edicraft
division of Thomas A. Edison,
Inc. began making coffeemakers (above), waffle irons,
sandwich grills, and toasters.
These ”electric servants”—
a popular term for kitchen
appliances—fit in with notions
of modern American domestic life. Sales of the pricey
gadgets dropped during the
Great Depression. Edicraft
ceased production in 1934.
1931
Dies October 18. Lights
dimmed nationwide for
one minute on the day of
his funeral.
1955
Edison company begins
conveying West Orange
property to National Park
Service.
1962
Edison National Historic
Site established to preserve
lab complex, Glenmont,
and historical collection.
2009
Congress redesignates site
as Thomas Edison National
Historical Park.
The Edisons at Glenmont
The Edison home, Glenmont.
NPS / JANE S. HANNA
Mina Miller Edison
and baby, ca. 1888.
Theodore Edison taking his piano lesson
with Miss Bogue, 1907.
In 1886 Thomas Edison married Mina Miller, the
20-year-old daughter of a wealthy Midwestern
manufacturer. According to family lore, Edison
gave his fiancée the choice of a townhouse in
New York City or a home in the country. They
soon settled on the Glenmont estate in Llewellyn
Park, a fashionable neighborhood that advertised
”Country Homes for City People.”
Mina and Thomas Edison, 1908.
The 29-room red brick and wood mansion was
built in 1880 by an office clerk who spared no
expense (including funds embezzled from his
firm). The architect was Henry Hudson Holly,
who also designed Edison’s nearby lab complex.
The exterior of the house exhibits the hallmarks
of the American Queen Anne style, which Holly
introduced to the nation: asymmetrical facade,
high-pitched gables, rooftop balcony, wraparound porch, and unified color. Interior elements
include stained-glass windows (right), chandeliers, wainscoting, and hand-painted ceilings.
Expansive grounds, a greenhouse and potting
shed, barn and stables, and poured-concrete
garage complete the estate.
Planning Your Visit
Laboratory Complex
Begin your visit at the Laboratory Complex
Visitor Center, which offers orientation information. Call ahead or check the park website
for hours and days of operation and special
events. Reservations are required for groups.
The Laboratory Complex tour is self-guiding.
You can see the 1877 tinfoil phonograph, the
kinetoscope, and many more original inventions.
The Edison Home at Glenmont offers a guided
tour; the estate grounds are self-guiding.
Thomas Edison National Historical Park is one
of over 390 parks in the National Park System.
To learn more about national parks visit
www.nps.gov.
Thomas Edison National Historical Park
211 Main St.
West Orange, NJ 07052
973-736-0550
www.nps.gov/edis
✩GPO:20xx—xxx-xxx/xxxxx Reprint 20xx
Printed on recycled paper.
Family gathered on the back steps of
Glenmont, 1906.
Glenmont was very much Mina’s domain; in
fact Thomas sold the property to her in 1891
to avoid possible seizure by creditors. Mina referred to herself as a “Home Executive” and
took those duties very seriously. She managed
money, oversaw the servants, and raised the
couple’s three children, Madeleine, Charles, and
Theodore and Edison’s three children from his
first marriage, Marion, Thomas Jr., and William.
Because Edison spent most of his time at the
labs, Mina represented him in the community
Glenmont Estate
Thomas Edison enjoying a quiet moment on the
grounds of Glenmont, 1917.
and by hosting social events at Glenmont. Guests
included Orville Wright, Helen Keller, the King
of Siam, and Edison’s friend Henry Ford. Products
of Edison’s labs and factories—phonographs, kinetoscopes, and of course electric lights—were
displayed throughout the rooms, as were Edison’s many honorary gifts and awards.
A large stained-glass window depicts Penelope
awaiting Ulysses’ return from the Trojan war.
This subject from Greek mythology fit the Victorian notion of a woman’s role as homemaker
and faithful wife.
All photographs NPS / THOMAS edison National historicAL PARK unless
otherwise credited
After Thomas died in 1931, Mina married again
and lived at Glenmont until her death in 1947.
Mina and Thomas are buried side by side in a
simple plot behind their home.
Edisons celebrate Thomas’ 80th birthday, 1927.
Museum and Archival Collections
Thomas Edison National Historical Park administers one of the largest museum collections in the
National Park System. There are some 400,000
artifacts—everything from prototype and commercial Edison products to laboratory furnishings
and equipment to the Edisons’ personal possessions. Also included are 48,000 sound recordings,
Edison’s own library of 10,000 rare books, and
the Edison archives with 60,000 photographic
images and an estimated five million documents.
West Orange Area
From New Jersey Turnpike: Exit 15W to I-280.
From Garden State
Parkway: Exit 145 to
I-280. From I-280 westbound: Exit 10. Turn
right on Northfield
Ave. Left on Main St.
Go about 0.75 mile to
parking on left and
Laboratory Complex
on right. From I-280
eastbound: Exit 9. Turn
left at end of ramp.
At second light, left
on Main St. Go about
0.5 mile to parking.
N. J. Transit: take bus
#21; www.njtransit.
com.