Wireless lawsuits
When World War I broke out, the British cut the
transatlantic telegraph cable linking the US to Germany in order to control the
flow of information between the two countries. They also tried to shut off
German wireless communication to and from the US by having the US Marconi
Company sue the German radio company Telefunken for patent infringement.
Telefunken brought in the physicists Jonathan Zenneck and Karl Ferdinand Braun
for their defense, and hired Tesla as a witness for two years for $1,000 a
month. The case stalled and then went moot when the US entered the war against
Germany in 1917.
In 1915, Tesla attempted to sue the Marconi Company for
infringement of his wireless tuning patents. Marconi's initial radio patent had
been awarded in the US in 1897, but his 1900 patent submission covering
improvements to radio transmission had been rejected several times, before it
was finally approved in 1904, on the grounds that it infringed on other
existing patents including two 1897 Tesla wireless power tuning patents. Tesla's
1915 case went nowhere, but in a related case, where the Marconi Company tried
to sue the US government over WWI patent infringements, a Supreme Court of the
United States 1943 decision restored the prior patents of Oliver Lodge, John Stone,
and Tesla. The court declared that their decision had no bearing on Marconi's
claim as the first to achieve radio transmission, just that since Marconi's
claim to certain patented improvements were questionable, the company could not
claim infringement on those same patents.
Nobel Prize rumors
On 6 November 1915, a Reuters news agency report from London
had the 1915 Nobel Prize in Physics awarded to Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla;
however, on 15 November, a Reuters story from Stockholm stated the prize that
year was being awarded to William Henry Bragg and Lawrence Bragg "for their services in the analysis of
crystal structure by means of X-rays". There were unsubstantiated
rumors at the time that either Tesla or Edison had refused the prize. The Nobel
Foundation said, "Any rumor that a
person has not been given a Nobel Prize because he has made known his intention
to refuse the reward is ridiculous"; a recipient could decline a Nobel
Prize only after he is announced a winner.
There have been subsequent claims by Tesla biographers that
Edison and Tesla were the original recipients and that neither was given the
award because of their animosity toward each other; that each sought to
minimize the other's achievements and right to win the award; that both refused
ever to accept the award if the other received its first; that both rejected
any possibility of sharing it; and even that a wealthy Edison refused it to
keep Tesla from getting the $20,000 prize money.
In the years after these rumors, neither Tesla nor Edison won
a Nobel Prize (although Edison received one of 38 possible bids in 1915 and
Tesla received one of 38 possible bids in 1937).
Other awards, patents
and ideas
Tesla won numerous medals and awards over this time. They
include:
Grand Officer of the Order of St. Sava (Serbia, 1892)
Elliott Cresson Medal (Franklin Institute, USA, 1894)
Grand Cross of the Order of Prince Danilo I (Montenegro,
1895)
Member of the American Philosophical Society (USA, 1896)
AIEE Edison Medal (Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers, USA, 1916)
Grand Cross of the Order of St. Sava (Yugoslavia, 1926)
Cross of the Order of the Yugoslav Crown (Yugoslavia, 1931)
John Scott Medal (Franklin Institute & Philadelphia City
Council, USA, 1934)
Order of the White Eagle (Yugoslavia, 1936)
Grand Cross of the Order of the White Lion (Czechoslovakia,
1937)
Medal of the University of Paris (Paris, France, 1937)
The Medal of the University St. Clement of Ochrida (Sofia,
Bulgaria, 1939)
Tesla attempted to market several devices based on the production
of ozone. These included his 1900 Tesla Ozone Company selling an 1896 patented
device based on his Tesla coil, used to bubble ozone through different types of
oils to make a therapeutic gel. He also tried to develop a variation of this a
few years later as a room sanitizer for hospitals.
Tesla theorized that the application of electricity to the
brain enhanced intelligence. In 1912, he crafted "a plan to make dull students bright by saturating them
unconsciously with electricity," wiring the walls of a schoolroom and,
"saturating [the schoolroom] with
infinitesimal electric waves vibrating at high frequency. The whole room will
thus, Mr. Tesla claims, be converted into a health-giving and stimulating
electromagnetic field or 'bath.'" The plan was, at least
provisionally, approved by then superintendent of New York City schools,
William H. Maxwell.
Before World War I, Tesla sought overseas investors. After
the war started, Tesla lost the funding he was receiving from his patents in
European countries.
In the August 1917 edition of the magazine Electrical
Experimenter, Tesla postulated that electricity could be used to locate
submarines via using the reflection of an "electric
ray" of "tremendous frequency," with the signal being viewed
on a fluorescent screen (a system that has been noted to have a superficial resemblance
to modern radar). Tesla was incorrect in his assumption that high-frequency
radio waves would penetrate water. Émile Girardeau, who helped develop France's
first radar system in the 1930s, noted in 1953 that Tesla's general speculation
that a very strong high-frequency signal would be needed was correct. Girardeau
said, "(Tesla) was prophesying or
dreaming, since he had at his disposal no means of carrying them out, but one
must add that if he was dreaming, at least he was dreaming correctly".
In 1928, Tesla received patent, U.S. patent 1,655,114, for a
biplane design capable of vertical take-off and landing (VTOL), which "gradually tilted through manipulation
of the elevator devices" in flight until it was flying like a
conventional plane. This impractical design was something Tesla thought would
sell for less than $1,000.
Tesla had a further office at 350 Madison Ave but by 1928 he
no longer had a laboratory or funding.
Living circumstances
Tesla lived at the Waldorf Astoria in New York City from 1900
and ran up a large bill. He moved to the St. Regis Hotel in 1922 and followed a
pattern from then on of moving to a different hotel every few years and leaving
unpaid bills behind.
Tesla walked to the park every day to feed the pigeons. He
began feeding them at the window of his hotel room and nursed injured birds
back to health. He said that he had been visited by a certain injured white
pigeon daily. He spent over $2,000 (equivalent to $36,410 in 2023) to care for
the bird, including a device he built to support her comfortably while her broken
wing and leg healed. Tesla stated:
I have been feeding
pigeons, thousands of them for years. But 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.
Tesla's unpaid bills, as well as complaints about the mess
made by pigeons, led to his eviction from St. Regis in 1923. He was also forced
to leave the Hotel Pennsylvania in 1930 and the Hotel Governor Clinton in 1934.
At one point he also took rooms at the Hotel Marguery.
Tesla moved to the Hotel New Yorker in 1934. At this time
Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company began paying him $125
(equivalent to $2,850 in 2023) per month in addition to paying his rent.
Accounts of how this came about vary. Several sources claim that Westinghouse
was concerned, or possibly warned, about potential bad publicity arising from
the impoverished conditions in which their former star inventor was living. The
payment has been described as being couched as a "consulting fee" to get around Tesla's aversion to
accepting charity. Tesla biographer Marc Seifer described the Westinghouse
payments as a type of "unspecified
settlement". In any case, Westinghouse provided the funds for Tesla
for the rest of his life.
Birthday press conferences
In 1931, a young journalist whom Tesla befriended, Kenneth
M. Swezey, organized a celebration for the inventor's 75th birthday. Tesla
received congratulations from figures in science and engineering such as Albert
Einstein, and he was also featured on the cover of Time magazine. The cover
caption "All the world's his power
house" noted his contribution to electrical power generation. The
party went so well that Tesla made it an annual event, an occasion where he
would put out a large spread of food and drink—featuring dishes of his own
creation. He invited the press in order to see his inventions and hear stories
about his past exploits, views on current events, and sometimes baffling
claims.
At the 1932 party, Tesla claimed he had invented a motor that
would run on cosmic rays. In 1933, at age 77, Tesla told reporters at the event
that, after 35 years of work, he was on the verge of producing proof of a new
form of energy. He claimed it was a theory of energy that was "violently opposed" to Einsteinian
physics and could be tapped with an apparatus that would be cheap to run and
last 500 years. He also told reporters he was working on a way to transmit
individualized private radio wavelengths, working on breakthroughs in
metallurgy, and developing a way to photograph the retina to record thought.
At the 1934 occasion, Tesla told reporters he had designed a
superweapon he claimed would end all war. He called it "teleforce", but was usually referred to as his death
ray. In 1940, the New York Times gave a range for the ray of 250 miles (400
km), with an expected development cost of US$2 million (equivalent to $43.5
million in 2023). Tesla described it as a defensive weapon that would be put up
along the border of a country and be used against attacking ground-based
infantry or aircraft. Tesla never revealed detailed plans of how the weapon
worked during his lifetime but, in 1984, they surfaced at the Nikola Tesla Museum
archive in Belgrade. The treatise, The New Art of Projecting Concentrated
Non-dispersive Energy through the Natural Media, described an open-ended vacuum
tube with a gas jet seal that allows particles to exit, a method of charging
slugs of tungsten or mercury to millions of volts, and directing them in
streams (through electrostatic repulsion). Tesla tried to attract interest of
the US War Department, United Kingdom, Soviet Union, and Yugoslavia in the
device.
In 1935, at his 79th birthday party, Tesla covered many
topics. He claimed to have discovered the cosmic ray in 1896 and invented a way
to produce direct current by induction, and made many claims about his
mechanical oscillator. Describing the device (which he expected would earn him
$100 million within two years) he told reporters that a version of his
oscillator had caused an earthquake in his 46 East Houston Street lab and
neighboring streets in Lower Manhattan in 1898. He went on to tell reporters
his oscillator could destroy the Empire State Building with 5 pounds (2.3 kg)
of air pressure. He also proposed using his oscillators to transmit vibrations
into the ground. He claimed it would work over any distance and could be used
for communication or locating underground mineral deposits, a technique he
called "telegeodynamics".
In 1937, at his Grand Ballroom of Hotel New Yorker event,
Tesla received the Order of the White Lion from the Czechoslovak ambassador and
a medal from the Yugoslav ambassador. On questions concerning the death ray,
Tesla stated: "But it is not an
experiment ... I have built, demonstrated and used it. Only a little time will
pass before I can give it to the world."
Death
In the fall of 1937 at the age of 81, after midnight one
night, Tesla left the Hotel New Yorker to make his regular commute to the
cathedral and library to feed the pigeons. While crossing a street a couple of
blocks from the hotel, Tesla was struck by a moving taxicab and was thrown to
the ground. His back was severely wrenched and three of his ribs were broken in
the accident. The full extent of his injuries was never known; Tesla refused to
consult a doctor, an almost lifelong custom, and never fully recovered.
On 7 January 1943, at the age of 86, Tesla died alone in
Room 3327 of the Hotel New Yorker. His body was found by maid Alice Monaghan
when she entered Tesla's room, ignoring the "do
not disturb" sign that Tesla had placed on his door two days earlier.
Assistant medical examiner H.W. Wembley examined the body and ruled that the
cause of death had been coronary thrombosis (a type of heart attack).
Two days later the Federal Bureau of Investigation ordered
the Alien Property Custodian to seize Tesla's belongings. John G. Trump, a
professor at M.I.T. and a well-known electrical engineer serving as a technical
aide to the National Defense Research Committee, was called in to analyze the
Tesla items. After a three-day investigation, Trump's report concluded that
there was nothing which would constitute a hazard in unfriendly hands, stating:
His [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.
In a box purported to contain a part of Tesla's "death ray", Trump found a
45-year-old multidecade resistance box.
On 10 January 1943, New York City mayor Fiorello La Guardia
read a eulogy written by Slovene-American author Louis Adamic live over WNYC
radio while violin pieces "Ave
Maria" and "Tamo daleko"
were played in the background. On 12 January, two thousand people attended a
state funeral for Tesla at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in Manhattan.
After the funeral, Tesla's body was taken to the Ferncliff Cemetery in Ardsley,
New York, where it was later cremated. The following day, a second service was
conducted by prominent priests in the Trinity Chapel (today's Serbian Orthodox
Cathedral of Saint Sava) in New York City.
Estate
In 1952, following pressure from Tesla's nephew, Sava
Kosanović, Tesla's entire estate was shipped to Belgrade in 80 trunks marked
N.T. In 1957, Kosanović's secretary Charlotte Muzar transported Tesla's ashes
from the United States to Belgrade. The ashes are displayed in a gold-plated
sphere on a marble pedestal in the Nikola Tesla Museum.
Patents
Tesla obtained around 300 patents worldwide for his
inventions. Some of Tesla's patents are not accounted for, and various sources
have discovered some that have lain hidden in patent archives. There are a
minimum of 278 known patents issued to Tesla in 26 countries. Many of Tesla's
patents were in the United States, Britain, and Canada, but many other patents
were approved in countries around the globe. Many inventions developed by Tesla
were not put into patent protection.
Personal life and
character
Appearance
Tesla was 6 feet 2 inches (1.88 m) tall and weighed 142
pounds (64 kg), with almost no weight variance from 1888 to about 1926. His
appearance was described by newspaper editor Arthur Brisbane as "almost the tallest, almost the
thinnest and certainly the most serious man who goes to Delmonico's
regularly". He was an elegant, stylish figure in New York City,
meticulous in his grooming, clothing, and regimented in his daily activities,
an appearance he maintained so as to further his business relationships. He was
also described as having light eyes, "very
big hands", and "remarkably
big" thumbs.
Eidetic memory
Tesla read many works, memorizing complete books, and
supposedly possessed a photographic memory. He was a polyglot, speaking eight
languages: Serbo-Croatian, Czech, English, French, German, Hungarian, Italian,
and Latin. Tesla related in his autobiography that he experienced detailed
moments of inspiration. During his early life, Tesla was repeatedly stricken
with illness. Blinding flashes of light would appear before his eyes, often
accompanied by visions. Often, the visions were linked to a word or idea he
might have come across; at other times they provided the solution to a
particular problem he had encountered. Just by hearing the name of an item, he
could envision it in realistic detail. Tesla visualized an invention in his
mind with extreme precision, including all dimensions, before moving to the
construction stage, a technique sometimes known as picture thinking. He
typically did not make drawings by hand but worked from memory. Beginning in
his childhood, Tesla had frequent flashbacks to events that had happened
previously in his life. He noted in his autobiography that this affliction had
developed his powers of observation and enabled him to discover a "truth of great importance", namely
that every thought he conceived was suggested by an external impression. Tesla
further wrote that "deficient
observation is merely a form of ignorance and responsible for the many morbid
notions and foolish ideas prevailing."
Relationships
Tesla was a lifelong bachelor, who had once explained that
his chastity was very helpful to his scientific abilities. He once said in
earlier years that he felt he could never be worthy enough for a woman,
considering women superior in every way. His opinion had started to sway in
later years when he felt that women were trying to outdo men and make
themselves more dominant. This "new
woman" was met with much indignation from Tesla, who felt that women
were losing their femininity by trying to be in power. In an interview with the
Galveston Daily News on 10 August 1924 he stated, "In place of the soft-voiced, a gentlewoman of my reverent
worship, has come the woman who thinks that her chief success in life lies in
making herself as much as possible like man—in dress, voice and actions, in
sports and achievements of every kind ... The tendency of women to push aside
man, supplanting the old spirit of cooperation with him in all the affairs of
life, is very disappointing to me." Although he told a reporter in later years
that he sometimes felt that by not marrying, he had made too great a sacrifice
to his work, Tesla chose to never pursue or engage in any known relationships,
instead finding all the stimulation he needed in his work.
Tesla was asocial and prone to seclude himself with his
work. However, when he did engage in social life, many people spoke very
positively and admiringly of Tesla. Robert Underwood Johnson described him as
attaining a "distinguished
sweetness, sincerity, modesty, refinement, generosity, and force". His
secretary, Dorothy Skerrit, wrote: "his
genial smile and nobility of bearing always denoted the gentlemanly
characteristics that were so ingrained in his soul". Tesla's friend,
Julian Hawthorne, wrote, "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".
Tesla was a good friend of Francis Marion Crawford, Robert
Underwood Johnson, Stanford White, Fritz Lowenstein, George Scherff, and
Kenneth Swezey. In middle age, Tesla became a close friend of Mark Twain; they
spent a lot of time together in his lab and elsewhere. Twain notably described
Tesla's induction motor invention as "the
most valuable patent since the telephone". At a party thrown by
actress Sarah Bernhardt in 1896, Tesla met Indian Hindu monk Swami Vivekananda.
Vivekananda later wrote that Tesla said he could demonstrate mathematically the
relationship between matter and energy, something Vivekananda hoped would give
a scientific foundation to Vedantic cosmology. The meeting with Swami
Vivekananda stimulated Tesla's interest in Eastern Science, which led to Tesla
studying Hindu and Vedic philosophy for a number of years. Tesla later wrote an
article titled "Man's Greatest
Achievement" using Sanskrit terms akasha and prana to describe the
relationship between matter and energy. In the late 1920s, Tesla befriended
George Sylvester Viereck, a poet, writer, mystic, and later, a Nazi
propagandist. Tesla occasionally attended dinner parties held by Viereck and
his wife.
Tesla could be harsh at times and openly expressed disgust
for overweight people, such as when he fired a secretary because of her weight.
He was quick to criticize clothing; on several occasions, Tesla directed a
subordinate to go home and change her dress. When Thomas Edison died, in 1931,
Tesla contributed the only negative opinion to The New York Times, buried in an
extensive coverage of Edison's life:
He had no hobby, cared
for no sort of amusement of any kind and lived in utter disregard of the most
elementary rules of hygiene ... His 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 90 percent 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.
Sleep habits
Tesla claimed never to sleep more than two hours per night.
However, he did admit to "dozing"
from time to time "to recharge his
batteries". During his second year of study at Graz, Tesla developed a
passionate proficiency for billiards, chess, and card-playing, sometimes
spending more than 48 hours in a stretch at a games table. On one occasion at
his laboratory, Tesla worked for a period of 84 hours without rest. Kenneth
Swezey, a journalist whom Tesla had befriended, confirmed that Tesla rarely
slept. Swezey recalled one morning when Tesla called him at 3 a.m.: "I was sleeping in my room like one
dead ... Suddenly, the telephone ring awakened me ... [Tesla] spoke animatedly,
with pauses, [as he] ... work[ed] out a problem, comparing one theory to
another, commenting; and when he felt he had arrived at the solution, he
suddenly closed the telephone."
Work and dining
habits
Tesla worked every day from 9:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. or
later, with dinner at exactly 8:10 p.m., at Delmonico's restaurant and later
the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Tesla then telephoned his dinner order to the headwaiter,
who also could be the only one to serve him. "The meal was required to be ready at eight o'clock ... He dined
alone, except on the rare occasions when he would give a dinner to a group to
meet his social obligations. Tesla then resumed his work, often until 3:00
a.m."
For exercise, Tesla walked between 8 and 10 miles (13 and 16
km) per day. He curled his toes one hundred times for each foot every night,
saying that it stimulated his brain cells.
In an interview with newspaper editor Arthur Brisbane, Tesla
said that he did not believe in telepathy, stating, "Suppose I made up my mind to murder you," he said, "In a second you would know it. Now,
isn't that wonderful? By what process does the mind get at all this?"
In the same interview, Tesla said that he believed that all fundamental laws
could be reduced to one.
Tesla became a vegetarian in his later years, living on only
milk, bread, honey, and vegetable juices. In what is believed to be the last
photo taken of Tesla, he is frail and emaciated in appearance.
Views and beliefs
On experimental and
theoretical physics
Tesla disagreed with the theory of atoms being composed of
smaller subatomic particles, stating there was no such thing as an electron
creating an electric charge. He believed that if electrons existed at all, they
were some fourth state of matter or "sub-atom"
that could exist only in an experimental vacuum and that they had nothing to do
with electricity. Tesla believed that atoms are immutable—they could not change
state or be split in any way. He was a believer in the 19th-century concept of
an all-pervasive ether that transmitted electrical energy.
Tesla was generally antagonistic towards theories about the
conversion of matter into energy. He was also critical of Einstein's theory of
relativity, saying:
I hold that space
cannot be curved, for the simple reason that it can have no properties. It
might as well be said that God has properties. He has not, but only attributes
and these are of our own making. Of properties we can only speak when dealing
with matter filling the space. To say that in the presence of large bodies
space becomes curved is equivalent to stating that something can act upon
nothing. I, for one, refuse to subscribe to such a view.
In 1935 he described relativity as "a beggar wrapped in purple whom ignorant people take for a
king" and said his own experiments had measured the speed of cosmic
rays from Arcturus as fifty times the speed of light.
Tesla claimed to have developed his own physical principle
regarding matter and energy that he started working on in 1892, and in 1937, at
age 81, claimed in a letter to have completed a "dynamic theory of gravity" that "[would] put an end to idle speculations and false conceptions, as
that of curved space". He stated that the theory was "worked out in all details" and
that he hoped to soon give it to the world. Further elucidation of his theory
was never found in his writings.
On society
Tesla is widely considered by his biographers to have been a
humanist in philosophical outlook. This did not preclude Tesla, like many of
his era, from becoming a proponent of an imposed selective breeding version of
eugenics.
Tesla expressed the belief that human "pity" had come to interfere with the natural "ruthless workings of nature". Though
his argumentation did not depend on a concept of a "master race" or the inherent superiority of one person
over another, he advocated for eugenics. In a 1937 interview he stated:
... man's new sense of
pity began to interfere with the ruthless workings of nature. The only method
compatible with our notions of civilization and the race is to prevent the
breeding of the unfit by sterilization and the deliberate guidance of the
mating instinct ... The trend of opinion among eugenists is that we must make
marriage more difficult. Certainly no one who is not a desirable parent should
be permitted to produce progeny. A century from now it will no more occur to a
normal person to mate with a person eugenically unfit than to marry a habitual
criminal.
In 1926, Tesla commented on the ills of the social
subservience of women and the struggle of women toward gender equality, and
indicated that humanity's future would be run by "Queen Bees". He believed that women would become the dominant
sex in the future.
Tesla made predictions about the relevant issues of a
post-World War I environment in a printed article entitled "Science and Discovery are the great Forces which will lead to the
Consummation of the War" (20 December 1914). Tesla believed that the
League of Nations was not a remedy for the times and issues.
On religion
Tesla was raised an Orthodox Christian. Later in life he did
not consider himself to be a "believer
in the orthodox sense", said he opposed religious fanaticism, and said
"Buddhism and Christianity are the
greatest religions both in number of disciples and in importance." He
also said "To me, the universe is
simply a great machine which never came into being and never will end"
and "what we call 'soul' or
'spirit,' is nothing more than the sum of the functionings of the body. When
this functioning ceases, the 'soul' or the 'spirit' ceases likewise."
Literary works
Tesla wrote a number of books and articles for magazines and
journals. Among his books are My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla,
compiled and edited by Ben Johnston in 1983 from a series of 1919 magazine articles
by Tesla which were republished in 1977; The Fantastic Inventions of Nikola
Tesla (1993), compiled and edited by David Hatcher Childress; and The Tesla
Papers.
Many of Tesla's writings are freely available online,
including the article "The Problem
of Increasing Human Energy", published in The Century Magazine in
1900, and the article "Experiments
with Alternate Currents of High Potential and High Frequency", published
in his book Inventions, Researches and Writings of Nikola Tesla.
Legacy and honors
Tesla's legacy has endured in books, films, radio, TV,
music, live theater, comics, and video games. The impact of the technologies
invented or envisioned by Tesla is a recurring theme in several types of
science fiction.
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