Below is the NY Times reprint of the story of Edison's light bulb.

http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/big/1021.html#article


There was no lack of enthusiasm or of confidence about Mr. Edison as he
greeted the Times reporter who entered his laboratory at Menlo Park, N.
J., yesterday. The inventor, a short, thick-set man, with grimy hands,
led the way through his workshop, and willingly explained the
distinctive features of what he and many others look upon as an
apparatus which will soon cause gas-light to be a thing of the past. The
lamp which Mr. Edison regards as a crowning triumph is a model of
simplicity and economy. In the lamp the light is emitted by a horseshoe
of carbonized paper about two and a half inches long and the width of a
thread. This horseshoe is in a glass globe, from which the air has been
as thoroughly exhausted as science is able to do. So good a vacuum is
produced that it is estimated that at the utmost no more than a
one-millionth part of the air remains. The operation of pumping lasts
one hour and a quarter. At the ends of the carbon horseshoe are two
platinum clamps, from which platinum wires run outwardly through a small
glass tube contained within a larger one leading out of the glass globe.
The small tube contains air. Within it the platinum wires are met by two
copper wires connecting with the conductors of the electricity. The air
is left in the small tube, because otherwise the copper wires would be
fused by the electric current. The carbonized paper is capable of being
made incandescent by a current of electricity, and while it allows the
current to pass over it, its resistance to the heat is strong enough to
prevent it from fusing.

The first place visited was the room in which the furnace for
carbonizing the paper is situated. The furnace is of the ordinary
pattern, and on the coals rested a horseshoe mold, in which the bristol
board to be charred was placed. Over each horseshoe a piece of tissue
paper was placed and the whole was washed until all the material of the
card-board, except the carbon, was taken away. When the filaments were
taken from the mold they resembled pieces of black thread. The particles
hung tenaciously together, however, and the black horse-shoe was easily
placed in the platinum clamps of the globe of the lamp. The exhausting
of the air takes place after the carbon is put in position, and when
this is done the lamp is complete. "As there is no oxygen to burn," said
Mr. Edison, "you can readily see that this piece of carbon will last an
ordinary life-time. It has the property of resisting the heat of the
current of electricity, while at the same time it becomes incandescent,
and gives out one of the most brilliant lights which the world has ever
seen. The cost of preparing one of these little horse-shoes of carbon is
about 1 cent, and the entire lamp will cost not more than 25 cents."
Here the inventor gave a practical illustration of his invention. He was
standing just under an ordinary gas chandelier in which two of his lamps
were burning. He took one of the lamps out, and it appeared simply as a
glass globe. He placed it back in the burner, and immediately a
brilliant horse-shoe of golden light illuminated the globe. Mr. Edison
then, by turning a screw in the lamp, brought the light down to a spark,
turned it off completely, as gas can be turned off, and turned it on
again to a brilliant incandescence by a twist of his fingers. He
certainly demonstrated that in his own laboratory at Menlo Park, the
electric light is as obedient to his will as the gas light is to the
general public. The light from each lamp is of about the power of an
ordinary gas-jet, but Mr. Edison claims that by increasing the
electricity, he can raise the power to 15 gas-jets.

Eighty-four lights are burning night and day in the laboratory, and they
are all supplied with electricity by an 80-horse-power engine, which is
stationed in the basement of one of the buildings. This engine, in
addition to feeding these lamps, furnishes the motive power for all the
machines in the laboratory, and at night feeds the electric lights which
have already been erected in Menlo Park, in anticipation of the proposed
grand illumination. The wires which are to convey the electricity to the
lamps for the grand display are to be above ground, so that all
spectators can see and investigate them. They will lead directly from
the lamps to the generator in the laboratory, and any person can trace
them from point to point.

>From the furnace-room Mr. Edison conducted the reporter to the room in
which his lamps are made, and where the air is exhausted from them. In
this room, also, is Mr. Edison's machine for regulating the pressure of
the electricity as it passes to the different lamps throughout his
laboratory. This machine consists of a series of coils of copper, over
which the electric current is continually passing, and each coil is
connected with a series of lamps. If the pressure is too great on any
series of lamps it is at once shown by the coil representing that
series, and can be regulated in an instant. In this room, also, the
carbonized paper is placed in the globes, and the lamp is completed. It
is Edison's pet room, and here he spends most of his time when not
engaged in studying out new inventions.

It has been asserted by some persons who are supposed to be conversant
with the subject of electricity that in order to furnish lights for
houses in this City a copper coil as large as an ordinary barrel would
be required as a conductor from the central station to the different
houses in two or three blocks. Regarding this, Mr. Edison said: "The
size and amount of conductors for carrying electricity for lighting
purposes depends, of course, upon the distance to which the electricity
is to be carried. If I have to carry it 10 miles my conductor must be
larger than it must be if I have to carry it 10 feet. My idea is to have
central stations to cover, say a square of three or four blocks. The
pipes containing the wires on a street, if this idea is carried out,
will not exceed in size the circumference of your arm. They will be laid
under the flag-stones just at the edge of the sidewalk, as gas-pipes are
now laid."

"What will be the cost of these conductors," asked the reporter.

"The cost, compared to gas-pipes, will be very small, and there is very
little chance of their getting out of order. The wire itself, which will
convey the electricity, will be an ordinary No. 9 telegraph wire, the
same wire that you see in use every day by the Western Union Company.
That is as near the size of a barrel as I intend to get."

"How will the light be distributed?"

"Precisely as gas is now distributed. You see that I can turn that
burner off entirely if I wish to; I can lower it or I can raise it, just
as you can lower or raise a gas jet. Our electricity will go from our
central stations just as gas flows from the meter. Whether the company
will charge for the light according to the amount of electricity which
each consumer uses, or whether so much a month will be charged to each
consumer I cannot say. That is a question which the company will
determine when the electric light is introduced."

"Do you intend to illuminate Menlo Park on New Year's Eve?"

"Not for the public as soon as that. Menlo Park is now illuminated every
night to a certain extent. All the lamps that we have on hand are
lighted nightly, but we cannot give the grand display that I intend to
give until we have more lamps. You can say this, however, that the
electric light is perfected, and that all the problems which have been
puzzling me for the last 18 months have been solved. I expect to have
every house here lighted, and a number of street-lamps going within 10
days. When I once get the light started, I shall keep them burning night
and day for at least two weeks, in order to make a time test of my
carbon. I believe that it is practically infusible, and I have confirmed
my belief by experiments here in my laboratory for several weeks, but I
want the public to believe it from their own knowledge, and the only way
to make the public believe it is to show it to them. I think that my
carbonized paper is the only substance which is capable of becoming
thoroughly incandescent, and at the same time of offering to the current
of electricity sufficient resistance to prevent it from melting away.
The vacuum in the globe, of course, offers no oxygen of any consequence
to burn; but the intense heat generated by the electricity would destroy
any other substance than this carbonized paper. There is absolutely
nothing there to fuse. It is carbon, pure and simple, and no machine
known to this age can generate enough electricity to destroy it."

"Have any electricians responded to your invitation to see you and
investigate your method of lighting by electricity?"

"No electricians have been here yet, nor are there likely to be any
here. Electricians are a very scarce article in this country, although
there are many persons here who call themselves electricians. They don't
come here, because they know that if they do they will be convinced that
my light is at last a perfect one. I am glad they don't come. Practical
men, with experience, and what I call 'horse sense,' are the best judges
of this light, and they are the men whom I like to welcome to my
laboratory."

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