Edison works on his lightbulb

Lot 1
16.07.2020 06:00UTC +00:00
Classic
Vendu
£ 75 000
AuctioneerCHRISTIE'S
Lieu de l'événementRoyaume-Uni, London
Commissionsee on Website%
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ID 369990
Lot 1 | Edison works on his lightbulb
Valeur estimée
£ 60 000 – 90 000
Thomas Alva Edison (1847-1931).

Autograph manuscript, seven pages of annotated design drawings for his lightbulb and related inventions, initialled (‘TAE’) and dated in pencil three times, n.p. [Florida], 11-12 March 1886. [And:] an Edison lightbulb, 1880-1881.

6 leaves extracted from a ruled notebook, 198 x 127mm on average, the drawings and autograph annotations all in pencil, on rectos only save for the final half-leaf (scattered surface stains sometimes touching the designs or annotations, the final page a fragment).

The lightbulb approximately 21 x 6cm at its widest point, flat seal stem, carbonised bamboo filament connected by platinum clamps to the electric wires (the filament complete but loose at one end). Both the leaves and the lightbulb presented in green morocco gilt cases.

Provenance: with Kenneth W. Rendell, sold in 2009 to – Aristophil collection, Paris – sale, Aguttes, 18 November 2019, lot 54.

The subject of the design drawings are as follows:

Page 1: Two electric lamp circuits, both with additional electrodes. [Below:] a steam-powered reciprocating compressor. Initialled and dated (‘March 12 1886. TAE’), annotated ‘Squeezing out licorice filaments with broadened ends’.

Page 2: A horseshoe electromagnet of the kind as used in telegraphy; between the two poles of the magnet is a glass cylinder with two internal plate electrodes, connected via a resistor to a Bell telephone. Parallel to the resistor is a circuit comprising a battery in series with a Bell telephone and a switch. Initialled and dated (‘Mch 11 1886/ TAE’), annotated ‘insulators def metals’.

Page 3: A cylinder made up of individual tubes with connecting wires, presumably leading to an unseen electrical source. Annotated ‘Tubes filled with various solutions’ and ‘?Gram light circular passes down thru tubes’.

Page 4: An electric lamp connected to a vacuum pump, next to moveable wires. Initialled and dated (‘Mch 11 1886 TAE’) and annotated ‘Mutual attraction between current in ?wires straiten carbon’ and ‘Vac pump’.

Pages 5-7: Electric lightbulb designs.


Thomas Edison works on his lightbulb. Edison built the first high-resistance, incandescent electric lamp in his Menlo Park laboratory in 1879 – the first successful test took place in October and the New York Times trumpeted the invention of the ‘Edison Light’ in their 21 December edition – but the carbonised paper filaments burned out within a few hours. Undaunted, he applied for the first patent on 4 November 1879 and over the next year a further 32 applications were sent from Menlo Park as Edison and his team tested thousands of filament materials: the discovery of a carbonised bamboo filament that could last over 1,200 hours allowed for the development of the forerunner of the modern lightbulb. In 1881, 500 ‘Edison Lights’ were exhibited at the inaugural International Exposition of Electricity in Paris, with people queuing to switch on the electric light and experience the marvel for themselves; by 1884, the city of New York registered 508 users of the ‘Edison Light’, with 10,164 lamps between them.

The present drawings testify to Edison’s continued work on the electric lamp throughout the 1880s, as well as offering an example of the related inventions that filled his design notebooks. In March 1886, while on honeymoon in Florida with his second wife, Edison is considering adding additional electrodes to electric lamp circuits, building, perhaps, on the ‘Edison effect’ first observed in 1875 and refined in 1883; designing a receiver for an electromagnet, which bears some similarity to the reed relays invented years later and used in telephone switches; and experimenting with the manipulation of Ampère’s force law.
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24.06.2020 – 16.07.2020
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