NIKOLA TESLA
AT WARDENCLYFFE
From Looking Back at
Rocky Point - In The Shadow of The Radio Towers - Vol. 1
by Natalie Aurucci Stiefel
“When the first
plant is inaugurated and it is known that a telegraphic message, almost
as secret and non-interferable as thought, can be transmitted to any
terrestrial distance, the sound of the human voice with all its
intonation and inflections, faithfully and instantly reproduced at any
other point of the globe, the energy of a waterfall made available for
supplying light, heat or motive power, anywhere - on sea, or land, or
high in the air - humanity will be like an ant heap stirred up with a
stick.
SEE THE EXCITEMENT
COMING!” --- Nikola Tesla
Wardenclyffe
in Shoreham, Long Island was the laboratory of the genius inventor,
Nikola Tesla. In the early twentieth century, local newspapers were
reporting exciting happenings at Wardenclyffe. By 1939 the property and
Tesla’s laboratory building, located along Route 25A, became the
facilities of the Peerless Photo Laboratories, a subsidiary of
Agfa-Gevart.
In 1901, Nikola Tesla
announced to the world that he would build a broadcasting station, which
he would call “Radio City” at Wardenclyffe in
Shoreham. He intended this to be the hub of a worldwide broadcasting
system, which would employ several thousand people.
Nikola Tesla obtained the
land through an arrangement with James S. Warden, Director of the
Suffolk County Land Company. Warden hoped by offering the land to Tesla
it would bring an opportunity to build homes for the prospective
employees on his company’s adjacent 1,800 acres. Warden extended the
offer of two hundred acres of land to Nikola Tesla, twenty acres cleared
and the right of way. This property was adjacent to the Jemima Randall
Farm and George Hagerman’s land in Shoreham. The deed, recorded in
Riverhead on April 20, 1902, transferred the land to Nikola Tesla by the
“North Shore Industrial Company”, incorporated under the laws of the
State of Maine, of which James S. Warden was Secretary and C. L.
Perkins, the President. Jack Warden offered land for sale in the New
York Times from $3,000 to $10,000 which attracted many Wall Street
businessmen who found the spot as an attractive summer resort. The
prediction was that Wardenclyffe would become famous for its natural
attractions as well as the place of Nikola Tesla’s experiments.
Tesla explained his dream
of his world broadcasting system to financier, J. Pierpont Morgan, who
backed Tesla with $150,000 for the project. Tesla’s friend, architect
Stanford White, of McKim Mead and White, designed the laboratory at
Shoreham. Due to White’s close friendship with Tesla, he presented his
design as a gift, and would not accept payment. White had received
international acclaim for his designs of the Washington Arch in New
York, the New York University, the Trinity Church in Boston, the
original Madison Square Garden, as well as numerous other buildings.
Stanford White designed
the Wardenclyffe brick building with arched windows, as well as the cast
iron ornament on the roof, called a wellhead, which was inspired from
one in Italy. An associate of White, W. D. Crow of East Orange, New
Jersey, supervised the construction work of the laboratory, which took
more than a year to complete.
Access to the Tesla
property at Wardenclyffe was made on the north side from North Country
Road as at that time the main road, Route 25A, was not in existence.
Shoreham Railroad station was adjacent to the Tesla property and
ideal for transporting equipment and supplies. Nikola Tesla’s
assistant, George Scherff, traveled daily on the railroad from New
York City, to bring a wicker basket of special food for Tesla, which was
prepared at the Waldorf Astoria.
LOCAL NEWSPAPER
REPORTED EXCITING HAPPENINGS
The summer of 1901 saw
exciting happenings in the little village of Shoreham. On August 2nd
The Port Jefferson Echo reported: “Mr. Nikola Tesla, the world
renowned scientist on Tuesday of this week, closed a contract for the
immediate building of a wireless telegraph plant and electrical
laboratory at Wardenclyffe, situated nine miles east of Port Jefferson,
where on the 200 acres recently acquired by Mr. Tesla, he will within
thirty days, begin the erection of a plant, which when completed will be
the largest of its kind in the world. The first building will be 100
feet square with others to follow. The power plant will be 350-horse
power. Mr. Tesla has for several years past maintained an extensive
electrical laboratory at Houston Street in New York City, where he has
discovered and developed many marvelous features in electrical power
and usefulness. The above will draw to Wardenclyffe men in the highest
scientific circles from many portions of the globe.”
By
February of 1902, the Echo reported further improvements at
Wardenclyffe: “Notwithstanding inclement weather and the usual
obstacles and difficulties incident to the development of great
enterprises, the Tesla improvements at Wardenclyffe have gone steadily
forward. The power house, constructed of pressed brick, is 100 feet
square and divided into a boiler room, engine and dynamo room, machine
shop and laboratory. The boilers, engines, dynamo and other electrical
equipment are being placed under the supervision of the Westinghouse
Electric Company, where a force of employees from Mr. Tesla’s New York
establishment is busy setting the drills, lathes, etc. in the machine
room. The power house is completed, the foundations of the great tower
put in and the well in connection herewith sunk to the required depth of
120’.
WHERE TESLA STAYED
On June 21, 1902 the
Port Jefferson Echo said “Nikola Tesla rented the brick cottage
of Mr. C. Wilson at Wardenclyffe until his own palatial abode
is constructed.“ Tesla also sometimes lodged at the home of
Dewitt Bailey. Mr. Dodd, proprietor of the Wardenclyffe Inn, was
famous for his warm hospitality, where Niklola Tesla also sometimes
stayed. During June of 1902 The Echo also reported that Tesla
received assistance from Fritz Lowenstein, who became a well-known
scientist and aided Tesla in his Colorado laboratory experiments in
1899 Lowenstein, who arrived from Germany, took up residence along
with Tesla’s private secretary, George Scherff, at Dr. W. J. Herdman’s
place at Wardenclyffe during that season.
The
progress inspired Tesla that Wardenclyffe would be the great wireless
center of America. He started to move his workshop from his New York
City laboratory. He also planned for a workmen’s village and expected
model cottages to be built by the following spring. However, much of
his work was done in secrecy. The August 1902 “Babylon Signal” stated
“the power house at Wardenclyffe occupies nearly three acres and is
fenced in so that no one can get a view of it except those who are
working within the enclosure. Mr. Tesla asserted there was a similar
power house in Scotland.” Tesla said “We have been sending
wireless messages for long distances from this station for some time,
but whether we are going into the telegraph field on a commercial basis
I cannot say at present. ”The Brooklyn Times of June 1905
reported, “From the time that Tesla secured the large tract of
woodland, where the electrical plant is now situated, up to the present
date, Mr. Tesla has maintained rigid privacy about his methods
and plans. He does not court publicity as to the details of his work
and newspapermen who call to see him are not likely to get overloaded
with technical information. The visitor who walks into the grounds and
approaches either the machine shop or the tower and well is met by an
employee, who explains in polite but forceful language, that it is
private property and that Mr. Tesla does not care to have visitors at
that place. Mr. Tesla claims that it is today possible to communicate
between any two points on earth, using the earth as a conductor. From
his plant at Wardenclyfe he could run the electric motors and the big
printing presses in the Brooklyn Times office. “
However, the County
Review gave another account of Tesla on June 23, 1905: “This one
gathers from occasional meetings with the Wizard of Wardenclyffe. He
talks freely of his work to those who have his confidence and to such he
is a wonderfully interesting man. His thought is concentrated almost
solely upon electrical work and he is sufficiently human to enjoy
discussing his work with those who have a fair comprehension of his
accomplishments. Dozens of Tesla’s inventions and discoveries in
connection with electrical work have been patented. The inventor
positively asserts that there are many infringements of his patents in
daily use in connection with wireless telegraphy” coneniences. He says
he has met with an immense amount of opposition along various lines and
that difficulties which would have put most men out of the race have
been successfully overcome. He has implicit faith in the future of his
many appliances.”
TESLA’S TOWER
Construction of the domed
tower began in the summer of 1901. It was constructed entirely of large
wooden beams, with 50,000 bolts, which were assembled on the ground and
hoisted up into position. When completed, the tower rose to a height of
187 feet and weighed 55 ton. It was eventually intended to enclose the
ribbed cage with copper plates to form an insulated metal ball.
The tower consisted of
four tall wooden timbers stretching from a height of over 100 feet. The
skeleton structure had a spread of 40 or 50 feet across the base.
Each
timber was aimed toward the center as it rose in the air, crowned at the
top by a huge half sphere. The staircase, which led up the tower, was
also constructed entirely of wood, and fastened by wooden pegs without
the use of nails. The tower was high enough to be easily seen from New
Haven Connecticut, across Long Island Sound. The huge mushroom-like
tower gave the aura of a futuristic, Martian giant and local residents
called it “Tesla’s Magic Tower.” Nikola Tesla planned to build
another two towers to duplicate the tower with the large sphere on top.
The three towers, one for each powerhouse, would each have a 500-foot
well. The water at the bottom of the well was to be kept warm and was
not to exceed a certain temperature. Excavation was planned to continue
down to 500 feet.
Local farmers watched the
strange looking objects arrive at Shoreham as attested by the March 27,
1904 New York Times: Some of the farmers who come to Wardenclyffe to
send their products to the city look at Mr. Tesla’s tower, which is
situated directly opposite the railroad station, and shake their heads
sadly. They are inclined to take a skeptical view regarding the
feasibility of the wireless, world telegraphy idea, but yet Tesla’s
transmitting tower as it stands in lonely grandeur and boldly
silhouetted against the sky on a wide clearing on the concession is a
source of great satisfaction and of some mystification to them all. ‘
The June 1905 Brooklyn
Times described the tower: “The queer tower has been taken for some
new-fangled kind of a lighthouse, a wireless telegraph station and a
pumping station. Every native keeps his eye on it in the hope that he
may catch on to its secret, but as yet all are in the dark as to its
purpose.” The Eagle reported that up to 1911 Nikola Tesla was a
familiar figure going to and from the plant. “An atmosphere of
mystery hung over the place, an unearthly influence seemed to be
radiated from the alemble topped tower, as if drawn down from
interstellar space and spread over the countryside to inspire wonder and
awe in the minds of the nearby farmers and villagers, who knew only that
Tesla was searching for or working with wonder currents that had
something to do with wireless and electricity.” By 1916 The Eagle
stated “Standing like one of the fabled Martian giants, from H. G.
Wells’ tale of the “War of the Worlds’, the tall Tesla tower has graced
the landscape of this village for a decade and a half of years.”
WORK HALTED BY
CARPENTERS:
Several months later, friction among the carpenters delayed the
operation and was reported in the July 1902 issue of the Echo.
Tesla had his hands full with managing of crew, machinery and the need
for more capital from his investor, J. P. Morgan. “The carpenters
employed on Tesla’s wireless plant refused to work last Saturday and
left for their homes at Port Chester. The men were set at work by
Foreman Houck putting shingles on the outside of a 150’ tower, when a
stick of timber came crashing down to the ground. It seems another
contractor, completing the upper portion of the tower, would not take
his men off. The carpenters said they would not work with a careless
set of laborers over their heads.” These delays proved to be very
costly to Nikola Tesla.
THE TUNNELS
The tunnels, which were
built under the great tower, were considered a great mystery. A well was
dug below the tower 120’ deep and 12’ square, lined with 8’ timbers. A
spiral stairway encircled a telescopic steel shaft. Air pressure
would cause the shaft to rise 300 feet to contact the tower’s top
platform. Connected to the well were four brick-lined tunnels nearly
100 feet in length. The Port Jefferson Echo reported in February
of 1902: “The staircase leading down into this subterranean chamber
is partially completed, and next week a force of workmen will begin the
driving of a series of four small tunnels, each 100 feet long
transversely across the bottom of the well. As these tunnels will
be below the water level, some skillful engineering will be required to
carry the work through. Mr. Tesla’s energy is pushing the work of
construction forward and the fact that the boilers, engines and heavy
machinery need only the finishing touches to make the power available,
is an assurance that within a very brief period, he will be transmitting
messages across the ocean through his wonderful wireless system.”
The March 1902 Patchogue Advance reported “Under the
center of the tower a well 123 feet square has been sunk a distance of
120 feet. This has been cased with eight-inch timbers and at the
bottom, below the water line, a system of four tunnels will be driven
out a distance of 100 feet each to the north, south, east and west. The
particular use to which all this is to be put is one of the mysteries of
the wireless system.”
In 1904 The New York Times
told of the curiosity of the tunnels at Wardenclyffe. “While the
tower itself is very stagy and picturesque, it is the wonders that are
supposed to be hidden in the earth underneath it that excite the
curiosity of the population in the little settlement. In the
centre of the wide concrete platform, which serves as a base for the
structure there is a wooden affair very much like the companionway on an
ocean steamer. The tower and the inclose in which it has been built are
being carefully guarded these days, and no one except Mr. Tesla’s own
men is allowed to approach it. Only they have been allowed as much as
the briefest peep down the companionway. Mr. Scherff, the
private secretary of the inventor, told an inquirer that the
companionway led to a small drainage passage built for the purpose of
keeping the ground about the tower dry. But such of the villagers as
saw the tower constructed, tell a different story. They declare that
it leads to a well-like excavation as deep as the tower is high with
walls of mason work and a circular stairway leading to the bottom. From
there, they say, tunnels have been built in all directions, until the
entire ground below the little plain on which the tower is raised has
been honeycombed with subterranean passages. They tell with awe
how Mr. Tesla, on his weekly visits to Wardenclyffe, spends as much time
in the underground passages as he does on the tower or in the handsome
laboratory and workshop erected beside it, and where the power plant for
the world telegraph has been installed.”
In a conversation this
writer had with Tesla author, Leland I. Anderson, he mentioned that
Nikola Tesla stated it would be very dangerous to walk on the ground
between the tower and the laboratory building when it was operating,
because of the tunnel, which connected the building to the tower.
Anderson also referred to a spiral stairway, which ascended down into
the tunnel. At the bottom there are four stone-lined tunnels going out
in various directions. These were used to establish ground connection
(transmission) for the tower and not to be walked in. The tunnels
gradually rose to the surface into brick, igloo-shaped mounds. Some
people remember seeing these mounds at the edge of the Tesla property,
near the present Fire Department. When the adjacent Fire Department
built an extension on their garage, the bulldozer sank deep into the
ground.
By February 22, 1902 The
Echo printed the following announcement: “The immense wireless
telegraph plant now being built at Wardenclyffe marks the beginning of
the real war between Marconi and Nikola Tesla. Marconi has so far found
only one way to send messages by wireless telegraphy - through the air.
Tesla will try two methods. By means of his great tower he will send
messages through the air. By means of his great well he will send
messages through the ground. It is the latter method that Tesla thinks
will achieve the greatest success. One of the remarkable features of the
well is that at the bottom, the water will be warm. The principles on
which Tesla will send wireless messages through the ground is, as
explained by a friend, that a straight line through the earth, say
between New York and London, is shorter than a line around the earth.
His belief in it is so great that he has declared, in confidence to his
friends, that ten years from now Wardenclyffe will be the great
telegraph and cable center of America.”
THE
END OF THE TOWER
In 1903, when Tesla
realized that financial backing for Wardenclyffe would cease, he
demonstrated lightening-type flashes from his tower in Shoreham. The
July 14th report from the New York Sun stated: “Tesla’s
Flashes Startling, but he won’t tell what he is trying for at
Wardenclyffe. Natives hereabouts are intensely interested in the
nightly electrical display shown from the tall tower where Nikola is
conducting his experiments in wireless telegraph and telephony. All
sorts of lightning were flashed from the tall tower and poles last
night. For a time, the air was filled with blinding streaks of
electricity, which seemed to shoot off into the darkness on some
mysterious errand. When interviewed, Tesla said “The people about
there, had they been awake instead of asleep, at other times would have
seen even stranger things. Some day, but not at this time, I shall make
an announcement of something that I never once dreamed of!”
Tesla’s dream for Shoreham
to become a worldwide wireless center, was halted in 1915 when he was
forced to hand over the Wardenclyffe deed to the Waldorf-Astoria to pay
some of his $20,000 hotel debts. It was his belief that the Waldorf
would hold the property until he could settle his debts. However, it was
sold before he could redeem it. It was Tesla’s intention to always
return there and continue his work, but that was not to be. The March
26, 1916 Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported that Wardenclyffe had been
transferred to Lester S. Holmes, a Manhattan lawyer, who purchased the
laboratory along with 176 acres, in foreclose, as a business
proposition. He had no intention of using it for the same purposes
Tesla did, but merely as a business proposition. It is Holmes’ name,
which appears on the Belcher Hyde 1917 map, with “Suffolk County Land
Company” still holding title to land just north of the site.
As local residents would
climb the tower stairs, the lower flight was removed to prevent further
use of the tower as an observation point. On July 4, 1917, by order of
Washington, the tower was dynamited by the Smiley Steel Company,
under the supervision of William H. Glancey of Shoreham. The job took
until Labor Day to complete. Shoreham resident, Robert Oliver,
witnessed the event, “ I remember standing on a hill in 1917 when
Tesla’s tower was taken down. It didn’t go down at first, but later
they were successful”. The salvage company made $1,750 from the
demolition job. The Echo gave a striking report of the
dynamiting of the tower: “The first charges of dynamite was exploded
Sunday morning about 8 o’clock and the shock was sufficient to dislodge
the steel dome at the top and it fell with a crash to the ground.
Subsequent light charges of dynamite reduced the remainder of the
structure.”
There have been various
speculations as to why the tower was dismantled. It was thought that
the government felt it might be an enemy target site for the nearby Camp
Upton military base. Tesla defended his patriotism for this country and
declared his treasured citizenship papers were of such high value to him
that they were kept in a vault, rather than the awards he received.
The laboratory lay
abandoned for many years. By 1912 Westhinghouse, Church, Kerr & Company
removed the machinery from the building, as part of their judgment of
$23,500. Ironically, many years before, Nikola Tesla gave many of his
patents to Westinghouse to save that company. If he kept his contract,
he would have sufficient capital to independently pursue his
inventions. Walter L. Johnson acquired the property in 1925.
On March 6, 1939
Plantacres, inc. purchased the property and leased it to Peerless Photo
Products. In 1940, the Peerless Company installed a new boiler to
replace the original Tesla boiler. The building started to take on some
changes when an extension was added on the west side and a small room on
the east side.
By 1950 a machine shop was
built on the northeast section of the property. A storage area of
15,000 square feet was added in 1956 and in 1964 an additional 10,000
square feet was built for shipping space.
REMEMBRANCES OF NIKOLA
TESLA
In 1885 Nikola Tesla
developed a wireless radio controlled boat. As early as 1898, he
astounded viewers at Madison Square Garden by demonstrating his
robotic boat. While Tesla was at his Wardenclyffe Laboratory in
Shoreham, he continued his research in robotics, which he referred to
as “Teleautomatics”. Local Rocky Point resident, Barbara
Hagerman Gallup, related the story her father told her about Tesla.
Wray Hagerman, who was a self-made inventor, frequently visited
Wardenclyffe and befriended Nikola Tesla. According to Hagerman, Japan
became interested in Tesla’s radio controlled robotics. Several Japanese
representatives came to Shoreham to see Tesla’s invention. When Tesla
demonstrated how he could blow up his robotic boat, floating in Long
Island Sound, from a high cliff above the beach, the Japanese offered to
buy it. Tesla refused, as he was very proud to be an American citizen
and would offer it to no other country. Tesla often remarked how his
degrees and gold medals were not guarded in a safe, but instead the safe
proudly held his American citizenship papers, which he felt were his
most valued possession. He was sworn in as citizen on July 30, 1891.
Rocky Point resident, Pete
Aviles, worked in food service at the New Yorker for seventeen years.
As a Bellhop he served meals to Nikola Tesla in his room. Aviles
recalled “I would bring his meals to his room, mostly very light
food. Mr. Tesla was fond of pigeons and took care of them on the
terrace outside his room. He would order many napkins to use with his
meals. When he left the room he would always tell me to take a coin
from the package of new coins on top of the dresser.”
Shoreham resident, Robert
Oliver, recalls the time he personally met Nikola Tesla: “During the
mid 1940’s I purchased my suits at Arnold Constable on Fifth Avenue, In
New York City. As was the custom in those days, we would have the suits
shipped out to our homes in order to save the two percent sales tax on
them. When the salesman realized my home was at Shoreham, he began a
conversation. It turned out that he worked as secretary to Nikola
Tesla. He would bring Tesla’s lunch in a wicker basket, via the
railroad, from the Waldorf Astoria Hotel. The salesman said he had
stayed with Tesla at the “Wardenclyffe Inn” (formerly known as “Flavel’s
Inn”) at Shoreham. Sometimes when they were staying at the Inn, Tesla
would wake him up in the middle of the night and they would walk to the
beach. The secretary would take shorthand notes in the dark, as he
walked along with Tesla. He told me that Tesla was living at the Hotel
New Yorker and comes to feed the pigeons at Bryant Park, adjacent to the
Fifth Avenue library. He walked me over to the Park and showed me this
old gentleman sitting on the park bench, feeding the pigeons. I sat
down and chatted with him, after shaking his hand. I said no more than
a few words. This was quite shortly before Tesla’s death, perhaps 1942.
Tesla was working on wireless transmission of energy. As children, we
would play in one of his deserted laboratories. The entire wall was
covered with glass tubing in all kinds of patterns. Much of it had been
broken with rocks. From my understanding, Tesla was working on the
transmission of energy through the atmosphere. I heard that he was
researching high pressure water, using water at extreme high pressures
to cut and weld things, a method, which later came to be. Today he is
not generally known for his contributions of alternating current, the
fluorescent light and actually the first transmission of wireless
radio.
NIKOLA TESLA - FAR
AHEAD OF TIME
The National Archives in
Manhattan store the records of Tesla’s application for citizenship as
early as February 6, 1889. On July 30, 1891 naturalized citizenship
was granted to Nikola Tesla when he was sworn in at the Common Pleas
Court in New York City. His witness was Richard F. Feist of Rahway, New
Jersey. At the time Nikola Tesla listed his residence as the
Hotel Gerlach on West 27th Street in New York City and his
occupation as Civil Engineer. This building was named “Radio Wave
Building”, in honor of Tesla’s transmission of radio waves in 1896 from
his laboratory at 5th Ave. south to Hotel Gerlach Tesla
organized his Tesla Arc Light Company of New York in 1885 and in
1887 founded The Tesla Electric Company. On two occasions Tesla
lost his laboratories to suspicious fires. As the genius savant kept
his inventions recorded in his photogenic mind, he was able to rebuild
his laboratory. With an affiliation with George Westinghouse, Tesla lit
up the 1893 Columbian Exhibition at the Chicago World’s Fair.
Westinghouse obtained forty patents from Tesla, breaking the monopoly
held by General Electric. When Tesla realized that Westinghouse needed
help, he tore up his contract with him, enabling Westinghouse to
continue, but left Tesla with little finances to pursue his inventions.
The vision he had from boyhood of harnessing the power of Niagara Falls
was fulfilled, when his polyphase system of power transmission was
applied there in 1893. A statue of Tesla is displayed on Goat Island
at Niagara Falls, in front of the entrance arch of the original Niagara
Falls polyphase power plant.
Many inventions used today
can be attributed to Nikola Tesla, such as fluorescent lighting, early
radio, the bladeless turbine and the science of robotics. In 1882 Tesla
discovered his greatest invention the generation of alternating current.
His polyphase alternating current is the system in use today to bring
electricity and power to homes and business throughout the world. He had
the basic system of radio in 1896. He learned that everything has its
own vibration, and by tuning into that “resonance” a building can be
brought down, a tube of gas can glow. The vacuum tube for photography
was developed in his lab. Tesla had over 700 patents in his name. He
worked in the field of high frequency currents and developed a
transformer known as the “Tesla Coil”, which converts low frequency
current into high frequency current. The Tesla Coil is use in every
radio and television produced today. In 1920 Tesla patented a lift-off
helicopter. His research in robotics developed into the technology of
missiles. The medical MRI, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, is expressed in
“Tesla Units”, for his work in resonance.
The vision Nikola Tesla
had from boyhood of harnessing the power of Niagara Falls was
fulfilled, when his polyphase system of power transmission was
applied there in 1893. A statue of Tesla is displayed on Goat Island at
Niagara Falls, in front of the entrance arch of the original Niagara
Falls polyphase power plant.
Tesla referred to himself
as a “discoverer” rather than an inventor, and opened the way for others
to follow. The immigrant, who arrived in the Unites States in 1884
left a great legacy to his adopted country. There is a photo of him on
display at the Statute of Liberty, memorializing the immigrant who
changed the world.
For many years, New York
City was graced with the man, Tesla, who loved to feed the pigeons in
Bryant Park behind the New York Library. The street sign there today
reads “Nikola Tesla Corner”. Nikola Tesla died alone on January
7th, 1943 at eighty-six years of age, the Hotel New Yorker where he
resided for the last ten years of his life.
Some people referred to
Nikola Tesla as the “Man Who Invented the 20th Century””.
Tesla’s discoveries and theories will someday prove that he also
invented the 21st century, as some of his discoveries are still waiting
to be explored.
“My project was retarded by laws of nature.
It was too far ahead of time.”
Nikola Tesla
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