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<h2> CHAPTER XXII </h2>
<h3> THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE EDISON STORAGE BATTERY </h3>
<p>IT is more than a hundred years since the elementary principle of the
storage battery or "accumulator" was detected by a Frenchman named
Gautherot; it is just fifty years since another Frenchman, named Plante,
discovered that on taking two thin plates of sheet lead, immersing them in
dilute sulphuric acid, and passing an electric current through the cell,
the combination exhibited the ability to give back part of the original
charging current, owing to the chemical changes and reactions set up.
Plante coiled up his sheets into a very handy cell like a little roll of
carpet or pastry; but the trouble was that the battery took a long time to
"form." One sheet becoming coated with lead peroxide and the other with
finely divided or spongy metallic lead, they would receive current, and
then, even after a long period of inaction, furnish or return an
electromotive force of from 1.85 to 2.2 volts. This ability to store up
electrical energy produced by dynamos in hours otherwise idle, whether
driven by steam, wind, or water, was a distinct advance in the art; but
the sensational step was taken about 1880, when Faure in France and Brush
in America broke away from the slow and weary process of "forming" the
plates, and hit on clever methods of furnishing them "ready made," so to
speak, by dabbing red lead onto lead-grid plates, just as butter is spread
on a slice of home-made bread. This brought the storage battery at once
into use as a practical, manufactured piece of apparatus; and the world
was captivated with the idea. The great English scientist, Sir William
Thomson, went wild with enthusiasm when a Faure "box of electricity" was
brought over from Paris to him in 1881 containing a million foot-pounds of
stored energy. His biographer, Dr. Sylvanus P. Thompson, describes him as
lying ill in bed with a wounded leg, and watching results with an
incandescent lamp fastened to his bed curtain by a safety-pin, and lit up
by current from the little Faure cell. Said Sir William: "It is going to
be a most valuable, practical affair—as valuable as water-cisterns
to people whether they had or had not systems of water-pipes and
water-supply." Indeed, in one outburst of panegyric the shrewd physicist
remarked that he saw in it "a realization of the most ardently and
increasingly felt scientific aspiration of his life—an aspiration
which he hardly dared to expect or to see realized." A little later,
however, Sir William, always cautious and canny, began to discover the
inherent defects of the primitive battery, as to disintegration,
inefficiency, costliness, etc., and though offered tempting inducements,
declined to lend his name to its financial introduction. Nevertheless, he
accepted the principle as valuable, and put the battery to actual use.</p>
<p>For many years after this episode, the modern lead-lead type of battery
thus brought forward with so great a flourish of trumpets had a hard time
of it. Edison's attitude toward it, even as a useful supplement to his
lighting system, was always one of scepticism, and he remarked
contemptuously that the best storage battery he knew was a ton of coal.
The financial fortunes of the battery, on both sides of the Atlantic, were
as varied and as disastrous as its industrial; but it did at last emerge,
and "made good." By 1905, the production of lead-lead storage batteries in
the United States alone had reached a value for the year of nearly
$3,000,000, and it has increased greatly since that time. The storage
battery is now regarded as an important and indispensable adjunct in
nearly all modern electric-lighting and electric-railway systems of any
magnitude; and in 1909, in spite of its weight, it had found adoption in
over ten thousand automobiles of the truck, delivery wagon, pleasure
carriage, and runabout types in America.</p>
<p>Edison watched closely all this earlier development for about fifteen
years, not changing his mind as to what he regarded as the incurable
defects of the lead-lead type, but coming gradually to the conclusion that
if a storage battery of some other and better type could be brought
forward, it would fulfil all the early hopes, however extravagant, of such
men as Kelvin (Sir William Thomson), and would become as necessary and as
universal as the incandescent lamp or the electric motor. The beginning of
the present century found him at his point of new departure.</p>
<p>Generally speaking, non-technical and uninitiated persons have a tendency
to regard an invention as being more or less the ultimate result of some
happy inspiration. And, indeed, there is no doubt that such may be the
fact in some instances; but in most cases the inventor has intentionally
set out to accomplish a definite and desired result—mostly through
the application of the known laws of the art in which he happens to be
working. It is rarely, however, that a man will start out deliberately, as
Edison did, to evolve a radically new type of such an intricate device as
the storage battery, with only a meagre clew and a vague starting-point.</p>
<p>In view of the successful outcome of the problem which, in 1900, he
undertook to solve, it will be interesting to review his mental attitude
at that period. It has already been noted at the end of a previous chapter
that on closing the magnetic iron-ore concentrating plant at Edison, New
Jersey, he resolved to work on a new type of storage battery. It was about
this time that, in the course of a conversation with Mr. R. H. Beach, then
of the street-railway department of the General Electric Company, he said:
"Beach, I don't think Nature would be so unkind as to withhold the secret
of a GOOD storage battery if a real earnest hunt for it is made. I'm going
to hunt."</p>
<p>Frequently Edison has been asked what he considers the secret of
achievement. To this query he has invariably replied: "Hard work, based on
hard thinking." The laboratory records bear the fullest witness that he
has consistently followed out this prescription to the utmost. The
perfection of all his great inventions has been signalized by patient,
persistent, and incessant effort which, recognizing nothing short of
success, has resulted in the ultimate accomplishment of his ideas.
Optimistic and hopeful to a high degree, Edison has the happy faculty of
beginning the day as open-minded as a child—yesterday's
disappointments and failures discarded and discounted by the alluring
possibilities of to-morrow.</p>
<p>Of all his inventions, it is doubtful whether any one of them has called
forth more original thought, work, perseverance, ingenuity, and monumental
patience than the one we are now dealing with. One of his associates who
has been through the many years of the storage-battery drudgery with him
said: "If Edison's experiments, investigations, and work on this storage
battery were all that he had ever done, I should say that he was not only
a notable inventor, but also a great man. It is almost impossible to
appreciate the enormous difficulties that have been overcome."</p>
<p>From a beginning which was made practically in the dark, it was not until
he had completed more than ten thousand experiments that he obtained any
positive preliminary results whatever. Through all this vast amount of
research there had been no previous signs of the electrical action he was
looking for. These experiments had extended over many months of constant
work by day and night, but there was no breakdown of Edison's faith in
ultimate success—no diminution of his sanguine and confident
expectations. The failure of an experiment simply meant to him that he had
found something else that would not work, thus bringing the possible goal
a little nearer by a process of painstaking elimination.</p>
<p>Now, however, after these many months of arduous toil, in which he had
examined and tested practically all the known elements in numerous
chemical combinations, the electric action he sought for had been
obtained, thus affording him the first inkling of the secret that he had
industriously tried to wrest from Nature. It should be borne in mind that
from the very outset Edison had disdained any intention of following in
the only tracks then known by employing lead and sulphuric acid as the
components of a successful storage battery. Impressed with what he
considered the serious inherent defects of batteries made of these
materials, and the tremendously complex nature of the chemical reactions
taking place in all types of such cells, he determined boldly at the start
that he would devise a battery without lead, and one in which an alkaline
solution could be used—a form which would, he firmly believed, be
inherently less subject to decay and dissolution than the standard type,
which after many setbacks had finally won its way to an annual production
of many thousands of cells, worth millions of dollars.</p>
<p>Two or three thousand of the first experiments followed the line of his
well-known primary battery in the attempted employment of copper oxide as
an element in a new type of storage cell; but its use offered no
advantages, and the hunt was continued in other directions and pursued
until Edison satisfied himself by a vast number of experiments that nickel
and iron possessed the desirable qualifications he was in search of.</p>
<p>This immense amount of investigation which had consumed so many months of
time, and which had culminated in the discovery of a series of reactions
between nickel and iron that bore great promise, brought Edison merely
within sight of a strange and hitherto unexplored country. Slowly but
surely the results of the last few thousands of his preliminary
experiments had pointed inevitably to a new and fruitful region ahead. He
had discovered the hidden passage and held the clew which he had so
industriously sought. And now, having outlined a definite path, Edison was
all afire to push ahead vigorously in order that he might enter in and
possess the land.</p>
<p>It is a trite saying that "history repeats itself," and certainly no axiom
carries more truth than this when applied to the history of each of
Edison's important inventions. The development of the storage battery has
been no exception; indeed, far from otherwise, for in the ten years that
have elapsed since the time he set himself and his mechanics, chemists,
machinists, and experimenters at work to develop a practical commercial
cell, the old story of incessant and persistent efforts so manifest in the
working out of other inventions was fully repeated.</p>
<p>Very soon after he had decided upon the use of nickel and iron as the
elemental metals for his storage battery, Edison established a chemical
plant at Silver Lake, New Jersey, a few miles from the Orange laboratory,
on land purchased some time previously. This place was the scene of the
further experiments to develop the various chemical forms of nickel and
iron, and to determine by tests what would be best adapted for use in
cells manufactured on a commercial scale. With a little handful of
selected experimenters gathered about him, Edison settled down to one of
his characteristic struggles for supremacy. To some extent it was a
revival of the old Menlo Park days (or, rather, nights). Some of these who
had worked on the preliminary experiments, with the addition of a few
new-comers, toiled together regardless of passing time and often under
most discouraging circumstances, but with that remarkable esprit de corps
that has ever marked Edison's relations with his co-workers, and that has
contributed so largely to the successful carrying out of his ideas.</p>
<p>The group that took part in these early years of Edison's arduous labors
included his old-time assistant, Fred Ott, together with his chemist, J.
W. Aylsworth, as well as E. J. Ross, Jr., W. E. Holland, and Ralph
Arbogast, and a little later W. G. Bee, all of whom have grown up with the
battery and still devote their energies to its commercial development. One
of these workers, relating the strenuous experiences of these few years,
says: "It was hard work and long hours, but still there were some things
that made life pleasant. One of them was the supper-hour we enjoyed when
we worked nights. Mr. Edison would have supper sent in about midnight, and
we all sat down together, including himself. Work was forgotten for the
time, and all hands were ready for fun. I have very pleasant recollections
of Mr. Edison at these times. He would always relax and help to make a
good time, and on some occasions I have seen him fairly overflow with
animal spirits, just like a boy let out from school. After the supper-hour
was over, however, he again became the serious, energetic inventor, deeply
immersed in the work at hand.</p>
<p>"He was very fond of telling and hearing stories, and always appreciated a
joke. I remember one that he liked to get off on us once in a while. Our
lighting plant was in duplicate, and about 12.30 or 1 o'clock in the
morning, at the close of the supper-hour, a change would be made from one
plant to the other, involving the gradual extinction of the electric
lights and their slowly coming up to candle-power again, the whole change
requiring probably about thirty seconds. Sometimes, as this was taking
place, Edison would fold his hands, compose himself as if he were in sound
sleep, and when the lights were full again would apparently wake up, with
the remark, 'Well, boys, we've had a fine rest; now let's pitch into work
again.'"</p>
<p>Another interesting and amusing reminiscence of this period of activity
has been gathered from another of the family of experimenters: "Sometimes,
when Mr. Edison had been working long hours, he would want to have a short
sleep. It was one of the funniest things I ever witnessed to see him crawl
into an ordinary roll-top desk and curl up and take a nap. If there was a
sight that was still more funny, it was to see him turn over on his other
side, all the time remaining in the desk. He would use several volumes of
Watts's Dictionary of Chemistry for a pillow, and we fellows used to say
that he absorbed the contents during his sleep, judging from the flow of
new ideas he had on waking."</p>
<p>Such incidents as these serve merely to illustrate the lighter moments
that stand out in relief against the more sombre background of the
strenuous years, for, of all the absorbingly busy periods of Edison's
inventive life, the first five years of the storage-battery era was one of
the very busiest of them all. It was not that there remained any basic
principle to be discovered or simplified, for that had already been done;
but it was in the effort to carry these principles into practice that
there arose the numerous difficulties that at times seemed insurmountable.
But, according to another co-worker, "Edison seemed pleased when he used
to run up against a serious difficulty. It would seem to stiffen his
backbone and make him more prolific of new ideas. For a time I thought I
was foolish to imagine such a thing, but I could never get away from the
impression that he really appeared happy when he ran up against a serious
snag. That was in my green days, and I soon learned that the failure of an
experiment never discourages him unless it is by reason of the
carelessness of the man making it. Then Edison gets disgusted. If it fails
on its merits, he doesn't worry or fret about it, but, on the contrary,
regards it as a useful fact learned; remains cheerful and tries something
else. I have known him to reverse an unsuccessful experiment and come out
all right."</p>
<p>To follow Edison's trail in detail through the innumerable twists and
turns of his experimentation and research on the storage battery, during
the past ten years, would not be in keeping with the scope of this
narrative, nor would it serve any useful purpose. Besides, such details
would fill a big volume. The narrative, however, would not be complete
without some mention of the general outline of his work, and reference may
be made briefly to a few of the chief items. And lest the reader think
that the word "innumerable" may have been carelessly or hastily used
above, we would quote the reply of one of the laboratory assistants when
asked how many experiments had been made on the Edison storage battery
since the year 1900: "Goodness only knows! We used to number our
experiments consecutively from 1 to 10,000, and when we got up to 10,000
we turned back to 1 and ran up to 10,000 again, and so on. We ran through
several series—I don't know how many, and have lost track of them
now, but it was not far from fifty thousand."</p>
<p>From the very first, Edison's broad idea of his storage battery was to
make perforated metallic containers having the active materials packed
therein; nickel hydrate for the positive and iron oxide for the negative
plate. This plan has been adhered to throughout, and has found its
consummation in the present form of the completed commercial cell, but in
the middle ground which stands between the early crude beginnings and the
perfected type of to-day there lies a world of original thought, patient
plodding, and achievement.</p>
<p>The first necessity was naturally to obtain the best and purest compounds
for active materials. Edison found that comparatively little was known by
manufacturing chemists about nickel and iron oxides of the high grade and
purity he required. Hence it became necessary for him to establish his own
chemical works and put them in charge of men specially trained by himself,
with whom he worked. This was the plant at Silver Lake, above referred to.
Here, for several years, there was ceaseless activity in the preparation
of these chemical compounds by every imaginable process and subsequent
testing. Edison's chief chemist says: "We left no stone unturned to find a
way of making those chemicals so that they would give the highest results.
We carried on the experiments with the two chemicals together. Sometimes
the nickel would be ahead in the tests, and then again it would fall
behind. To stimulate us to greater improvement, Edison hung up a card
which showed the results of tests in milliampere-hours given by the
experimental elements as we tried them with the various grades of nickel
and iron we had made. This stirred up a great deal of ambition among the
boys to push the figures up. Some of our earliest tests showed around 300,
but as we improved the material, they gradually crept up to over 500. Just
about that time Edison made a trip to Canada, and when he came back we had
made such good progress that the figures had crept up to about 1000. I
well remember how greatly he was pleased."</p>
<p>In speaking of the development of the negative element of the battery, Mr.
Aylsworth said: "In like manner the iron element had to be developed and
improved; and finally the iron, which had generally enjoyed superiority in
capacity over its companion, the nickel element, had to go in training in
order to retain its lead, which was imperative, in order to produce a
uniform and constant voltage curve. In talking with me one day about the
difficulties under which we were working and contrasting them with the
phonograph experimentation, Edison said: 'In phonographic work we can use
our ears and our eyes, aided with powerful microscopes; but in the battery
our difficulties cannot be seen or heard, but must be observed by our
mind's eye!' And by reason of the employment of such vision in the past,
Edison is now able to see quite clearly through the forest of difficulties
after eliminating them one by one."</p>
<p>The size and shape of the containing pockets in the battery plates or
elements and the degree of their perforation were matters that received
many years of close study and experiment; indeed, there is still to-day
constant work expended on their perfection, although their present general
form was decided upon several years ago. The mechanical construction of
the battery, as a whole, in its present form, compels instant admiration
on account of its beauty and completeness. Mr. Edison has spared neither
thought, ingenuity, labor, nor money in the effort to make it the most
complete and efficient storage cell obtainable, and the results show that
his skill, judgment, and foresight have lost nothing of the power that
laid the foundation of, and built up, other great arts at each earlier
stage of his career.</p>
<p>Among the complex and numerous problems that presented themselves in the
evolution of the battery was the one concerning the internal conductivity
of the positive unit. The nickel hydrate was a poor electrical conductor,
and although a metallic nickel pocket might be filled with it, there would
not be the desired electrical action unless a conducting substance were
mixed with it, and so incorporated and packed that there would be good
electrical contact throughout. This proved to be a most knotty and
intricate puzzle—tricky and evasive—always leading on and
promising something, and at the last slipping away leaving the work
undone. Edison's remarkable patience and persistence in dealing with this
trying problem and in finally solving it successfully won for him more
than ordinary admiration from his associates. One of them, in speaking of
the seemingly interminable experiments to overcome this trouble, said: "I
guess that question of conductivity of the positive pocket brought lots of
gray hairs to his head. I never dreamed a man could have such patience and
perseverance. Any other man than Edison would have given the whole thing
up a thousand times, but not he! Things looked awfully blue to the whole
bunch of us many a time, but he was always hopeful. I remember one time
things looked so dark to me that I had just about made up my mind to throw
up my job, but some good turn came just then and I didn't. Now I'm glad I
held on, for we've got a great future."</p>
<p>The difficulty of obtaining good electrical contact in the positive
element was indeed Edison's chief trouble for many years. After a great
amount of work and experimentation he decided upon a certain form of
graphite, which seemed to be suitable for the purpose, and then proceeded
to the commercial manufacture of the battery at a special factory in Glen
Ridge, New Jersey, installed for the purpose. There was no lack of buyers,
but, on the contrary, the factory was unable to turn out batteries enough.
The newspapers had previously published articles showing the unusual
capacity and performance of the battery, and public interest had thus been
greatly awakened.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding the establishment of a regular routine of manufacture and
sale, Edison did not cease to experiment for improvement. Although the
graphite apparently did the work desired of it, he was not altogether
satisfied with its performance and made extended trials of other
substances, but at that time found nothing that on the whole served the
purpose better. Continuous tests of the commercial cells were carried on
at the laboratory, as well as more practical and heavy tests in
automobiles, which were constantly kept running around the adjoining
country over all kinds of roads. All these tests were very closely watched
by Edison, who demanded rigorously that the various trials of the battery
should be carried on with all strenuousness so as to get the utmost
results and develop any possible weakness. So insistent was he on this,
that if any automobile should run several days without bursting a tire or
breaking some part of the machine, he would accuse the chauffeur of
picking out easy roads.</p>
<p>After these tests had been going on for some time, and some thousands of
cells had been sold and were giving satisfactory results to the
purchasers, the test sheets and experience gathered from various sources
pointed to the fact that occasionally a cell here and there would show up
as being short in capacity. Inasmuch as the factory processes were very
exact and carefully guarded, and every cell was made as uniform as human
skill and care could provide, there thus arose a serious problem. Edison
concentrated his powers on the investigation of this trouble, and found
that the chief cause lay in the graphite. Some other minor matters also
attracted his attention. What to do, was the important question that
confronted him. To shut down the factory meant great loss and apparent
failure. He realized this fully, but he also knew that to go on would
simply be to increase the number of defective batteries in circulation,
which would ultimately result in a permanent closure and real failure.
Hence he took the course which one would expect of Edison's common sense
and directness of action. He was not satisfied that the battery was a
complete success, so he shut down and went to experimenting once more.</p>
<p>"And then," says one of the laboratory men, "we started on another series
of record-breaking experiments that lasted over five years. I might almost
say heart-breaking, too, for of all the elusive, disappointing things one
ever hunted for that was the worst. But secrets have to be long-winded and
roost high if they want to get away when the 'Old Man' goes hunting for
them. He doesn't get mad when he misses them, but just keeps on smiling
and firing, and usually brings them into camp. That's what he did on the
battery, for after a whole lot of work he perfected the nickel-flake idea
and process, besides making the great improvement of using tubes instead
of flat pockets for the positive. He also added a minor improvement here
and there, and now we have a finer battery than we ever expected."</p>
<p>In the interim, while the experimentation of these last five years was in
progress, many customers who had purchased batteries of the original type
came knocking at the door with orders in their hands for additional
outfits wherewith to equip more wagons and trucks. Edison expressed his
regrets, but said he was not satisfied with the old cells and was engaged
in improving them. To which the customers replied that THEY were entirely
satisfied and ready and willing to pay for more batteries of the same
kind; but Edison could not be moved from his determination, although
considerable pressure was at times brought to bear to sway his decision.</p>
<p>Experiment was continued beyond the point of peradventure, and after some
new machinery had been built, the manufacture of the new type of cell was
begun in the early summer of 1909, and at the present writing is being
extended as fast as the necessary additional machinery can be made. The
product is shipped out as soon as it is completed.</p>
<p>The nickel flake, which is Edison's ingenious solution of the conductivity
problem, is of itself a most interesting product, intensely practical in
its application and fascinating in its manufacture. The flake of nickel is
obtained by electroplating upon a metallic cylinder alternate layers of
copper and nickel, one hundred of each, after which the combined sheet is
stripped from the cylinder. So thin are the layers that this sheet is only
about the thickness of a visiting-card, and yet it is composed of two
hundred layers of metal. The sheet is cut into tiny squares, each about
one-sixteenth of an inch, and these squares are put into a bath where the
copper is dissolved out. This releases the layers of nickel, so that each
of these small squares becomes one hundred tiny sheets, or flakes, of pure
metallic nickel, so thin that when they are dried they will float in the
air, like thistle-down.</p>
<p>In their application to the manufacture of batteries, the flakes are used
through the medium of a special machine, so arranged that small charges of
nickel hydrate and nickel flake are alternately fed into the pockets
intended for positives, and tamped down with a pressure equal to about
four tons per square inch. This insures complete and perfect contact and
consequent electrical conductivity throughout the entire unit.</p>
<p>The development of the nickel flake contains in itself a history of
patient investigation, labor, and achievement, but we have not space for
it, nor for tracing the great work that has been done in developing and
perfecting the numerous other parts and adjuncts of this remarkable
battery. Suffice it to say that when Edison went boldly out into new
territory, after something entirely unknown, he was quite prepared for
hard work and exploration. He encountered both in unstinted measure, but
kept on going forward until, after long travel, he had found all that he
expected and accomplished something more beside. Nature DID respond to his
whole-hearted appeal, and, by the time the hunt was ended, revealed a good
storage battery of entirely new type. Edison not only recognized and took
advantage of the principles he had discovered, but in adapting them for
commercial use developed most ingenious processes and mechanical
appliances for carrying his discoveries into practical effect. Indeed, it
may be said that the invention of an enormous variety of new machines and
mechanical appliances rendered necessary by each change during the various
stages of development of the battery, from first to last, stands as a
lasting tribute to the range and versatility of his powers.</p>
<p>It is not within the scope of this narrative to enter into any description
of the relative merits of the Edison storage battery, that being the
province of a commercial catalogue. It does, however, seem entirely
allowable to say that while at the present writing the tests that have
been made extend over a few years only, their results and the intrinsic
value of this characteristic Edison invention are of such a substantial
nature as to point to the inevitable growth of another great industry
arising from its manufacture, and to its wide-spread application to many
uses.</p>
<p>The principal use that Edison has had in mind for his battery is
transportation of freight and passengers by truck, automobile, and
street-car. The greatly increased capacity in proportion to weight of the
Edison cell makes it particularly adaptable for this class of work on
account of the much greater radius of travel that is possible by its use.
The latter point of advantage is the one that appeals most to the
automobilist, as he is thus enabled to travel, it is asserted, more than
three times farther than ever before on a single charge of the battery.</p>
<p>Edison believes that there are important advantages possible in the
employment of his storage battery for street-car propulsion. Under the
present system of operation, a plant furnishing the electric power for
street railways must be large enough to supply current for the maximum
load during "rush hours," although much of the machinery may be lying idle
and unproductive in the hours of minimum load. By the use of
storage-battery cars, this immense and uneconomical maximum investment in
plant can be cut down to proportions of true commercial economy, as the
charging of the batteries can be conducted at a uniform rate with a
reasonable expenditure for generating machinery. Not only this, but each
car becomes an independently moving unit, not subject to delay by reason
of a general breakdown of the power plant or of the line. In addition to
these advantages, the streets would be freed from their burden of trolley
wires or conduits. To put his ideas into practice, Edison built a short
railway line at the Orange works in the winter of 1909-10, and, in
co-operation with Mr. R. H. Beach, constructed a special type of
street-car, and equipped it with motor, storage battery, and other
necessary operating devices. This car was subsequently put upon the
street-car lines in New York City, and demonstrated its efficiency so
completely that it was purchased by one of the street-car companies, which
has since ordered additional cars for its lines. The demonstration of this
initial car has been watched with interest by many railroad officials, and
its performance has been of so successful a nature that at the present
writing (the summer of 1910) it has been necessary to organize and equip a
preliminary factory in which to construct many other cars of a similar
type that have been ordered by other street-railway companies. This
enterprise will be conducted by a corporation which has been specially
organized for the purpose. Thus, there has been initiated the development
of a new and important industry whose possible ultimate proportions are
beyond the range of present calculation. Extensive as this industry may
become, however, Edison is firmly convinced that the greatest field for
his storage battery lies in its adaptation to commercial trucking and
hauling, and to pleasure vehicles, in comparison with which the street-car
business even with its great possibilities—will not amount to more
than 1 per cent.</p>
<p>Edison has pithily summed up his work and his views in an article on "The
To-Morrows of Electricity and Invention" in Popular Electricity for June,
1910, in which he says: "For years past I have been trying to perfect a
storage battery, and have now rendered it entirely suitable to automobile
and other work. There is absolutely no reason why horses should be allowed
within city limits; for between the gasoline and the electric car, no room
is left for them. They are not needed. The cow and the pig have gone, and
the horse is still more undesirable. A higher public ideal of health and
cleanliness is working toward such banishment very swiftly; and then we
shall have decent streets, instead of stables made out of strips of
cobblestones bordered by sidewalks. The worst use of money is to make a
fine thoroughfare, and then turn it over to horses. Besides that, the
change will put the humane societies out of business. Many people now
charge their own batteries because of lack of facilities; but I believe
central stations will find in this work very soon the largest part of
their load. The New York Edison Company, or the Chicago Edison Company,
should have as much current going out for storage batteries as for power
motors; and it will be so some near day."</p>
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