Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Thomas Edison
View through CrossRef
The most prolific inventor in American history, Thomas Edison played a major role in creating industries that have altered life around the globe: electric light and power, recorded sound and motion pictures. He also made significant innovations in telecommunications, battery technology, office machinery, the manufacture of Portland Cement, and processes for working low-grade ores. He was able to contribute to such a wide array of industries because he was not a lone inventor. At his workshops and laboratories in Newark, Menlo Park, and West Orange in New Jersey, Edison brought together teams of skilled research assistants and machinists. These teams allowed him to do more than any one person could do. In the process he transformed invention by making it part of a larger process of research, development, and commercialization that we now call innovation. That transformation—as much as any single invention—has become a crucial feature of the modern world.
Includes a detailed chronology of Edison’s life and work.An introduction that provides an overview of Edison’s life and work.The A-to-Z section includes three hundred encyclopedic entries on Edison’s inventions, laboratories, business enterprises, public image and numerous individuals with whom he was associated.An extensive bibliography of Edison’s publications and select interviews; modern, contemporaneous, and juvenile biographies; and thirteen subject areas related to Edison’s work and influence.The index thoroughly cross-references the chronological and encyclopedic entries.
Title: Thomas Edison
Description:
The most prolific inventor in American history, Thomas Edison played a major role in creating industries that have altered life around the globe: electric light and power, recorded sound and motion pictures.
He also made significant innovations in telecommunications, battery technology, office machinery, the manufacture of Portland Cement, and processes for working low-grade ores.
He was able to contribute to such a wide array of industries because he was not a lone inventor.
At his workshops and laboratories in Newark, Menlo Park, and West Orange in New Jersey, Edison brought together teams of skilled research assistants and machinists.
These teams allowed him to do more than any one person could do.
In the process he transformed invention by making it part of a larger process of research, development, and commercialization that we now call innovation.
That transformation—as much as any single invention—has become a crucial feature of the modern world.
Includes a detailed chronology of Edison’s life and work.
An introduction that provides an overview of Edison’s life and work.
The A-to-Z section includes three hundred encyclopedic entries on Edison’s inventions, laboratories, business enterprises, public image and numerous individuals with whom he was associated.
An extensive bibliography of Edison’s publications and select interviews; modern, contemporaneous, and juvenile biographies; and thirteen subject areas related to Edison’s work and influence.
The index thoroughly cross-references the chronological and encyclopedic entries.
Related Results
The Man Who Invented Motion Pictures
The Man Who Invented Motion Pictures
A Radio 4 Book of the Week
‘Fascinating … filled with lively historical digressions.’ New York Times ‘Best True Crime of 2022’
In 1888 Louis Le Prince shot the ...
Memoirs and Letters of Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, Inventor
Memoirs and Letters of Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, Inventor
First published in 1891, this memoir describes the life of the metallurgist and inventor Sidney Gilchrist Thomas (1850–1885), best-known for discovering the method of eliminating p...
Icons of Invention
Icons of Invention
These two volumes provide in-depth coverage of 24 of history's most important inventors and their inventions.
Who invented the sewing machine, the telephone, the internal...
Electric Illumination
Electric Illumination
Two years after Thomas Edison patented his electric light bulb, the 1881 International Exposition of Electricity in Paris, featuring many spectacular lighting displays, showcased t...
Electric Illumination
Electric Illumination
Two years after Thomas Edison patented his electric light bulb, the 1881 International Exposition of Electricity in Paris, featuring many spectacular lighting displays, showcased t...
Evelyn Beatrice Longman
Evelyn Beatrice Longman
Poor, motherless at 5, uneducated after elementary school, Mary Evelyn Beatrice Longman made the presumptuous and ludicrous claim in 1893, at age 19, that she could create monument...
Festschrift für Thomas Heidel
Festschrift für Thomas Heidel
Corporate Litigation, der „Besondere Vertreter“ und Minderheitenschutz im Aktienrecht, „Gestaltungsspielräume“ bei der Unternehmensführung und -bewertung – all das sind Fragen, die...
The Fifth Notebook of Dylan Thomas
The Fifth Notebook of Dylan Thomas
Between May 1930 and August 1935, Dylan Thomas kept numerous notebooks of poems. They contain the drafts of almost all of the work that would form his first two reputation-making c...

