Quick Facts
- NAME: Thomas Edison
- OCCUPATION: Entrepreneur, Inventor
- BIRTH DATE: February 11, 1847
- DEATH DATE: October 18, 1931
- EDUCATION: The Cooper Union
- PLACE OF BIRTH: Milan, Ohio
- PLACE OF DEATH: West Orange, New Jersey
- Full Name: Thomas Alva Edison
- AKA: Thomas Edison
Best Known For
Inventor Thomas Edison created such great innovations as the electric light bulb, the telephone and the phonograph. A savvy businessman, he held more than a 1,000 patents for his inventions.
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Thomas Edison - Inventor (4:13)
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Thomas Edison - Mini Biography
Inventor Thomas Edison, known during his time as "The Wizard of Menlo Park," developed numerous practical devices that changed the world such as the phonograph, the movie camera, and the light bulb.
Thomas Edison - Inventor
The inventor of the light bulb, phonograph, and motion picture, Thomas Edison was granted 400 patents from 1879 to 1886. Though he changed technology forever, not all of his inventions were successful.
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Henry Ford is credited with the creation of assembly line-a concept that yields the world's most affordable car.
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Play NowThomas Alva Edison. (2013). The Biography Channel website. Retrieved 11:00, May 22, 2013, from http://www.biography.com/people/thomas-edison-9284349.
Thomas Alva Edison. [Internet]. 2013. The Biography Channel website. Available from: http://www.biography.com/people/thomas-edison-9284349 [Accessed 22 May 2013].
"Thomas Alva Edison." 2013. The Biography Channel website. May 22 2013, 11:00 http://www.biography.com/people/thomas-edison-9284349.
"Thomas Alva Edison," The Biography Channel website, 2013, http://www.biography.com/people/thomas-edison-9284349 [accessed May 22, 2013].
"Thomas Alva Edison," The Biography Channel website, http://www.biography.com/people/thomas-edison-9284349 (accessed May 22, 2013).
Thomas Alva Edison [Internet]. The Biography Channel website; 2013 [cited 2013 May 22] Available from: http://www.biography.com/people/thomas-edison-9284349.
Thomas Alva Edison, http://www.biography.com/people/thomas-edison-9284349 (last visited May 22, 2013).
Thomas Alva Edison. The Biography Channel website. 2013. Available at: http://www.biography.com/people/thomas-edison-9284349. Accessed May 22, 2013.
Synopsis
Born on February 11, 1847, in Milan, Ohio, Thomas Edison rose from humble beginnings to work as an inventor of major technology. Setting up a lab in Menlo Park, some of the products he developed included the telegraph, telephone, phonograph, electric light bulb, alkaline storage batteries and Kinetograph (a camera for motion pictures). He died on October 18, 1931, in West Orange, New Jersey.
Contents
Quotes
"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work."
"Everything comes to him who hustles while he waits."
Younger Years
Born on February 11, 1847, in Milan, Ohio, Thomas Alva Edison was the last of the seven children of Samuel and Nancy Edison. Thomas's father was an exiled political activist from Canada. His mother, an accomplished school teacher, was a major influence in Thomas’ early life. An early bout with scarlet fever left him with hearing difficulties in both ears, a malady that would eventually leave him nearly deaf as an adult.
In 1854, the family moved to Port Huron, Michigan, where Edison attended public school for a total of 12 weeks. A hyperactive child, prone to distraction, he was deemed “difficult” by his teacher. His mother quickly pulled him from school and taught him at home. At age 11, he showed a voracious appetite for knowledge, reading books on a wide range of subjects. In this wide-open curriculum Edison developed a process for self-education and learning independently that would serve him throughout his life.
Early Career
At age 12, Edison set out to put much of that education to work. He convinced his parents to let him sell newspapers to passengers along the Grand Trunk Railroad line. Exploiting his access to the news bulletins teletyped to the station office each day, Thomas began publishing his own small newspaper, called the Grand Trunk Herald. The up-to-date articles were a hit with passengers. This was the first of what would become a long string of entrepreneurial ventures where he saw a need and capitalized on opportunity.
Edison also used his access to the railroad to conduct chemical experiments in a small laboratory he set up in a train baggage car. During one of his experiments, a chemical fire started and the car caught fire. The conductor rushed in and struck Thomas on the side of the head, probably furthering some of his hearing loss. He was kicked off the train and forced to sell his newspapers at various stations along the route.
While he worked for the railroad, a near-tragic event turned fortuitous for the young man. After Edison saved a three-year-old from being run over by an errant train, the child’s grateful father rewarded him by teaching him to operate a telegraph. By age 15, he had learned enough to be employed as a telegraph operator. For the next five years, Edison traveled throughout the Midwest as an itinerant telegrapher, subbing for those who had gone to the Civil War. In his spare time, he read widely, studied and experimented with telegraph technology, and became familiar with electrical science.
In 1866, at age 19, Edison moved to Louisville, Kentucky, working for The Associated Press.
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Captains of Industry
View groupAmerica wasn't discovered, it was built. At the end of the Civil War, America was seen as a failing experiment in democracy; a nation fraying from the inside and at war with itself. Just 50 years later, the United States was the greatest superpower the world had ever seen. This landmark transition was due in no small part to a group of business-savvy, innovative young men: John D. Rockefeller, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Andrew Carnegie, Henry Ford, J.P. Morgan and Thomas Edison. These men constructed a bold vision for a modern America and transformed the greatest industries of our time, including oil, rail, steel, shipping, automobiles and finance; they are unequivocally America's first captains of industry.
Captains of Industry 7 people in this group
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Famous Aquarians 552 people in this group
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Famous Inventors 103 people in this group

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