Thomas Edison's machine shop, lit by early electric lamps
Episode 0011879 - 1893

Light Bulb & Electricity:
Edison vs Tesla's Hidden Battle

timer12 Minute Feature
boltThe War of Currents

The Genesis

“This wasn't a contest of ideas. It was a war for the right to power the world — and only one current could win.”

For all of human history, when the sun went down, the world went dark. Then, in 1879, Thomas Edison perfected the incandescent light bulb and set out to do something no one had attempted: to wire entire cities and sell electricity itself. His system ran on direct current — reliable over a few blocks, but fatally limited. DC could not travel far without bleeding away, demanding a power station on nearly every corner.

Into that flaw walked Nikola Tesla, a Serbian immigrant with a head full of alternating-current machines Edison dismissed. When Tesla's vision collided with Edison's empire — and George Westinghouse's capital — it ignited the War of Currents: a brutal campaign of public demonstrations, propaganda, and electrocutions that would decide how humanity would be powered for the next century. One man would win the war. The other would win the future.

Historical Milestones

Edison carbon filament light bulb
1879

The Lamp That Banished Night

Edison's carbon-filament bulb finally burned long enough to be practical. It was not the first electric light, but it was the first anyone could sell — the cornerstone of an empire built on direct current.

Nikola Tesla with his alternating-current equipment
1888

The Polyphase System

Tesla's alternating-current motor and polyphase patents proved electricity could travel hundreds of miles at high voltage. Westinghouse bought the rights — and the War of Currents turned existential for Edison.

Westinghouse alternating-current generators at Niagara Falls
1893

The World's Fair Showdown

Westinghouse and Tesla lit the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition with AC, dazzling 27 million visitors. Within two years their current would harness Niagara Falls — settling the war for good.

The Combatants

Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison

The Wizard of Menlo Park

Champion of direct current and the world's first electrical empire. A relentless inventor and showman who would wage a ruthless campaign to defend the system he built.

Nikola Tesla
Nikola Tesla

The Master of Lightning

The visionary behind the alternating-current system that powers the world today. He won the technological war but died nearly penniless, his genius vindicated only in hindsight.

George Westinghouse
George Westinghouse

The Industrialist Backer

The engineer-financier who bet his fortune on Tesla's AC patents. His capital and conviction turned one immigrant's equations into the grid that lit a continent.

Inside the Feature

Chapter Breakdown

  1. 01The Dark Truth Behind Edison00:00
  2. 02This Wasn't Science… It Was War00:32
  3. 03The World Before Electricity01:15
  4. 04The Rise of Thomas Edison02:10
  5. 05The Fatal Flaw in Edison's System03:40
  6. 06The Arrival of Nikola Tesla04:35
  7. 07Genius vs Power05:50
  8. 08The Betrayal That Started It All06:40
  9. 09The War of Currents Begins07:30
  10. 10Edison's Ruthless Campaign08:30
  11. 11Tesla Fights Back With Lightning09:30
  12. 12The World's Fair Showdown10:20
  13. 13The Man Who Won… But Lost Everything11:05
  14. 14Who Really Won the War?11:40

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