The Education of Thomas Edison
by Jim Powell
In 1854, Reverend G. B. Engle belittled one of his students,
seven-year-old Thomas Alva Edison, as "addled." This out-raged the
youngster, and he stormed out of the Port Huron, Michigan school, the first
formal school he had ever attended. His mother, Nancy Edison, brought him
back the next day to discuss the situation with Reverend Engle, but she
became angry at his rigid ways. Everything was forced on the kids. She
withdrew her son from the school where he had been for only three months and
resolved to
educate him at home. Al though he seems to have briefly attended two more
schools, nearly all his childhood learning took place at home. Thus arose
the legend that Thomas Alva Edison (born February 11, 1847) became America's
most prolific inventor-1,093 patents for such wonders as the microphone,
telephone receiver, stock ticker, phonograph, movies, office copiers, and
incandescent electric light-despite his lack of schooling.
For years, he looked the part of the improbable, homespun genius: five feet,
10 inches tall, gray eyes, long hair that looked as if he cut it himself,
baggy acid-stained pants, scruffy shoes, and hands discolored by chemicals.
Later he took to wearing city clothes-black. On more than one occasion
passers-by mistook him for a priest and respectfully tipped their hats. Yet
Edison probably gained a far better education than most children of his time
or ours. This wasn't because his mother had official credentials. She had
taught school, but only a little. Nor was it because his parents had money.
They were poor and lived on the outskirts of a declining town. Nancy
Edison's secret: she was more dedicated than any teacher was likely to be,
and she had the flexibility to experiment with various ways of nurturing her
son's love for learning. "She avoided forcing or prodding," wrote Edison
biographer Matthew Josephson, "and made an effort to engage his interest by
reading him works of good literature and history that she had learned to
love-and she was said to have been a fine reader. "
Thomas Edison plunged into great books. Before he was 12, he had read works
by Shakespeare and Dickens, Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire, David Hume's History of England, and more. Because Nancy Edison was
devoted and observant, she discovered simple ways to nurture her son's
enthusiasm. She brought him a book on the physical sciences- R. G. Parker's
School of Natural Philosophy, which explained how to perform chemistry
experiments at home. Edison recalled this was "the first book in science I
read when a boy." It made learning fun, and he performed every experiment in
the book. Then Nancy Edison brought him The Dictionary of Science which
further spurred his interest.
He became passionate about chemistry, spending all his spare money buying
chemicals from a local pharmacist, collecting bottles, wires, and other
items for experiments. He built his first laboratory in the cellar of the
family's Port Huron house. "Thus," Josephson noted, "his mother had
accomplished that which all truly great teachers do for their pupils, she
brought him to the stage of learning things for himself, learning that which
most amused and interested him, and she encouraged him to go on in that
path. It was the very best thing she could have done for this singular boy."
As Edison himself put it: "My mother was the making of me. She understood
me; she let me follow my bent." Sam Edison disapproved of all the time his
son spent in the cellar.
Sometimes he offered the boy a penny to resume reading literature. At 12,
for example, Thomas read Thomas Paine's Age of Reason. "I can still remember
the flash of enlightenment that shone from his pages," he recalled.
Typically, though, he used his pennies to buy more chemicals for experiments
in the cellar. But Thomas Edison had discovered intellectual play. He wanted
to learn everything he could about steam engines, electricity, battery
power, electromagnetism, and especially the telegraph. Samuel F. B. Morse
had attracted tremendous crowds when he demonstrated the telegraph back in
1838, and telegraph lines were extended across the country by the time
Thomas Edison was conducting his experiments. The idea of transmitting
information over a wire utterly fascinated him. He used scrap metal to build
a telegraph set and practiced the Morse code. Through his experiments, he
learned more and more about electricity which was to revolutionize the
world.
When the Grand Trunk Railroad was extended to Port Huron in 1859, he got a
job as newsboy for the day-long run to Detroit and back. After about a year,
he looked for ways to make better use of the five-hour layover in Detroit
before the train made its return trip. He got permission to move his cellar
laboratory equipment aboard the baggage car, so he could continue his
experiments. This worked well for a while until the train lurched, spilled
some chemicals, and the laboratory caught on fire. In 1862, a train accident
injured his ears, and the 15-year-old began to lose much of his hearing.
Apparently, he realized that as a handicapped boy without any credentials,
he must learn everything he needed to know on his own. He dramatically
intensified his self-education. "Deafness probably drove me to reading," he
reflected later. He was among the first people to use the Detroit Free
Library-with card number 33-and he systematically read through it shelf by
shelf. He read literature. He was thrilled by Victor Hugo's new romantic
epic, Les Miserables, especially the stories of lost children. He talked so
much about the book that his friends
called him "Victor Hugo" Edison.
Of course, what fascinated Edison most was science. He devoured books on
electricity, mechanics, chemical analysis, manufacturing technology and
more. He struggled with Isaac Newton's Principles, which made him realize
his future would be with practical matters, not theorizing.
The Joy of Learning
As a home-schooled, self-educated youth, Edison learned lessons that were to
serve him all his life. He learned education was his own responsibility. He
learned to take initiative. He learned to be persistent. He learned he could
gain practical knowledge, inspiration and wisdom by reading books. He
learned to discover all kinds of things from methodical observation. He
learned education is a continuing, joyful process.
At 2O, Edison got a job as itinerant Western Union telegraph operator and
became remarkably proficient. He worked in Cincinnati, Louisville,
Indianapolis, Memphis, Boston, and New York. The more he learned about
telegraphy, the more he wanted to learn. He took apart equipment and
reassembled it until he understood how it worked. He experimented with ways
to make it better. He decided that greater knowledge of chemistry would help
him, so he haunted used bookstores and ordered chemistry books
from London and Paris. He filled his rented rooms with chemicals and junk
metal for his experiments. One associate observed: "He spent his money
buying apparatus and books, and wouldn't buy clothing. That winter he went
without an overcoat and nearly froze."
Edison's knowledge and enterprise led to a dramatic series of inventions. On
January 25, 1869, ho applied for a patent on a telegraphic stock ticker,
which, after he filed patents for dozens of successive improvements, became
standard office equipment in America and Europe. Edison invented a printing
telegraph for gold bullion and foreign exchange dealers. Western Union and
its rivals battled to gain control of Edison's patents which revolutionized
the telegraph business. For example, he figured out how a central telegraph
office could control the performance of telegraph equipment at remote
locations. He developed a method for transmitting four messages
simultaneously over the same wire. Intense curiosity, nourished by
his home education, drove him to become perhaps America's best technician on
telegraphy.
From his practical experience, Edison learned to make the most of unexpected
opportunities. For example, on July 18, 1877, he was testing an automatic
telegraph which had a stylus to read coded indentations on strips of paper.
For some reason, perhaps excessive voltage, the stylus suddenly began moving
so fast through the indentations that the friction resulted in a sound. It
might have been only a hum, but it got Edison's attention. His imagination
made a wild leap. Explains archivist Douglas Tarr at the Edison
National Historical Site, West Orange, New Jersey: "Edison seemed to reason
that if a stylus going through indentations could produce a sound
unintentionally, then it could produce a sound intentionally, in which case
he should be able to reproduce the human voice." A talking machine!
Edison worked out its fundamental principles in his notebooks, and on
December 17, 1877, he filed a patent application for the phonograph ("sound
writing"). This was no improvement of existing technology. It was something
brand new, Edison's most original invention. It was also one thing he didn't
seek to invent, unlike the light bulb, power generation systems, and other
famous inventions which he deliberately pursued. Having developed the idea,
Edison followed up, working on and off for more than two decades to
produce recorded sound quality which would thrill millions.
With a flexible and open mind, Edison enjoyed an important advantage in the
race for electric light. Other inventors were committed to refining
low-resistance arc lights (then used in light houses) which required large
amounts of electrical power and copper wire-the most costly part of their
lighting systems. In September 1878, Edison cheerfully began considering the
opposite: a high resistance system which would require far less electrical
power and copper wire. This could mean small electric lights suitable for
home use. By January 1879, at the laboratory he established in Menlo Park,
New Jersey, Edison had built his first high resistance, incandescent
electric light. It worked by passing electricity through a thin platinum
filament in a glass vacuum bulb to delay the filament from melting.
But the lamp worked for only an hour or two. Improving performance required
all the persistence Edison had learned as a child. He tested many other
metals. He thought about tungsten, the metal in light bulb filaments now,
but he couldn't work with it using tools available in his day. He tried
carbon. He tested carbonized filaments of every imaginable plant material,
including baywood, boxwood, hickory, cedar, flax, and bamboo. He contacted
biologists who could send him plant fibers from the tropics.
"Before I got through," he recalled, "I tested no fewer than 6,000 vegetable
growths, and ransacked the world for the most suitable filament material."
Best performer for many years: carbonized filaments from cotton thread. This
proved to be one of Edison's most perplexing inventions. "The electric
light has caused me the greatest amount of study and has required the most
elaborate experiments," he wrote. "I was never myself discouraged, or
inclined to be hopeless of success. I cannot say the same for all my
associates." Edison at the peak of his inventive powers drew inspiration, as
he did in his youth, from Victor Hugo's novel Toilers of the Sea. The hero,
Gilliatt, struggled against the waves, the tides and a storm to save a
steamship from destruction on a reef. Hailed as "The Wizard of Menlo Park,"
Edison was often able to see possibilities others missed because he
continuously educated himself about different technologies. For example,
during the late 1880s and early 1890s, he read widely about the latest
developments in photographic optics. He investigated the potential of tough,
flexible celluloid as motion picture film and had George Eastman make
50-foot-long, 35mm wide test strips. Edison worked out the mechanical
problems of advancing film steadily across a photographic lens without
tearing. He linked his new motion picture camera to an improved phonograph,
capturing sound synchronized with motion
pictures. Then Edison developed what he called the Kinetoscope to project
these "talking" images on a screen.
In 1887, Edison built a magnificent laboratory in West Orange, New Jersey.
It was 10 times larger than his first, fabled facility in Menlo Park. The
main building alone contained some 60,000 square feet of floor space for
machine shops, glass-blowing operations, electrical testing rooms, chemical
stockrooms, electrical power generation, and other functions.
Once a day, Edison toured this vast facility to see what was going on, but
he did most work in the library. It had a great hall, a 30-foot-high ceiling
and two galleries. Right in the center, Edison sat at a desk with three
dozen pigeonholes, surrounded by some 10,000 books. Here he would ponder new
ideas and hear his associates report on their progress. As Edison grew
older, he became stouter and harder of hearing, but he
remained as enthusiastic as ever about the free-wheeling pursuit of
practical knowledge. In 1903, he hired Martin Andre Rosanoff, a Russian
born, Paris-trained chemist who asked about laboratory rules. "Hell," Edison
snorted, "there ain't no rules around here! We're tryin' to accomplish
somep'n."
After Edison died on Sunday, October 18, 1931, his coffin was placed in his
beloved West Orange library for mourners to pay their respects. Rosanoff
identified a key to the Old Man's enduring fame: "Had Edison been formally
schooled, he might not have had the audacity to create such impossible
things."