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History not told


In 1896, Thomas Edison, the great inventor of the electric bulb, was working on a car design when he learned that a young man in his company had created an experimental car. Edison met this young man, Henry Ford, at a company party in New York and was thoroughly impressed by his gasoline-powered car idea. Edison, who had been considering electricity as a power source, enthusiastically encouraged Ford, saying, "Young man, that's the thing! You have it! I think you are on to something! I encourage you to continue your pursuits!"

Encouraged by the respected inventor, Henry Ford continued his work, eventually inventing a car that made him wealthy.

On December 9, 1914, Edison's laboratory and factory were destroyed by fire. At 67 years old, the damage was too extensive for insurance to cover. Before the ashes were cold, Henry Ford handed Edison a check for $750,000 with a note saying Edison could have more if needed.

In 1916, Ford relocated his home next to Edison's. When Edison was later confined to a wheelchair, Ford also got a wheelchair so they could race each other.

Thomas Edison made Henry Ford believe in himself, creating a friendship for life.

LESSON:
Don't ever be jealous of others' success. If you can't win a race, help the person in front of you break the record. Your candle doesn't lose its light by lighting another. Let us follow this example of supporting and uplifting each other!
ChipmunkErnie · 70-79, M
Edison didn't invent the electric bulb -- his research staff just came up with a better filament for the bulb, which already existed. He was best at stealing concepts -- like the motion picture camera and projector -- from other inventors and claiming them for his own. To experiment on how electricity killed, he paid local kids to grab dogs and cats off the street to be killed. He hired thugs to intimidate rivals in the film industry. He was NOT a good man from what I can see.
Onasander · 41-45, M
@ChipmunkErnie I've never looked into that, maybe that's the case. I'd be pretty scared to play with electricity back then, it was something experimented with for decades but I'd probably chicken shit out of it without having firm aafety measures in place. Animal experimentation does seem prudent. I just don't see how you can go from seeing people shocked to death touching a exposed wire to saying "you know, this should be wired into everyone's wooden, easy to burn down home". I wouldn't of ever of gone that route, just DC. But that's me.
ChipmunkErnie · 70-79, M
@Onasander It was part of Edison's feud with Westinghouse (who had bought Telsa's patents); Edison wanted to sell his DC tech and was trying to prove Westinghouse's AC tech was dangerous. Electrocuting things with AC was part of his plan. He lost the fight.
Onasander · 41-45, M
@ChipmunkErnie I could see that happening.
WillaKissing · 56-60
Beautiful and posts like these will be greatly missed f you quit posting! ♥️🌹
NinaTina · 26-30, F
@WillaKissing already did self cemetery was my last post
Degbeme · 70-79, M
Two that changed history.
😌..... Beautiful.......🤗

 
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