<p>On the night of July 15 1903 Nikola Tesla powered up his 190-foot tower in Wardenclyffe on Long Island's north shore. The bolts of energy radiating from the apical dome were visible as far away as New Haven Connecticut.?This was the first and last time anyone would witness such a display. Three years later broke and unable to secure further funding Tesla abandoned the Wardenclyffe tower and his dream of worldwide wireless power. He returned to Manhattan where he promptly suffered a nervous breakdown.</p><p>So say the history books.</p><p>But new evidence has surfaced that a shadowy fraternal order stepped in and provided generous funding after J. P. Morgan reneged. Witnesses state that testing of the tower continued but only on foggy days when the discharges would not be noticed. The final test took place on April 18 1906. Around dawn in heavy fog the tower was charged to maximum capacity; across the Atlantic in Abereiddy Wales two copper prongs attached to a 50-watt lightbulb were thrust into the ground. The bulb lit. Tesla had proved that worldwide wireless power was possible.</p><p>Why then at the moment of his greatest vindication did Nikola Tesla abandon his project? What could possibly have transpired at Wardenclyffe that day to so rattle him that he would deny the world his transformative technology? We may never know.</p>
Title | Wardenclyffe |
Author | F. Paul Wilson |
Narrator | Eric G. Dove |
Media | Audiobooks |
Genre | General Fiction |
ISBN | 9781987130393 |
Published | 2018-01-01 |
Stock | In stock |
Duration | 4 hours 17 minutes |