May 5, 2009

A Battle to Preserve a Visionary’s Bold Failure
By WILLIAM J. BROAD
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/05/science/05tesla.html?8dpc=&pagewanted=print


In 1901, Nikola Tesla began work on a global system of giant towers 
meant to relay through the air not only news, stock reports and even 
pictures but also, unbeknown to investors such as J. Pierpont Morgan, 
free electricity for one and all.

It was the inventor’s biggest project, and his most audacious.

The first tower rose on rural Long Island and, by 1903, stood more than 
18 stories tall. One midsummer night, it emitted a dull rumble and 
proceeded to hurl bolts of electricity into the sky. The blinding 
flashes, The New York Sun reported, “seemed to shoot off into the 
darkness on some mysterious errand.”

But the system failed for want of money, and at least partly for 
scientific viability. Tesla never finished his prototype tower and was 
forced to abandon its adjoining laboratory.

Today, a fight is looming over the ghostly remains of that site, called 
Wardenclyffe — what Tesla authorities call the only surviving workplace 
of the eccentric genius who dreamed countless big dreams while 
pioneering wireless communication and alternating current. The 
disagreement began recently after the property went up for sale in 
Shoreham, N.Y.

A science group on Long Island wants to turn the 16-acre site into a 
Tesla museum and education center, and hopes to get the land donated to 
that end. But the owner, the Agfa Corporation, says it must sell the 
property to raise money in hard economic times. The company’s real 
estate broker says the land, listed at $1.6 million, can “be delivered 
fully cleared and level,” a statement that has thrown the 
preservationists into action.

The ruins of Wardenclyffe include the tower’s foundation and the large 
brick laboratory, designed by Tesla’s friend Stanford White, the 
celebrated architect.

“It’s hugely important to protect this site,” said Marc J. Seifer, 
author of “Wizard,” a Tesla biography. “He’s an icon. He stands for what 
humans are supposed to do — honor nature while using high technology to 
harness its powers.”

Recently, New York State echoed that judgment. The commissioner of 
historic preservation wrote Dr. Seifer on behalf of Gov. David A. 
Paterson to back Wardenclyffe’s preservation and listing in the National 
Register of Historic Places.

On Long Island, Tesla enthusiasts vow to obtain the land one way or 
another, saying that saving a symbol of Tesla’s accomplishments would 
help restore the visionary to his rightful place as an architect of the 
modern age.

“A lot of his work was way ahead of his time,” said Jane Alcorn, 
president of the Tesla Science Center, a private group in Shoreham that 
is seeking to acquire Wardenclyffe.

Dr. Ljubo Vujovic, president of the Tesla Memorial Society of New York, 
said destroying the old lab “would be a terrible thing for the United 
States and the world. It’s a piece of history.”

Tesla, who lived from 1856 to 1943, made bitter enemies who dismissed 
some of his claims as exaggerated, helping tarnish his reputation in his 
lifetime. He was part recluse, part showman. He issued publicity photos 
(actually double exposures) showing him reading quietly in his 
laboratory amid deadly flashes.

Today, his work tends to be poorly known among scientists, though some 
call him an intuitive genius far ahead of his peers. Socially, his 
popularity has soared, elevating him to cult status.

Books and Web sites abound. Wikipedia says the inventor obtained at 
least 700 patents. YouTube has several Tesla videos, including one of a 
break-in at Wardenclyffe. A rock band calls itself Tesla. An electric 
car company backed by Google’s founders calls itself Tesla Motors.

Larry Page, Google’s co-founder, sees the creator’s life as a cautionary 
tale. “It’s a sad, sad story,” Mr. Page told Fortune magazine last year. 
The inventor “couldn’t commercialize anything. He could barely fund his 
own research.”

Wardenclyffe epitomized that kind of visionary impracticality.

Tesla seized on the colossal project at the age of 44 while living in 
New York City. An impeccably dressed bon vivant of Serbian birth, he was 
widely celebrated for his inventions of motors and power distribution 
systems that used the form of electricity known as alternating current, 
which beat out direct current (and Thomas Edison) to electrify the world.

His patents made him a rich man, at least for a while. He lived at the 
Waldorf-Astoria and loved to hobnob with the famous at Delmonico’s and 
the Players Club.

Around 1900, as Tesla planned what would become Wardenclyffe, inventors 
around the world were racing for what was considered the next big thing 
— wireless communication. His own plan was to turn alternating current 
into electromagnetic waves that flashed from antennas to distant 
receivers. This is essentially what radio transmission is. The scale of 
his vision was gargantuan, however, eclipsing that of any rival.

Investors, given Tesla’s electrical achievements, paid heed. The biggest 
was J. Pierpont Morgan, a top financier. He sank $150,000 (today more 
than $3 million) into Tesla’s global wireless venture.

Work on the prototype tower began in mid-1901 on the North Shore of Long 
Island at a site Tesla named after a patron and the nearby cliffs. “The 
proposed plant at Wardenclyffe,” The New York Times reported, “will be 
the first of a number that the electrician proposes to establish in this 
and other countries.”

The shock wave hit Dec. 12, 1901. That day, Marconi succeeded in sending 
radio signals across the Atlantic, crushing Tesla’s hopes for pioneering 
glory.

Still, Wardenclyffe grew, with guards under strict orders to keep 
visitors away. The wooden tower rose 187 feet over a wide shaft that 
descended 120 feet to deeply anchor the antenna. Villagers told The 
Times that the ground beneath the tower was “honeycombed with 
subterranean passages.”

The nearby laboratory of red brick, with arched windows and a tall 
chimney, held tools, generators, a machine shop, electrical 
transformers, glass-blowing equipment, a library and an office.

But Morgan was disenchanted. He refused Tesla’s request for more money.

Desperate, the inventor pulled out what he considered his ace. The 
towers would transmit not only information around the globe, he wrote 
the financier in July 1903, but also electric power.

“I should not feel disposed,” Morgan replied coolly, “to make any 
further advances.”

Margaret Cheney, a Tesla biographer, observed that Tesla had seriously 
misjudged his wealthy patron, a man deeply committed to the profit 
motive. “The prospect of beaming electricity to penniless Zulus or 
Pygmies,” she wrote, must have left the financier less than enthusiastic.

It was then that Tesla, reeling financially and emotionally, fired up 
the tower for the first and last time. He eventually sold Wardenclyffe 
to satisfy $20,000 (today about $400,000) in bills at the Waldorf. In 
1917, the new owners had the giant tower blown up and sold for scrap.

Today, Tesla’s exact plan for the site remains a mystery even as 
scientists agree on the impracticality of his overall vision. The tower 
could have succeeded in broadcasting information, but not power.

“He was an absolute genius,” Dennis Papadopoulos, a physicist at the 
University of Maryland, said in an interview. “He conceived of things in 
1900 that it took us 50 or 60 years to understand. But he did not 
appreciate dissipation. You can’t start putting a lot of power” into an 
antenna and expect the energy to travel long distances without great 
diminution.

Wardenclyffe passed through many hands, ending with Agfa, which is based 
in Ridgefield Park, N.J. The imaging giant used it from 1969 to 1992, 
and then shuttered the property. Silver and cadmium, a serious poison, 
had contaminated the site, and the company says it spent some $5 million 
on studies and remediation. The cleanup ended in September, and the site 
was put up for sale in late February.

Real estate agents said they had shown Wardenclyffe to four or five 
prospective buyers.

Last month, Agfa opened the heavily wooded site to a reporter. “NO 
TRESPASSING,” warned a faded sign at a front gate, which was topped with 
barbed wire.

Tesla’s red brick building stood intact, an elegant wind vane atop its 
chimney. But Agfa had recently covered the big windows with plywood to 
deter vandals and intruders, who had stolen much of the building’s 
wiring for its copper.

The building’s dark interior was littered with beer cans and broken 
bottles. Flashlights revealed no trace of the original equipment, except 
for a surprise on the second floor. There in the darkness loomed four 
enormous tanks, each the size of a small car. Their sides were made of 
thick metal and their seams heavily riveted, like those of an old 
destroyer or battleship. The Agfa consultant leading the tour called 
them giant batteries.

“Look up there,” said the consultant, Ralph Passantino, signaling with 
his flashlight. “There’s a hatch up there. It was used to get into the 
tanks to service them.”

Tesla authorities appear to know little of the big tanks, making them 
potential clues to the inventor’s original plans.

After the tour, Christopher M. Santomassimo, Agfa’s general counsel, 
explained his company’s position: no donation of the site for a museum, 
and no action that would rule out the building’s destruction.

“Agfa is in a difficult economic position given what’s going on in the 
global marketplace,” he said. “It needs to maximize its potential 
recovery from the sale of that site.”

He added that the company would entertain “any reasonable offer,” 
including ones from groups interested in preserving Wardenclyffe because 
of its historical significance. “We’re simply not in a position,” he 
emphasized, “to donate the property outright.”

Ms. Alcorn of the Tesla Science Center, who has sought to stir interest 
in Wardenclyffe for more than a decade, seemed confident that a solution 
would be worked out. Suffolk County might buy the site, she said, or a 
campaign might raise the funds for its purchase, restoration and 
conversion into a science museum and education center. She said the 
local community was strongly backing the preservation idea.

“Once the sign went up, I started getting so many calls,” she remarked. 
“People said: ‘They’re not really going to sell it, are they? It’s got 
to be a museum, right?’ ”

Sitting at a reading table at the North Shore Public Library, where she 
works as a children’s librarian, Ms. Alcorn gestured across a map of 
Wardenclyffe to show how the abandoned site might be transformed with 
not only a Tesla museum but also a playground, a cafeteria and a bookshop.

“That’s critical,” she said.

Ms. Alcorn said the investigation and restoration of the old site 
promised to solve one of the big mysteries: the extent and nature of the 
tunnels said to honeycomb the area around the tower.

“I’d love to see if they really existed,” she said. “The stories abound, 
but not the proof.”

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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