Status: 02/11/2022 12:19 p.m
Inventor Thomas Edison had already pioneered the incandescent lamp and phonograph when he turned to his last major project – at his research center in Florida. A site visit.
By Torsten Teichmann, ARD Studio Washington
In the harsh winter of 1885, inventor Thomas Edison was looking for some sun. To escape the cold of New Jersey, he had to move further and further south, all the way to Fort Myers, Florida.
The perfect place for scientists
Fort Myers then had a population of no more than 200 – ideal for an inventor to focus on. On the banks of the Caloosahatchee River, on pastureland, Edison’s winter laboratory was built; Florida’s premier research and development center. It became the scene of his last major project.
By the time Edison came to Florida, he had already introduced the incandescent lamp to light switches, power plants, and electric meters. He had developed the phonograph, which might record and reproduce sound using a cylinder. Technological advances brought with them completely new possibilities.
“First the pier was built to face the water,” says Taylor, who shows tourists around the houses and gardens. “The wooden houses were produced in Fairfield, Maine. There they were completely assembled, then dismantled, shipped to Florida on six steamboats, brought across the pier and finished.”
Steamboats brought the wooden houses for Thomas Edison’s research center to Fort Myers.
Bild: picture alliance / NurPhoto
The blue-grey wooden houses have two floors; the ground floor is surrounded by expansive verandas with bright red canopies and tall palm trees. Inside, dignified bourgeois style with dark wooden floors, a grand piano, desks and a large dining room.
Only attended school for a short time
None of this was foreseeable: Born in 1847 as the seventh child of a family in Ohio, Thomas Edison only attended school for a short time. His mother did the rest. First job at twelve: as a train attendant selling sweets and newspapers.
It was only his work as a telegraph operator, his understanding of the technology, ideas and contacts with investors that helped him, his companies and research laboratories to rise worldwide.
Born 175 years ago: The inventor Thomas Edison.
Bild: picture alliance / Mary Evans Pi
Tests with thousands of plants
There were enough tasks: At the end of the 1920s, for example, there was growing concern in the USA that it was too dependent on rubber imports from abroad. Edison founds the Botanical Research Society. It will be his last project that will challenge the entire family.
“The Edisons didn’t leave Fort Myers until June 1931,” says guide Taylor. Because Thomas Edison is pursuing one of his last research tasks: He is looking for a plant for the production of rubber in the USA.
Edison brings 17,000 different plants to Fort Myers to test them. Which one is good for production? Goldenrods seem promising. But in the middle of the research, Edison dies. A few months following his death, the DuPond company launched a competing synthetic product, neoprene.
Edison’s research center in Fort Myers is closing forever. Today the labs are an official historic landmark of chemistry in the United States.
Thomas Edison 175 Years: History of His Winter Quarters in Florida
Torsten Teichmann, ARD Washington, February 10, 2022 9:38 a.m