Thomas Edison, Failure: by Michael Peterson
Thomas Edison, Failure: by Michael Peterson
Thomas Edison, Failure: by Michael Peterson
At the height of his fame and success, America’s greatest inventor embarked on a disastrous
project that cost him ten years and all his fortune
by Michael Peterson
If you make your way to the top of a rugged, forested hill in the northwestern corner of New Jersey that the
local people call Edison’s mountain, you can still find the remains of what was for a few years a century ago
a mammoth industrial complex. Empty cellars, quarry pits, and stone walls under the trees mark the site of
what may have been Thomas Alva Edison’s most ambitious but least-known project—and his most
spectacular failure.
For all Edison’s creative and commercial success and his prodigious production of inventions, he never
earned as much of a fortune as others might have. He fell short as a businessman and spent much of his
earnings in legal battles, protecting his patents and fending off unscrupulous competitors. He also lost a
great deal on the mountaintop at Ogdensburg.
By 1889 Edison had introduced practical electric lighting to the world and was busy building generating
stations and other pieces of the new electrical age. He had so far filed for more than 300 of his 1,093
patents and had revolutionized the tele; graph industry, improved the stock ticker, and invented the :
mimeograph, the phonograph, an electric locomotive, and dozens of lesser-known contrivances. That
summer he and his inventions were a major attraction at the Universal Exposition in Paris, and he took a
triumphal tour of Europe, where he was received by royalty and heads of state.
At this moment of glory he was already well at work on the scheme that would greatly reduce his coverage
in America’s newspapers for nearly ten years and leave him deeply in debt. His plan was to revolutionize the
struggling iron business, putting himself at the head of the industry, as he once had in the electrical field.
The public did not want to know that a man as revered as Edison had stumbled into so immense a failure,
and perhaps that is why most of his early biographers paid little attention to the Ogdensburg episode. But
the saga is an intriguing and important one; it has proven in retrospect to have been a landmark for certain
technologies. When a colleague reminded Edison that the venture had used up several million dollars, the
inventor replied, “Yes, but we had a hell of a good time spending it.”
The construction of big electric generators and dynamos demanded large quantities of very high-grade,
highpriced steel, and as Edison signed purchase orders for it, he became increasingly concerned about the
steep cost. Most of the amount, he discovered, covered shipping, first of ore to the steel mills and then of
steel to the customer. If ore could be mined and milled close to Eastern industrial users, Edison reasoned,
its price could drop dramatically, and whoever controlled this process would dominate the steel industry.
Edison had become interested in ore separation in 1879, when he was looking for the best filament for his
electric light. Platinum had been a promising candidate, and Edison had begun to investigate various mining
and mineralprocessing techniques with a view to reducing cost. His interest spread to gold and iron
processing, and he devised a magnetic ore-separation technique that was patented in 1880. By then he had
organized the Edison Ore-Milling Company, backed by a small band of eager investors, to exploit his
advances.
One day in 1881 the inventor was fishing with some friends off the coast of Long Island,
and the small group put ashore at an isolated beach to eat their lunch. They found the
beach covered with deposits of black sand. Edison, curious, took some home in a bait
bucket. Several days later he dropped a magnet from his desktop into the bucket, and the
grains drew to it; as he lifted the magnet away, silica and other base materials fell back
into the bucket. The black grains turned out to be pure magnetite, a mineral form of iron
oxide. Edison jumped at the chance to put his newly developed ore-separation process
into practice. He directed his aide William Meadowcroft to purchase the Long Island
beachfront and another one in Rhode Island with similar deposits. Meadowcroft was to
fabricate model separators and move them to the sites.
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1) http://www.americanheritage.com/articles/magazine/it/1991/3/1991_3_8.shtml
A formula was patented that winter and was ready to test at the mill in the spring. The
powdered ore was mixed with water, and then a glue was stirred in; the result, which
looked like modeling clay, was injected under pressure into small round molds and fired
to a rock-hard consistency. The briquettes proved easy to handle (though smelting
problems persisted). By World War II the research that had created them would be a
crucial feature in the iron-mining industry and in formulating the taconite process.
The ore was too powdery and didn’t
smelt properly, so Edison invented a
briquetting process after trying two
hundred possible binding materials.
With everything ready, the mine and the new mill began production again in the summer of 1897. Edison
personally escorted the first shipment of sample briquettes to the Crane Iron Works, of Catasauqua,
Pennsylvania. The president of Crane reported that the briquettes produced nearly a third more steel per ton
than other ores he was buying, and he placed an order for “all the ore you can send us.”
But it would be another year before Edison was satisfied enough with the system to start a full commercial
run. The briquette oven was hopelessly inefficient and costly to operate, and the hot briquettes tended to
start fires in the stock house or on the railroad cars as they were pulled away down the hill. A new baking
furnace had to be designed and built, and big fans had to be erected to cool the briquettes as they moved to
the shipping area.
By the summer of 1898 the New Jersey and Pennsylvania Ore Concentrating Company was producing
briquettes on two shifts, and a night crew was working in the quarry under the glow of Edison electric lights.
The machinery was at last running dependably. A thousand tons of ore a day were being shipped out; if this
The final chapter had been written. Ever a proud man, Edison did return one last time, in
August 1900, to produce enough ore at the new Minnesota prices to fulfill a previous
contract with Bethlehem. Shortly thereafter the operation was dismantled. It would take
Edison years to personally pay back the debts he had accumulated in the last two years.
On several occasions he even bought back worthless stock in the company at face value
from the widows of original investors.
The Ogdensburg mill at its most
efficient spent $4.75 to produce a ton of
ore. But soon ore from the Mesabi
range would go for less than $3.00.
The press delivered a eulogy. A Newark paper announced to the world that “in just four years Thomas
Edison had succeeded in converting an industrial and technological empire into a dusty, temperamental mill
complex of little practical or real value.” But history is always subject to reinterpretation, and in retrospect
Ogdensburg may have even been a success, bad timing aside. Years later Iron Age magazine would
editorialize that Edison’s only mistake at Ogdensburg had been being merely twenty-five years ahead of his
time.
The work on the ore separator yielded forty-seven directly and indirectly related patents. Many of the ideas
they set forth are still in use in modern industry. Edison had anticipated metal coating with his magnetic
techniques, Portland cement with his crushing machinery, and taconite processing with his separation and
briquetting techniques. Perhaps the greatest homage paid the project came from Henry Ford, who years
later wrote that Ogdensburg had partly inspired his Model T assembly line and his conception of fully
automated manufacturing.
Edison eventually packed up his giant rollers and furnaces and moved them a few miles west to a spot from
which he and Walter Mallory would revolutionize the cement and commercial-construction industry. The
cement business would ultimately make enough money to repay a good portion of the nearly $3 million that
Ogdensburg had cost. Meanwhile, Edison headed back to West Orange, New Jersey, heralding his return
there with a letter to his staff stating, “I am pretty close to the end of my mill biz, and will soon be able to
come back to work.” Shortly thereafter he began developing a new alkaline storage battery.