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Book Review: Jozwiak on Essig, _Edison and the Electric Chair_



Forwarded to HISTNEUR-L from H-SCI-MED-TECH, in accordance with that list's copyright notice (see below). --RJ


----- Original Message -----
From: "Carsten Timmermann, H-SCI-MED-TECH" [smtedit@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU]
Date: Monday, March 15, 2004 0:58 am
Subject: Book Review: Jozwiak on Essig, _Edison and the Electric Chair_
Date: Sun, 14 Mar 2004 00:51:09 -0500
From: H-Net Reviews [books@h-net.msu.edu]
Subject: Jozwiak on Essig, _Edison and the Electric Chair_


H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by H-USA@h-net.msu.edu (December 2003)

Mark Essig. _Edison and the Electric Chair: A Story of Light and
Death_. New York: Walker, 2003. 358 pp. Illustrations, notes, index.
$26.00 (cloth), ISBN 0-8027-1406-4.

Reviewed for H-USA by Elizabeth Jozwiak, Department of History,
University of Wisconsin-Rock County

Zapped

In the somewhat misleadingly titled _Edison and the Electric Chair:
A Story of Light and Death_, Mark Essig attempts to tell the story
of the competition between two ambitious men, Thomas Edison and
George Westinghouse, while explaining the science of electricity, as
well as exploring debates over the death penalty and its methods.
In short, the electric chair is only part of the story.

Essig begins with the story of early experiments with electricity,
such as those conducted by Benjamin Franklin, Luigi Galvani, and
Alessandro Volta. He then deals with Thomas Edison's early
experiences as a telegrapher and fledgling inventor. Essig reveals
Thomas Edison to be an extremely ambitious man who "craved the
public's attention" (p. 24). Edison even seems a bit of a "snake
oil" salesman. In the 1870s, he promoted the "inductorium," an
induction coil system for giving mild shocks, as a way to treat
rheumatism and provide family amusement. Those who know about
Edison the scientist may find Essig's discussion of Edison the
businessman revealing.

Edison's scientific efforts to produce an effective electric
lighting system figure prominently in this work. Essig describes
clearly Edison's development of the incandescent light bulb and the
difficulty in finding a workable filament material. At the same
time, the author shows that for Edison the potential for profit from
electric lighting was as important as the spirit of invention. The
first efforts at electric lighting were directed toward street
lights. One early method was arc lighting, operated via small
lighting stations housing dynamos every few blocks. Edison was more
ambitious. He envisioned electricity being piped into homes as a
utility in the same way as gas had been. To do this, his system
used a central station and buried cables, implementation of which
would be an expensive and time-consuming process. Though Edison's
approach was more expensive in the short run, it would ultimately
win out.

The next important challenge to Edison's vision of providing the
lighting system for America came from the "upstart" George
Westinghouse. Westinghouse had burst into the inventing world with a
workable train air brake, and then turned his efforts to
electricity. Edison had developed his system using direct current,
which allowed fairly low voltages to be transmitted into homes. The
problem with direct current, however, was that it required thick
wires of low resistance to prevent the wires from overheating.
These wires could be expensive. Westinghouse worked with higher
voltages and thinner wires. He also found that using alternating
current, which had the advantage of creating induction, allowed for
thinner transmission wires. Transformers could reduce voltages as
the electricity reached homes. But Edison was already committed to
his approach and wanted to protect it. In order to persuade the
American public and potential buyers of the value of his approach,
Edison set out to show that alternating current was a high-voltage
and therefore deadly approach. One way to do that was to promote
its use for a new tool of execution--the electric chair. It was in
this way that Edison--who was not a fan of the death penalty--became
associated with this lethal instrument.

Essig tries to put the development of the electric chair into
historical context by discussing the history of public executions
and their role as public spectacle. He also talks about the debates
over whether the condemned should be made to suffer in the process
of execution. He delves into discussions of the 1870s over whether
execution by electrocution (a term incidentally that outraged
linguists for its lack of etymologic basis) was cruel and unusual
punishment. Many people of the time questioned whether
electrocution could be quick and painless, and as Essig points out
in gruesome detail, many of these early electrocutions were neither.
The author also tries to show how this new form of execution fit
into the changing notions of the purpose of executions. By the
1870s, the public spectacle of execution apparently was seemingly
less important than the quick dispatch of the convicted.

This is an ambitious book that attempts to do several things at
once. Though Essig attempts to deal with social issues, such as the
death penalty controversies, the book seems aimed more at an
audience interested in the history of science. Those familiar with
urban politics and society in the late 1800s will gain some insight
into the scientific details of lighting America's cities. In order
to explain the debate between the various approaches to
electricity--e.g. the incandescent bulb, direct current, etc.--Essig
gives the reader some of the relevant science background. The
non-scientifically inclined reader may find the discussion of
electrical principles a bit too detailed, but they may be rather
simple to those with an understanding of electricity.

The chronological framework of this book makes for some confusion.
One minute the reader is presented with yet another installment in
the seemingly endless parade of animal electrocutions (as
experimenters tried to determine the killing power of electricity)
and the next the reader is learning about competition over
electrical contracts, and then is back in the laboratory. It is
probably not surprising that Essig, a specialist in the history of
forensic medicine, would focus on the physiological effects of
electricity. Nevertheless, those sections dealing with animal and
human electrocutions are not for the squeamish. Essig has drawn
from a variety of primary sources, but particularly Edison's papers
and newspaper accounts of the late-nineteenth century. Overall, the
same many-threaded approach that can make for confusion also makes
this an interesting effort.


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educational purposes, with full and accurate attribution to the
author, web location, date of publication, originating list, and
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contact the Reviews editorial staff: hbooks@mail.h-net.msu.edu.

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