Interesting facts about Nikola Tesla

nikola tesla

Nikola Tesla was a Serbian American inventor, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer, physicist, and futurist best known for his contributions to the design of the modern alternating current electricity supply system.

Nikola Tesla one of the most brilliant mind in the history of men was born around midnight, between July 9 and July 10, 1856 during a fierce lightning storm. According to family legend, midway through the birth, the midwife wrung her hands and declared the lightning a bad omen. This child will be a child of darkness, she said, to which his mother replied: “No. He will be a child of light.”

Tesla’s father was a priest at the Serbian Orthodox church.

The defining event of young Nikola’s childhood was the day he witnessed the death of his older brother Dane in a riding accident. In the years following the tragedy, Tesla began seeing visions of the air around him “filled with tongues of living flame.As an adolescent Nikola Tesla learned to exercise his willpower to control the visions.

Tesla rarely made drawings of his inventions, but worked from a picture or a memory in his head.

He had a photographic memory.

After an eventful upbringing and education, Tesla moved to France in 1882 where he worked on electrical equipment at the Continental Edison Company.

He immigrated to the USA in 1884 where he worked for Thomas Edison before resigning a year later to work on his own projects.

At one point Edison told Tesla he would pay $50,000 for an improved design for his DC dynamos. After months of experimentation, Tesla presented a solution and asked for the money. Edison demurred, saying, “Tesla, you don’t understand our American humor.” Tesla quit soon after.

Tesla was the vice president of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers between 1892 and 1894.

Tesla moved his lab to Colorado Springs in 1899 where he proved the Earth was a conductor, produced artificial lightning and became well known to his neighbors with ambitious electrical experiments that caused booming thunder, rogue sparks and the occasional power outage.

tesla colorado

Tesla experimented with X-rays and radio waves, developing important ideas and even making a few accidental discoveries thanks to his extravagant experiments.

He invented the first hydroelectric power plant.

nikola tesla hydroelectric power plant

He built a 185-foot tower on Long Island, planning to suck electricity out of the air and send it through the earth. Sadly for humanity: it did not work. In 1917, the tower was torn down. Somebody blamed the government, who allegedly blamed the Germans who were supposedly using it as a spy tower. This all appears to have been a cover: Tesla was broke and his debtors wanted to salvage what they could from the wreckage.

tesl tower

As Alcorn said, Tesla was “worried about the fact that people consume the Earth’s resources too fast, so he wanted to make sure that these resources were renewable“. Thus he studied the ways to gather the natural energy from the ground and air. He created artificial lightning in his lab and detected differences in electrical potential on Earth and on high objects.

Nikola Tesla envisioned the modern day smartphone in 1909.

tesla smart phone

Tesla slept two hours per night, and was prone to spending two days or more in his laboratory without sleeping at all.

Mark Twain and Nikola Tesla became friends in the 1890s, thanks in part to Twain’s lifelong fascination with technology and new inventions.

Tesla suffered from obsessive compulsive behaviours.

He also suffered from the fear of pearls (oystersaritisphobia). Tesla could not stand the sight of pearls, to the extent that he refused to speak to women wearing them.

Nikola Tesla could not bear to touch hair. Also he was obsessed with the number 3 and had a habit of polishing each point of the dining room before dining, using precisely 18 napkins.

Tesla said: “I don’t care that thay stole my idea.I care that thay don’t have any of their own.”

Later in his life he would spend much of his time feeding and, he claimed, mystically communicating with pigeons.

Tesla moved to the New Yorker Hotel in 1934 where he continued his research and spent the remaining years of his life before dying in 1943 at the age of 86.

When Nikola Tesla died in the year of 1943, the Office of Alien Property took his stuff. Most of his things were given to his family, and many were taken to the Tesla Museum in Belgrade. However, some documents still remain classified by the U.S. Government.