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The History of Alternating Current:

AC Power History and Timeline


Alternating current power drives our world today. AC power was the next logical step after
DC power was established. The founders, developers, and visionaries of AC power are depicted
below.

Below: The inventors, including the first year they developed the technology or improved
the technology (most continued to improve the technology after that date, it was rarely a one
time achievement)
The AC generator:
Sabastian Ziani de Ferranti
Theory and early
1882
The Transformer:
Friedrich August
Sabastian Ziani de Ferranti 1882
development:
Haselwander 1887
Zippernowsky, Blathy, and Deri 1883
Hippolyte Pixii 1835
C. S. Bradley 1887
Lucien Gaulard 1883
William Thomson (Lord
Mikhail
Dolivo-Dobrovsky
William Stanley 1885
Kelvin) 1882
George Westinghouse 1886
Charles P. Steinmetz 1892 1888
Elihu
Thomson
1891
Oliver Shallenberger (not shown
Galileo Ferraris 1884
Almirian Decker 1891
above) 1887
Benjamin G. Lamme 1892
Charles P. Steinmetz 1892
Power Transmission:
The AC motor:
Walter Baily (not shown) 1879
Oskar von Miller 1882
Galileo Ferraris 1885 "Father of three-phase current"
George Westinghouse
Nikola Tesla 1888
Galileo Ferraris 1884
Oliver Shallenberger (not shown)1888
Nikola Tesla 1890
Rudolph Eickmeyer (not shown) 1880s
Dr. Louis Bell 1892
Mikhail Dolivo-Dobrovsky 1889
Almirian Decker 1892
Notes: Stanley and Thomson had worked on motor, but it had a commutator.
Ferraris invented an AC three phase motor without commutator. Tesla and Oliver Shallenberger
also were working on the motor a couple of months behind Ferraris.
To learn about important early sites and installations of AC power please see our History of Power
Transmission and Electrification page:

AC Power Development Timeline:


1835 - Hippolyte Pixii builds the first alternator. Pixii builds a device with a rotating magnet. He
doesn't know how to make his creation useful since all the other experimenters of the time were
building DC devices. Others like Faraday and Henry were experimenting at the time with primitive
electric motors using electromagnets.
1855 - Guillaume Duchenne uses alternating current in electrotherapeutic triggering of muscle
contractions. (Paris, France) AC power is not viewed as useful for anything else at the time.
1878 - Ganz Company starts working with single phase AC power systems in Budapest, AustroHungary
1879 - London: Walter Baily makes a copper disc rotate using alternating current (this is a weak
early AC motor) which was not effective for bearing any load.
The 1880s: This decade proved to be an exciting time for the development of electric power, read
below to find out some of the major developments by year.
1882 - London, Sabastian Ferranti (Englishman with an Italian parent) works at Siemens
Brothers firm in London with Lord Kelvin (William Thompson), and Ince. With the help of Lord
Kelvin Ferranti pioneers early AC power technology, including an early transformer. Later on
John Gibbs and Lucien Gaulard would base their designs off of Ferranti.
1884 - Turin, Italy: Lucien Gaulard develops transformers and the power transmission system
from Lanzo to Turino. The demonstration of AC power includes a 25 mile trolley with step down
transformers that allow low power Edison incandescent lights to light the path along with arc
lamps. Galileo Ferraris was head of the Electrical Department. The next year Ferraris would
invent the polyphase motor.
1885 - Ferraris conceives the idea of the first polyphase AC motor: " In the summer of 1885 he
conceived the idea that two out-of-phase, but synchronized, currents might be used to produce
two magnetic fields that could be combined to produce a rotating field without any need for
switching or for moving parts. "
1885 - Elihu Thomson at Thomson-Houston starts experimenting with AC power (the first
company in the US to start work on AC)
1885 - George Westinghouse is intrigued by AC power and buys North American rights to
Gaulard and Gibbs system for $50,000
1885 - George Westinghouse orders a Siemens alternator (AC generator) and a Gaulard and
Gibbs transformer. Stanley begin experimenting with this system.

1886

An important year for AC power


1886 - Great Barrington, Massachusetts - the first full AC power system in the world is
demonstrated using step up and step down transformers. The system was built by William Stanley
and funded by Westinghouse.
1886 - November - Buffalo, New York receives the first commercial AC power system in the
USA. This system designed by George Westinghouse, William Stanley, and Oliver B.
Shallenberger
1886 - William Stanley designs an improved version of the Siemens single phase alternator
1886 - Fall - Elihu Thomson's AC power system is rejected by the patent office. Westinghouse is
already far ahead, having sold its system commercially already.
1886 - Nikola Tesla tries to sell his AC power system to investors in New York City, but it fails to
be of interest in a city which is already heavily invested in DC power systems. Other inventors
around the world also promoting AC power have similar problems. This is especially due to the
fact that no one has yet to invent an AC electric motor which is efficient.
1886 - Otto Blathy comes to the USA and Thomas Edison buys options on the Z.B.D.

Transformer. This would put him in the position to rival Westinghouse that controlled the Gaulard
and Gibbs transformer patent. Later Edison decides that it is not worth going into AC and drops
his options on the Z.B.D. Transformer.
1887 - C.S. Bradley builds the first AC 3 phase generator. Up until this time Siemens and
Westinghouse had been producing single phase AC generators. The 3 phase system would be a
great improvement.
1887 - F. Augus Haselwander develops the first AC 3 phase generator in Europe. He is behind
Bradley by a couple months and it is generally believed that he built his design independently of

Bradley.
1887 - Sabastian Ferranti designs Depford Power Station in London. When it is completed in
1891 it would be an important early site in AC power history.
1888 - Mikhail Dolivo-Dobrovsky in Germany builts his first AC polyphase generator. He works for
AEG. (Allgemeine Elektricitts-Gesellschaft)l
1888 - April - Galileo Ferraris makes public his AC polyphase motor first conceived in 1885. His
motor works without a commutator, this development finally makes the AC motor efficient, and
therefore competitive with DC motors. The A motor report was first published at the Royal
Academy of Sciences in Turin. Westinghouse read the report of Ferraris and saw a chance for AC
systems to become much more marketable
1888 - May 15 - Tesla stands before the AIEE showing his polyphase motor. Elihu Thomson was
there and some in the group seemed to be impressed. One week later Westinghouse sent out a
recruiter to get Tesla to join him. Tesla's progress on the motor is slightly ahead of Oliver
Shallenberger's 3 phase electric motor. Shallenberger was already working for Westinghouse.
Tesla claims he "dreamed up" the first polyphase motor before Galileo Ferraris. Later at a trial a
US court sides with Tesla despite the fact that Tesla has no proof besides witness
testimony.Read more here
1889 - Dobrovolsky builds his first transformer and motor to work with his 3 phase AC system
1891 - Frankfurt, Germany: First distance power transmission (for electric power utility)
Lauffen to Frankfurt 109 miles. The entire system was designed by Dobrovsky from generator to
electric motor. Many important figures of AC power were invited to the event, at the Congress
Dinner Galileo Ferraris was hailed as the father of three-phase current.

1892 - Charles P. Steinmetz goes before the AIEE and presents his paper on hysteresis, or the
delay effect in 3 phase AC power. Steinmetz was the first person to understand AC power from a
mathematical point of view. After his paper he is hired by General Electric Company and joins
forces with Elihu Thomson and William Stanley. Steinmetz would go on to improve and
troubleshoot future AC power systems.
1893 - Redlands Power House - the first commercial installation of 3 phase AC power, 40
hz.
1895 - Folsom Power House - The first installation of modern AC power in the USA: 3 Phase AC
at 60 Hz.
1895 - Westinghouse builds the power system for the Adams Power Station at Niagara Falls.
Benjamin Garver Lamme is the principal engineer of the operation. General Electric builds the 25
mile power transmission system from the Niagara power house to Buffalo, NY which is made
operational in 1896.
1897 - Mechanicville Power Station - Charles P. Steinmetz experiments with a unique single
phase AC power transmission system.
1900s - Three Phase AC power is fully established as the principle source of power for the world
Viewer Comments:

EARLY AC POWER
From the perspective of historian Joesph Cunningham:

The development of electrical systems is a long and winding story which I have been researching for
some 48 years. From the arc light systems, now forgotten, which played a major role; to the incandescent
light systems of Edison and his competitors; through the development of power systems in the 20th
century, much has been lost or forgotten. For example, the DC transmission concepts of Rene Thury are
all but gone from most reference sources, as are those of later HVDC pioneers.
When it comes to polyphase AC, it appears that there is no true "father," but rather a number of
researchers. William Stanley, the inventor of the transformer in the US was funded by George
Westinghouse, an industrialist in railway air brake and signal systems who sought to improve upon the
limitations of the DC systems. In Germany, Werner Siemens and others took the lead and produced the
first long distance transmission of AC power 1891. AC motors were a different matter and the two
leading figures on opposite sides of the Atlantic approached the problem independently.
Galileo Ferraris, a physicist at the university of Turin, described in 1885 the rotating field principle. but
did not publish until 1888 by which time Nikola Tesla, having conceived the concept as well, had built
machines for which patents were granted two weeks after the Ferraris publication. Tesla, seeking
commercial development of an AC motor, developed a two phase system of supply. Tesla in a letter to
Electrical World of May 25, 1889 recognized Ferraris' work and also cited the work of Oliver
Shallenberger at Westinghouse. Shallenberger claimed to have intuited the principle after the
observation of the twisting of a meter spring in the field of an AC coil. Electrical World of April 15, 1893
attempted to sort this issue by giving field theory primacy to Ferraris and multiphase system primacy to
Tesla. Many, including Thomas Hughes in his book Networks of Power (Johns Hopkins U Press
available from Amazon) believe that the issue of primacy of the idea will never be settled completely.
The Tesla system patents, though two phase, were the basis of the Westinghouse system at the Columbian
Exposition and then at Niagara Falls. At the time, Tesla's work was the most recognized, having been the
subject of demonstrations to the AIEE (now IEEE) and also at Columbia University and having
undergone a thorough analysis by Prof. Anthony, director of the electrical engineering program at
Cornell. Tesla was subsequently feted by the science academies of London and Paris.

Elihu Thomson of Thomson-Houston arrived at AC by another path. He produced initially AC arc light
systems and formed the basis for the GE effort directed by Steinmetz, for GE was an amalgamation of
Edison and Sprague companies funded through T-H capital. An article in the IEEE PES from several
years ago detailed the birth of 3 phase systems through both AEG and Siemens efforts. In the United
States, transmission range was a paramount concern and two phase systems prevailed for several decades
whereever AC was supplied to the customer, thus the Tesla/Westinghouse system found a ready market.
Three phase customer connections were not common until the 1920s; acceptance delayed by an inability
to balance single phase customer loads on three phase AC lines. Only after the work of Charles Fortescu
at Westinghouse and also that of Edith Clark at GE in the 1917-20 period were standardized equations
available for the engineering of three phase distribution.
As for other AC pioneers there are many - Frank Sprague, usually associated with railways, was an
early proponent of AC research. Having the mathematical skills to devise the practical formulae to adapt
the British Hopkinson 3 wire system to Edison lighting applications, he went on to develop practical
industrial motors which made small utility companies financially viable with the establishment of a
daytime motor load. As consultant to the Edison company in NY he recommended the use of AC in a
large central plant to be distributed through "receiving" stations in which a transformer would step down
the voltage and apply it to a "receiving motor" (reversed alternator) to drive DC generators. That report in
September ,1886, but a few months after the first Stanley installation in Great Barrington, shows how
universal was the thinking toward large scale AC generation. In that sense, the conversion substation
could be said to have been invented by Sprague.
Thus the story has many participants, most of whom replicated another's work, sometimes
simultaneously, often with no knowledge of the other. Even the standard power converter of the day had
multiple fathers. Benjamin Lamme who led development of AC at Westinghouse described his rotary
converter as the overlaying of a DC generator on a synchronous motor and believed it unique until he
discovered that Charles Bradley (Bradley Electric was later acquired by of GE) had applied for a patent
as well and there are indications that others had the same idea.
Much of the AC distribution refinement which led to the practical secondary distribution network was the
work of Westinghouse engineers working with the United Electric Light & Power Co. in Manhattan to
develop the first practical AC networks. But even at Westinghouse, it was researchers like Guido
Pantaleoni, a student of Ferraris, that bridged the ocean by licensing the Gaulard and Gibbs, Siemens,
and AEG patents. Sebastian Zinni DeFerrante, a leader in British arc lighting while still in his mid
teens, had installed underground 10,000 volt lines in London as early as 1891.
Moreover, in an era prior to the refined understanding of inductance, capacitance and reactive power
issues, and prior to the development of steel with magnetic characteristics ideal for alternating fields, the
issue of the best frequency was another major concern. Benjamin Lamme's article on the Technical Story
of the Frequencies (presented Jan 1918 to the Washington Section AIEE and available online under
Google Books) is the best source of 1890s thinking on the issues.

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