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Electrifying America
An electric motor for alternating current by Westinghouse Electric, 1888.

An electric motor for alternating current by Westinghouse Electric, 1888.

Citation Information
Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing, “Electric Motor for Alternating Current,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/fef629068d90f9de1164fb33cc1464f5.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center via Smithsonian Institution.

Tips for Students

For this source, consider:

  • the author's point of view
  • the author's purpose
  • historical context
  • audience

Item 11 of 15 in the Primary Source Set Electrifying America

Previous ItemNext Item
Excerpts of data from Forty Years of Edison Service, 1882-1922; Outlining the Growth and Development of the Edison System in New York City.
Excerpts from Recipes for Cooking by Electricity, issued by the New York Edison Company, which introduced customers to electric appliances.
A 1906 map of New York City showing the United Electric Light and Power Company lines.
A 1910 catalog of Edison-Lalande batteries and other electric appliances produced by the Edison Manufacturing Company.
An excerpt from the 1930 book Edison as I Know Him, written by Henry Ford, detailing the “debt” America owes to Edison for his work.
A clipping of “Sketches in Edison’s Laboratory” including the “mechanism employed in producing his electric light.”
A catalog page from the early 1900s showing shades for electric lamps.
A photograph of Fifth Avenue in New York City illuminated by electric light, 1913.
An illustration of “bathing by electric light,” 1880.
An illustration of “electric light.”
An electric motor for alternating current by Westinghouse Electric, 1888.
A photograph of Westinghouse equipment.
A photograph of the World’s Fair Pan-American Exposition buildings lit up by electric light, 1901.
“Petaluma’s pride,” an 1898 atlas article describing a California power company.
Drawing of the Incandescent Light Bulb by Thomas Edison, 1880.

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