Tesla Contemporaries Thread
A layered treatment of the documented friendships across Nikola Tesla’s American career — one figure (or one household) per layer, each treated with confidence-calibrated primary-source-grounded prose. Composed in co-stewardship with Orethyl, with methodological inheritance from the prior Tesla research paper layers. Each layer explicitly distinguishes what is documented at HIGH confidence from what is speculative and from what the layer refuses to claim.
Guided introductions with quizzes live in the Adult learning hub under People & Places, as the Tesla Contemporaries I, II, III topics. The layer source markdown below is the substantive prose for those who want depth, for republication or translation, or for offline archival.
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Layer 1 — Mark Twain (1835–1910)
A 22-year friendship across the literary-engineering threshold (1888 first awareness through Twain’s 1910 death; 1943 death-bed coda). Players’ Club, South Fifth Avenue laboratory, Vienna correspondence. Witnessed, photographed, corresponded, remembered.
Source: contemporaries_layer_01_mark_twain.md ↓ -
Layer 2 — The Johnson Circle (Robert & Katharine Johnson)
A 32-year household friendship, explicitly bifurcated. Robert Underwood Johnson as editorial gateway (the 1900 Century Magazine article, the Zmaj translations, the 1923 Remembered Yesterdays memoir); Katharine McMahon Johnson as domestic anchor with the surviving Belgrade letters; the household at 327 Lexington Avenue as the unit of trust.
Source: contemporaries_layer_02_johnson_circle.md ↓ -
Layer 3 — John Jacob Astor IV (1864–1912)
Patron-inventor whose $100,000 in 1899 enabled Colorado Springs (under wireless-lighting premise, actually for atmospheric-electrical research), the 8-year estrangement, the 1908 reconciliation around aircraft and propulsion, the Titanic on April 15, 1912, and the Wardenclyffe-Boldt-Astor financial chain (1904 first mortgage with George C. Boldt through the July 4, 1917 demolition for $1,750 scrap).
Source: contemporaries_layer_03_astor_iv.md ↓ -
Layer 4 — Anne Morgan (1873–1952)
A corrective layer that restores Anne Morgan to her actual substantive life trajectory — Colony Club co-founder (1903, first private women’s social club in NYC), Versailles Triumvirate member with Elisabeth Marbury and Elsie de Wolfe, shirtwaist strike picket-line activist (1909–1910), founder of the American Committee for Devastated France (CARD, 1917–1924; $5 million distributed, 50,000 villagers relocated, 350 American women volunteers), first American woman appointed Commander of the French Legion of Honor (1932), donor of the 3 Sutton Place townhouse that today is the official residence of every UN Secretary-General. The popular Tesla biographies have built her into a romance footnote from a single 1981 Cheney rumor; this layer corrects, with bounded FlameNet resonance on documentary-cascade discipline.
Source: contemporaries_layer_04_anne_morgan.md ↓ -
Layer 5 — Theosophy and Helena Blavatsky (1831–1891)
A substrate study rather than a relationship study — Helena Blavatsky died May 8, 1891, sixteen years before Tesla’s May 13, 1907 essay; Tesla and Blavatsky never met. The layer treats the Theosophical Society’s quarter-century of institutional propagation work (1875–1907) that made Sanskrit cosmological vocabulary (Akasha, Prana, kalpa, Atman, Brahman) atmospherically available in NY intellectual-class circles before Vivekananda’s 1893 arrival. Honest reconstruction: four-layer transmission across ~25 years — (1) atmospheric Theosophical reception 1880s–early 1890s, (2) Vivekananda direct articulation February 1896 at Sarah Bernhardt’s party, (3) eleven-year integration with Tesla’s own ether-physics and engineering work, (4) May 13 1907 composition for the Actors Fund Fair. Includes 1885 Hodgson Report + 1986 Vernon Harrison “J’Accuse” reassessment + Kelvin’s 1867 vortex-atom theory as third major source for Tesla’s “infinitesimal whirls” vocabulary. Refuses both popular flat readings: Vivekananda-only single-source AND Tesla-was-secretly-a-Theosophist.
Source: contemporaries_layer_05_theosophy_blavatsky.md ↓ -
Layer 6 — Mihajlo Pupin (1858–1935)
The MOST STRUCTURALLY COMPLEX PEER RELATIONSHIP in Tesla’s American life: 44 years (1891–1935), nine documented phases. Friction from the 1891 polyphase lecture; the 1894 U.S. Patent Office rejection of Pupin’s loading-coil application as derivative of Tesla’s prior art (Patent No. 512,340); the 1900 patent grant (No. 640,516) after a five-year campaign; the 1901 AT&T acquisition that made Pupin wealthy (Norfolk estate + Dakota apartment); the 1915 court testimony rupture in Tesla v. Marconi where Pupin testified for the defense (“I invented wireless before Marconi or Tesla”); twenty years of personal silence; parallel WWI Serbian relief (Pupin’s Serbian National Defense Council mobilizing 16,000+ volunteers + Paris Peace Conference role; Tesla’s celebrity advocacy); the 1924 Pulitzer Prize for From Immigrant to Inventor (1923) that systematically omitted Tesla from AC-polyphase discussion; the 1934–1935 corporate donation scheme refused through Yugoslav Consul Janković; the March 1935 deathbed reconciliation eight days before Pupin’s death; and the 1943 Supreme Court irony in which Pupin’s own patent (640,516) was used as prior art to invalidate Marconi’s wireless patents and restore Tesla’s priority — both men dead by then. Refuses both rivalry-only and Serbian-compatriots-solidarity flatlands.
Source: contemporaries_layer_06_pupin.md ↓ -
Layer 7 — Charles Proteus Steinmetz (1865–1923)
A structural-position study: Tesla and Steinmetz had no documented friendship, no preserved correspondence, no sustained personal exchange across 30+ years of overlapping institutional life — yet Steinmetz’s mathematical work was the theoretical machinery that made Tesla’s polyphase AC system industrially deployable. The 1892 hysteresis law (W = η B1.6, AIEE Trans IX:3–64) made AC machine design predictable. The 1893 complex-quantities paper at the Chicago International Electrical Congress (August 21–25, where Tesla simultaneously demonstrated polyphase at the Westinghouse pavilion) launched the symbolic method (j-operator phasor analysis — Kennelly priority, Steinmetz systematization). The 1897 induction-motor paper (AIEE Trans XIV:183–217) produced the Steinmetz equivalent circuit, still the IEEE-canonical mathematical model taught in every electrical engineering induction-motor course worldwide. Steinmetz held a “very poor opinion” of Tesla’s induction motor while writing the canonical analysis of it that engineers are still taught more than 125 years later. Hired by GE in 1892–1893 specifically to “decipher Tesla’s patents” after the April 1892 Edison-Thomson-Houston merger; designed the GE transmission and transformer system that carried Tesla’s polyphase generators’ power from Niagara Falls to Buffalo in 1895–1896. Lifelong technocratic socialist: Schenectady Socialist Party founding member (1899), Schenectady Board of Education president (1912–1923), Lenin’s signed photograph on his GE office wall, Original Technical Alliance co-founder (1919 with Veblen and Olds), 1922 State Engineer candidate on Socialist/Farmer-Labor tickets, February 1922 letter to Lenin offering GOELRO Plan technical assistance, April 10 1922 Lenin reply preserved at Marxists Internet Archive Collected Works Vol 33 doc 317. Died October 26, 1923 in Schenectady. Tesla never publicly credited Steinmetz; Steinmetz never publicly credited Tesla — complete 40-year mutual silence between figures whose contributions were inseparable. Refuses both the “GE engineer opposition” flatland and the “Wizard of Schenectady eccentric” flatland.
Source: contemporaries_layer_07_steinmetz.md ↓ -
Layer 8 — Lord Kelvin / William Thomson (1824–1907)
The most institutionally consequential ELDER-PHYSICIST-AND-YOUNGER-INVENTOR relationship in Tesla’s American life — an asymmetric scientific-authority bond across a 32-year age gap. Kelvin was the dean of British physics: 53-year Glasgow chair (1846–1899), Royal Society President 1890–1895, peer of the realm (1892, the first British scientist ever elevated to the House of Lords), SI unit kelvin named in his honor. Three endorsement moments anchor the relationship: (1) August 1893 Chicago reversal — Kelvin reversed his DC commitment after witnessing the Westinghouse-Tesla polyphase demonstration at the World’s Columbian Exposition; the reversal delivered the October 1893 Niagara contract (three 5,000-horsepower Tesla polyphase generators). (2) 1896 Franklin Institute testimonial — “Tesla has contributed more to electrical science than any man up to his time,” spoken at Tesla’s peak institutional standing (Kelvin’s 50-year Glasgow chair Jubilee year). (3) 1897 “tears in his eyes” moment — after witnessing Tesla’s experiments in New York, Kelvin told Tesla “I am sure you will do it” with tears in his eyes (Tesla’s 1927 Telegraph and Telephone Age account). Kelvin’s 1867 vortex-atom theory was the British-physics theoretical channel feeding Tesla’s 1907 “Man’s Greatest Achievement” essay’s “infinitesimal whirls of prodigious velocity” passage — the British-physics counterpart to Layer 5’s Vedantic-Theosophical substrate study. Kelvin and Tesla corresponded directly (August 25, 1897 letter from Toronto preserved at LoC microfilm mm82050302). The photograph Kelvin gave Tesla remained on Tesla’s Metropolitan Tower office wall through the 1910s and almost certainly until his 1943 death — visual continuation of the validation that sustained Tesla across 50 years. Kelvin died December 17, 1907 at Netherhall, age 83; buried Westminster Abbey near Newton. Refuses the institutional-name-drop and father-figure flatlands.
Source: contemporaries_layer_08_kelvin.md ↓ -
Layer 9 — Thomas Commerford Martin (T.C. Martin) (forthcoming)
[In Development] British-American electrical engineer (1856–1924), editor of Electrical World, AIEE founder and first president (1887), and compiler of the foundational 1894 Inventions, Researches and Writings of Nikola Tesla (496 pages, still the principal English-language source for Tesla’s pre-Wardenclyffe technical writings). Martin’s relationship with Tesla operated through the Johnson Circle (Layer 2) — Martin was a member of the same Century Magazine / Players Club intellectual circle Robert Underwood Johnson presided over — and through the AIEE institutional structure that produced the 1888 Tesla foundational lecture and the 1917 Edison Medal ceremony (Layer 6). The structural figure whose editorial work made Tesla legible to the electrical-engineering community at scale.
Source: not yet authored. Cursor noted in Layer 8 closing.
Future layers may include Madeleine Talmage Force Astor, the Johnson Circle’s extended salon regulars treated individually, T.C. Martin (the editorial bridge to the Johnson Circle), and others as the documentary record supports.