


-Nick
Ah, well so much for it being a mystery period piece.phonogfp wrote:In this case, the decal is a reproduction from the 1970s/80s, and compared to what we have today (and certainly compared to an original) pretty poor quality.![]()
George P.
Fran,fran604g wrote:It's neat to think that the musical artists would sit in chairs like this during a recording session!
Now, to find an Edison chair...![]()
Fran
Well, I won't be using one of those for my guests.Curt A wrote:Fran,fran604g wrote:It's neat to think that the musical artists would sit in chairs like this during a recording session!
Now, to find an Edison chair...![]()
Fran
I think that the "Edison Chair" goes by the name of "Old Sparky"...
Edison was approached by a man named Harold Brown. The self-taught electrical engineer thought AC was too dangerous to be used in public, and he wanted Edison’s financial resources to help him prove it. Edison resisted at first; as a progressive-minded individual, he was actually opposed to capital punishment. Then he realized that if he could help Brown build an efficient killing machine, he could tar AC as a killer current and wipe out Westinghouse, clearing the way for DC to corner the market.
Edison brought Brown to his laboratories in New Jersey and helped the engineer design and build the first electric chair using alternating current, which New York used to execute a convicted murderer by the name of William Kemmler in 1890.