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Letters of Note: On behalf of Nikola Tesla

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  • Letters of Note: On behalf of Nikola Tesla

    Letters of Note: Ordinary standards do not apply to Tesla :

    On January 4th, 1943, Slovenian-American author Louis Adamic wrote the following heartfelt letter to ex-President of the United States, Herbert Hoover. The letter concerned the alarming treatment and general well-being of Adamic's friend, Nikola Tesla; an immeasurably important inventor whose impact on the modern world is still difficult to appreciate and who, despite his numerous groundbreaking scientific achievements, was at the time of writing severely in debt and in worryingly ill-health.

    LOUIS ADAMIC . MILFORD . NEW JERSEY

    January 4, 1943

    Dear Mr. Hoover:

    Nikola Tesla, as you know, is a Serbian immigrant who came to America from Croatia some 60 years ago and became one of the world's greatest inventors. He became also an American. In the early 1920s Lenin urged him to move to the Soviet Union, promising him every scientific facility, and personal security for life, but Tesla declined -- he was an American and had got used to living in the United States, whose civilization he helped to create.

    His contribution to the sum-total of American civilization is almost beyond calculation. Hundreds of billions of dollars of American wealth are ascribable to his inventions. They are at the very center of our current war effort. No man living has added more substantially to the potentialities of human life than Tesla.

    Yet today, when he is past 90, he is worse than penniless. He is extremely frail, weighing less than 90 pounds. His health is poor, and he has grown somewhat bitter against the U.S.A. No doubt his current poverty is his own fault. However, I think that ordinary standards do not apply to Tesla. He was always the pure scientist, never interested in money, always impractical about material existence.

    But the fact is that now he is up against it. He receives a small "pension" from the Yugoslav government-in-exile. I know that Tesla suffers greatly at having to accept this pension from the government of his native country, to which he had never contributed anything directly. He suffers especially because the money comes to him through the Yugoslav Ambassador in Washington, whom he dislikes personally. Tesla suffers, too, in fact to the point of bitterness, because he feels -- with some justice -- that everyone in America, including the beneficiaries of fortunes created by his inventions, has forgotten him. No one writes to him; no one comes to see him.

    He lives in a meager room in the New Yorker Hotel, in New York. He owes about a year's rent -- the Yugoslav pension is not enough to keep him in scientific apparatus, etc., for he continues to work on his projects.

    This letter is not an appeal for your personal financial help. Some way will be found of looking out for him -- he will probably not outlive 1943. But he needs someone to take care of him personally without seeming to; someone who could also follow his current notes and experiments and preserve what may be of value in them. Perhaps one of the large electrical corporations which have benefitted so greatly through his inventions would be glad to pension him for the short balance of his life. And I am wondering if you know someone who might be approached.

    A pension coming from such a source would relieve Tesla of the necessity of accepting more money from the Yugoslav government. It would do much to remove his bitter feeling of neglect. And it would be fitting, though small, recognition of the debt America owes this man who has done so much for his country.

    If you would like more details, I can come to see you in New York at any time.

    Sincerely,

    Louis Adamic

  • #2
    Reading this saddened me a great deal. Poor Nikola tried so hard. It's up to us now to ensure that his suffering was not in vain! Btw excellent find Lamare

    -Raui
    Scribd account; http://www.scribd.com/raui

    Comment


    • #3
      "Theory guides. Experiment decides."

      “I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
      Nikola Tesla

      Comment


      • #4
        Saddening

        Hi,

        This was a very sad ending for the Great Inventor of our time. It should be a lesson for all of us. Similar endings have also happened to Victor Schauberger, Wilhelm Reich, Moray, Grey, Stanley Meyer, ...

        I wonder, if these inventors did something wrong that led them to such a life. You know we don't know the emotions and thinking they had in their time, that led to such a sad ending. I know that they were very good and bright people, but I am curious: "How can an Inventor avoid such endings?"

        I remember reading somewhere that Tesla, was not interested in making a small amount of money, from his inventions, to assist him in completing his greater inventions, He could have made enough money to complete his Great Tower if he had some patience and continued on with his smaller inventions for a while, which did not Threaten the establishment.

        Everything a Man does, does to himself, I am asking what did these inventors do that led a type of ending for themselves. I suppose they were quite a head of their time and wanted to give the people a technology they were not ready for?!
        Another reason was the secrecy, they had in their work, not all of them but most of them. The another difficulty they had in their time was the fact they did not have the Internet, If they wanted to disclose their work on a mass scale, it was not very easy for them.

        Elias
        Humility, an important property for a COP>1 system.
        http://blog.hexaheart.org

        Comment


        • #5
          Tesla obviously had a lot going against him in his later life, but I think you are right that it may also have something to do with the mind of an inventor... This is one of my favorite Tesla quotes:

          “I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
          "Theory guides. Experiment decides."

          “I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
          Nikola Tesla

          Comment

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