Lady Mary and Carson the butler try out another new-fangled device. |
Sir Charles Barry's drawing for one of Highclere's towers, 1842. |
Meanwhile, in Buffalo, NY, the elite of the Queen City were building their own Beaux Arts and gothic revival mansions, and supplying many of them with electricity from the start. The Darwin D. Martin House was no exception: the house was designed to be electrified, yet, surprisingly, not by virtue of the massive supply of power being generated 20 miles away at Niagara Falls, but rather by a private dynamo located in the carriage house basement. This was not uncommon, at a time when Niagara's hydro power was being used primarily for street-lighting and industrial applications. But it does seem ironic in retrospect that the Martin House, built a stone's throw from the electrical displays of the Pan-American Exposition (1901), should require its own source of power. The Barton House, pilot project for the Martin House complex, was equipped for gas lighting originally, but soon converted to electric (using the same fixtures).
The Martins' impressive dynamo in the carriage house basement |
Use your electrical computing device to CLICK HERE for a fascinating history of electricity at the Biltmore estate.
And - an interesting blog post on Downton, electricity and the future of energy HERE.
Experts on the history of electricity in Buffalo are invited to weigh-in and provide further factoids, corrections and clarifications, without resorting to fisticuffs, please.
7 comments:
Any indications or comments anywhere as to what the dynamo sounded like? Or what happened to it when the carriage house was demolished?
Hi Barbara -
Sorry, there are no indications of what the dynamo sounded like, or what became of it. But Im' sure it wasn't quiet!
Somewhere in one of Martin's diaries he said he had a generator because the cost of electricity was about 40 cents per light bulb per month. Our little accountant quickly did his math and determined that he had 350 light bulbs x 40 cents each which was more than he was willing to pay.
Martin was having at least a car load of coal delivered annually so he preferred generating his own electricity.
Thanks, Martha. That jibes with Martin's (relative) frugality.
Regarding the dynamo in the carriage house: it was in the basement, far from the main house. When the carriage house was demolished the dynamo was probably sold for scrap. Most likely it was taken out and sold during WW II when it was getting $7 a ton. A long list could be made of items sold for scrap and then recycled - but we didn't call it that - for the war effort.
I would like to know how was the house wired. I'm sure in high class houses like this they would not accept wires going on the wall destroying their expensive decoration. And without anything to hide the wires, besides wallpaper, how was that properly installed?
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