Sunday, 4 September 2022

PEARL STREET STATION IN NYC, SUPPLYING ELECTRICITY

Today, The Grandma has been reading about Pearl Street Station, the first commercial central power plant in the US, that started generating electricity on a day like today in 1882.

Pearl Street Station was the first commercial central power plant in the United States

It was located at 255–257 Pearl Street in the Financial District of Manhattan, New York City, just south of Fulton Street on a site measuring 15 by 30 m.

The station was built by the Edison Illuminating Company, under the direction of Francis Upton, hired by Thomas Edison.

Pearl Street Station was fired by coal; it began with six dynamos, and it started generating electricity on September 4, 1882, serving an initial load of 400 lamps at 82 customers.

By 1884, Pearl Street Station was serving 508 customers with 10,164 lamps. The station was originally powered by custom-made Porter-Allen high-speed steam engines designed to provide 175 horsepower at 700 rpm,  but these proved to be unreliable with their sensitive governors.

They were removed and replaced with new engines from Armington & Sims that proved to be much more suitable for Edison's dynamos.

More information: ETHW

Pearl Street Station was also the world's first cogeneration plant. While the steam engines provided grid electricity, Edison made use of the thermal byproduct by providing steam heating to local manufacturers and nearby buildings on the same Manhattan block.

Pearl Street Station served what was known as the First District (bounded clockwise from north by Spruce Street, the East River, Wall Street, and Nassau Street). The district, so named because of its importance in the history of electric power, contained several other power stations such as the Excelsior Power Company Building.

The station burned down in 1890, destroying all but one dynamo that is now kept in the Greenfield Village Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.

In 1929 the Edison Company constructed three scale working models of the station. When a button was pushed, a motor turned the engines, generators, and other equipment in the model. A set of lamps connected to labelled buttons identified the various areas of the building. Cut-outs in the side of the model building allowed examination of the boilers on the first level, reciprocating steam engines and dynamos on the reinforced second level, and the control and test gear on the third and fourth levels. The models were constructed to a scale of one-half inch to the foot and were 62 inches long, 34 inches high and 13 inches wide. 

The models still exist and are on display at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.; at the Consolidated Edison Learning Center in Long Island City, New York; and at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.

Up to 31 people worked on constructing the models which took about 6 months to complete.

More information: Smithsonian-National Museum of American History


We believe that electricity exists,
because the electric company keeps sending us bills for it,
but we cannot figure out
how it travels inside wires.

Dave Barry

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