Newspaper and magazine articles related to Nikola Tesla

Nikola Tesla Articles

Newspaper and magazine articles related to Nikola Tesla

Englishman and Son to Divide 1915 Nobel Prize for Physics

November 14th, 1915
Page number(s):
11B

Previous Dispatches Said Honor Would Go to Edison and Tesla — Germans Win Chemistry Prize.

LONDON, Nov. 13. — According to a Reuter dispatch from Stockholm, two of the Nobel Prizes for 1915 will be awarded as follows:

Chemistry — Dr. Richard Willstaetter, of the University of Berlin. Physics Divided between Prof. William Henry Bragg of the University of Leeds, and his son, W. L Bragg of Cambridge University, for research in the structure of crystals by use of the Roentgen Rays.

A Copenhagen dispatch to the London Daily Telegraph, Nov. 6, stated that the Swedish Government had decided on the recipients of some of the Nobel prizes, naming Thomas A. Edison and Nikola Tesla to divide the prize in physics, while Prof. Theodore Svedberg was to receive the prize in chemistry.

A Reuter's dispatch from Stockholm to London Friday, announced that the 1914 Nobel prize for chemistry had been awarded to Prof. Theodore William Richards of Harvard University for fixing the atomic weights of chemical elements. The 1915 prizes were to be awarded to-day.

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