Nikola Tesla Articles
The Teslian - Vol. I, No. 7 & Supplement Page 6
Teslian (Tesla-International) - March 1st, 1955
and to eliminate from our industrial world the results of Mr. Tesla's work, the wheels of industry would cease to turn, our electric cars and trains would stop, our towns would be dark, our mills would be dead and idle. Yes, so far-reaching is this work, that it has become the warp and woof of industry. His name marks an epoch in the advance of electrical science. From THAT work has sprung a revolution in the electrical art."
Lord Kelvin (before the British Association commenting upon a Tesla Transformer exhibited):
"This is a wonderful development of the induction coil and destined to be of great importance."
Sir William Crookes:
"The performance of the machine is marvelous.
"Nature" London:
Dr. Silvanus Thompson exhibited a Tesla Oscillator. He congratulated Mr. Tesla on the perfect working and the compactness of his machine."
"Electrical Review" New York:
"Mr. Tesla comes forward with perfected and extremely simple oscillators. We believe that the importance of the advent of these new implements for the advancement of science and industry can not be overestimated."
A. E. Kennelly, Electrical Engineer, Author, Professor at Harvard University (at the occasion of the award of the Edison Medal):
"The medallist is the man who devised the rotating magnetic field that set wheels going 'round all over the land and all over the world and also made the phenomena of high frequency known and what he showed was a revelation to science and art unto all time."
H. W. Buck, Chief Engineer, President of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers:
"The work of Nikola Tesla at that time in his great conception of the rotary field seems to me one of the greatest feats of imagination