Nikola Tesla's Wardenclyffe wireless station, located in Shoreham, New York, seen in 1904. The 187 foot (57 m) transmitting tower appears to rise from the building but actually stands on the ground behind it. More
Brochure image of Wardenclyffe Tower
Tesla Ready for Business., New-York tribune., August 07, 1901, Page 4, Image 4
Tesla's "World System" as depicted in a contemporary newspaper Public domain photograph - United States during World War One, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description
A model of Wardenclyffe Tower, the high voltage wireless station built by Nikola Tesla in 1901-1902. Designed as a transatlantic radiotelegraphy and wireless power transmitter, it was never completed, and was More
Nikola Tesla's Wardenclyffe lab building, seen in 1904.
This 1904 photo of Wardenclyffe was taken so that Tesla could go back to J. P. Morgan to try and get the additional funds he needed to finish the tower.
Wardenclyffe Tower wireless power station built by Serbian American inventor Nikola Tesla in Shoreham, New York 1901-1904. This was intended to be both a transatlantic wireless telegraphy (radio) station, and More
Tesla's Wardenclyffe tower on Long Island in partial stage of demolition. On July 4, 1917 the Smiley Steel Company of New York began demolition of the tower by dynamiting it but it took till September to total More
Tesla's Wardenclyffe plant on Long Island in partial stage of completion. Work on the 55-foot diameter cupola had not yet begun. Note what appears to be a coal car parked next to the building. From this faci More
Drawing from U.S. Patent No. 649,621, "Apparatus for Transmission of Electrical Energy" showing a system for the wireless transmission and reception of electrical energy through the earth’s rarefied upper atmo More
Pearson's Magazine, May 1899. Illustration of Tesla's wireless energy distribution
Français : Description de la propagation des ondes de courant dans la Terre, d'après Tesla
Diagram by US inventor Nikola Tesla explaining how his proposed revolutionary worldwide wireless power system would work, from a 1919 article in Hugo Gernsback's electrical magazine. Tesla was obsessed with t More
Français : Récepteur décrit dans le brevet 787,412 de TEsla
Français : Article du New-York American décrivant le système de transmission d'énergie sans fil de Tesla
Illustration of Nikola Tesla's article in 1919 issue of "Electrical Experimenter"