Adolphe Alexandre Chaillet
Adolphe Alexandre Chaillet | |
---|---|
Born |
Paris, France | 15 July 1867
Died | after 1914 |
Occupation | Worked in the design department of General Electric of Bryan-Marsh Company (1892–1897),Technical Manager and a part of board in Shelby Electric Company (1897–1902) |
Spouse(s) | Maude L. Bickmore (1877–?) |
Children | 3, Alexander B. Chaillet (November 1896), Arnold Chaillet Son (August 1898), Catherine Chaillet Daughter (January 1899). |
Parent(s) | Samuel Alexander Chaillet – Eugénie Eva Wendawowicz |
Adolphe Alexandre Chaillet (July 15, 1867 – after 1914) was born in Paris and was an inventor in the field of Electrical engineering. Chaillet is known for creating the Centennial Light, which has been illuminating a fire station in Livermore, California for well over a century.[1] In addition to expertise in the field of electrical engineering, Adolphe Chaillet was knowledgeable in the areas of chemistry and mineralogy.[2]
Early life
Adolphe A. Chaillet was born in a Paris district on July 15, 1867. He was the son of Samuel Alexander Chaillet, a Swedish watchmaker, and Eugénie Eva Wendawowicz, who was born in Russia.[3][4]
Chaillet was a graduate of both German and French scientific institutions. In addition to a thorough knowledge of electrical engineering, Chaillet was capable as a chemist and mineralogist. In a newspaper article, he commented on Darwin's theory of evolution.
Chaillet started in the incandescent lamp business with his father, who operated a factory near Paris. Chaillet was engaged by the Schaefer Company in Germany to assist in making filament lamps and remodeling their plant, eventually putting him in charge of the largest factory in Germany.
Emigration and marriage
He emigrated to the United States in 1892 to manufacture lamps in Marlboro, Massachusetts (probably in what was then known as the Bryan-Marsh Company). Later, he was employed in the design department of the General Electric Company in Lynn, Massachusetts. About 1896, he completed a design for an electric locomotive for the Jeffreys Manufacturing Company of Columbus, Ohio.
Shortly after, Chaillet married Maude L. Bickmore (b. 1877) in Maine, Massachusetts.[1] Maude's parents were also from Maine. They had three children. Their two sons were Alexander B. Chaillet (b. November 1896) and Arnold Chaillet (b. August 1898), and their daughter was Catherine Chaillet (b. January 1899). All three children were born in Shelby, Ohio.[3][lower-alpha 1]
Shelby Electric Works
In the latter part of July, 1896, John Cooper Whiteside, former superintendent at the Cooper Engine Works in Mount Vernon, Ohio, mentioned to John Chamberlain Fish, a businessman in Shelby, Ohio, that Chaillet had an idea for an improved incandescent lamp that was 20% more efficient and had 30% more life than other models. This aroused the interest of Fish, an enthusiastic individual, who thought its manufacture would be a good business venture to pursue. On August 7, 1896, a newspaper article announced that a contract had been negotiated between Chaillet, Whiteside, Fish and some other Shelby investors, namely W. W. Skiles, G. M. Skiles, M. H. Davis, and Jonas Feighner. Chaillet was technical manager as well as being on the board of directors.[5]
"A. A. Chaillet, the technical manager of the company, and upon whom it chiefly depends for its advice regarding all points pertaining to the manufacturing of its product, was engaged in the factory operated by his father near Paris, France, when the incandescent lamp was made by them in Europe. The professor has been engaged as a manufacturer of incandescent lamps since 1878, having had charge of the laboratory of the largest factory in Germany. Mr. Chaillet came to this country in 1892 to manufacture lamps at Marlboro, Mass. He had been engaged in Germany by the Schaefer company to assist it in making filaments and remodeling its plant. This factory was closed by the Edison company shortly after Professor Chaillet had completed his work of remodeling. The professor was then engaged in the designing department of the General Electric company at Lynn, Mass., and has recently completed the design of an electric locomotive for the Jeffreys Manufacturing company of Columbus, Ohio. Professor Chaillet is not only an electrician of extensive experience and knowledge, but is a thorough chemist and mineralogist."[2]
Adolphe Chaillet was on the Board of Directors until their annual meeting on August 29, 1902 when he was not re-elected.[lower-alpha 2] Jas. Wormley & Co. had sole agency for the Shelby tipless lamp in Cook County, IL, and Minnesota from the first day of manufacture. In 1902, Wormley became a director of Shelby Electric.
Adolphe Chaillet was granted only two U. S. Patents from 1896 to 1922, for a lamp socket and a light bulb; both were applied for while he was associated with Shelby Electric.[6][7]
Improved incandescent light bulb
Chaillet's light-bulb design involved flattening the elliptically-looped carbon filament coil set transversely to the longitudinal axis of the lamp, as well as flattening the end of the globe, or bulb at its tip end, parallel to the loops, so that the greatest intensity of light is thrown downward when the bulb is hung from the ceiling.
The Chaillet lamp was tested with others in January, 1897. Manufacturing of the lamp started about February 1, 1897. The lamp was put on the market in March, 1897. Manufacturing of the lamp started about 1 February 1897. The lamp was put on the market in March 1897.
The original Chaillet lamp appeared in Electrical World on February 6, 1897. The complete details of the lamp design were not revealed in that article. It was a tipless lamp with a carbon filament that was manufactured using a secret process. Quoting directly from the article:
The lamp possesses a number of peculiar features which it is claimed give to it certain elements of superiority above all others. The filament is square cut by means of automatic machinery from sheets of material produced by a secret chemical process. The cut filament, after being formed, is attached to platinum terminals which are sealed into the sides at the lower end of the lamp bulb. The filament is of such high resistance that in the Shelby lamps it is shorter than that of most other commercial lamps of equal rating. The bulb is not exhausted from the top, which in connection with the exceedingly small filament used makes the completed lamp one of the smallest, also one of the neatest, lamps on the market.[8]
In reality, it would have been difficult to prove conclusively that a new lamp design would perform in a superior manner to a competitive lamp that had a different filament configuration. The reason for making such a statement here is that while power input into a lamp could be easily measured, the light output had to have been measured in a spherical photometer. In the 1880s and 1890s, light output measurements were usually measured with a horizontal photometer. A horizontal measurement determines light output in only one direction rather than a total integrated value. Thus, while the Chaillet design might have been a better one relative to the competitive lamps it is not easy to conclude that now.
In an Electrical Review article of March 10, 1897, pg 111, the origin of Shelby light bulb filaments was discussed. Some manufacturers apparently thought that Shelby filaments were purchased in Europe. The Electrical Review telegraphed the Shelby Electric Company for the purpose of determining the truth about the origin of the filaments. The following are excerpts from Shelby's response:
The question of taking licenses to manufacture under the Westinghouse patents is one which we have not definitely decided....We have secured copies of the entire number of patents, which they claim to own or control, and we know positively that we do not want to infringe on any of them. We think that we are the only company manufacturing lamps in the United States to-day who can make such a statement. With reference to the filament which we use, we would say that we are using a square filament, not a cellulose filament. Our filament is not imported from Germany. We are manufacturing it here in Shelby, but it is the same filament which our Professor Chaillet discovered in Germany, and one that is most successfully being used by two of the most prominent lamp factories of Europe, by a special arrangement with our Professor Chaillet. The filament is much nearer pure carbon than anything on the market, it being so hard after being carbonized that it will scratch glass very readily....We could ourselves secure patents on over a hundred different devices, which we use in our manufacture, but prefer to keep them secret....We are not selling lamps on prices, but on quality....[9]
At first, Chaillet did not patent the new lamp design, nor its details, preferring to keep them as trade secrets. Chaillet filed a patent application on October 22, 1900, which was granted on July 2, 1902.
Later life
Activities in Shelby lasted until 1902, when he left the company board of directors. After this period, Adolphe Chaillet moved to Mexico City with his family. According to reports, Chaillet worked at the lamps branch in Mexico City during the period from 1904 to 1914. In 1914, Mexico City was a very dangerous place to live at the time and the Mexican Revolution forced Chaillet go to Ellis Island.[lower-alpha 3]
Of the place, date and cause of his death nothing is known. His grandson, Alexander B. Chaillet Jr. and Alex grandson seek connections with the family to the present day.
Notes
- ↑ A. A. Chaillet was living in Shelby in the year 1900 when the U. S. Census was taken. The census information regarding Chaillet was taken on June 18, 1900. It stated that Adolphe Chaillet was 32 years of age at that time, having been born in France in November of 1867. In 1900, he lived on Grand Boulevard, Shelby, Sharon Township, Richland County. The place of birth of Adolphe's mother was in Russia and his father's place of birth was in Sweden. It is stated that he had been married for five years. The wife of Adolphe was listed as Maud L., who, at that time, was 23 years of age, having been born in April, 1877. Her birthplace was in Massachusetts. Maud's mother and father were also born in Massachusetts. The Chaillet's three children were: Alexander B., born in November, 1896; Arnold, born in August, 1898; and, Catherine, five months old and born in January, 1899. The three children were born in Ohio. In actuality, a check at the Richland County Vital Records Office in Mansfield, Ohio indicated that Catharine M. was born on December 28, 1899; her mother's maiden name was given as Maud Bickmore.
- ↑ Chaillet had two assistants. They were Joseph Hardwick, who had worked in the lamp department of the Thomson-Houston Electric Company and Charles F. Stilwell, the younger brother of Thomas Alva Edison's first wife, Mary. Hardwick also worked for the Universal Electric Company in Cleveland, Ohio, which dissolved in 1896.
- ↑ According to the The American Family Immigration History Center website, after August 1902, when Chaillet was no longer on the Board of Directors at Shelby, "A. A. Chaillet" is shown as having arrived at Ellis Island on July 5, 1914, on the ship Antonio Lopez, the port of departure being Puerto Mexico, Veracruz, Mexico; and Maude Chaillet and her daughter, Catharine, as having arrived at Ellis Island on July 15, 1904, aboard the ship Monterey, the port of departure being Veracruz Llave, Veracruz, Mexico. A. A. Chaillet's place of residence was listed as Mexico City. Therefore, it might be assumed, that Chaillet worked in Mexico City from about 1902 to 1914. Some corroboration of that conclusion follows from the text card that accompanies one of William J. Hammer's lamps that is now stored in the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. Lamp No. 1905-798 is a Chaillet lamp that was manufactured in Mexico. There is the possibility that the turbulent nature of the Mexican Revolution made Mexico City a less-than-desirable place to live in 1914, the year Chaillet disembarked at Ellis Island.
References
- 1 2 "Tribute to Adolphe A. Chaillet". Livermore, California's Centennial Light. Retrieved May 8, 2016.
- 1 2 "Shelby Electric Company". Western Electrician. XX (24): 338–40. June 12, 1897.
- 1 2 Twelfth Census of the United States, enumerated on June 18, 1900, Shelby Village, Precinct B, Sharon Township, Richland County, Ohio, Vol 130, E. D. 136, Sheet 14, Line 96.
- ↑ "Adolphe A. Chaillet Family". Rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2016-05-04.
- ↑ "The Shelby Electric Works – A Description of One..." The Shelby News (Shelby, Ohio), December 18, 1896.
- ↑ US patent 625321, Chaillet, Adolphe A., "Socket for incandescent lamps", published 1899-05-23, assigned to Shelby Electric Co
- ↑ US patent 701295, Chaillet, Adolphe A., "Incandescent electric lamp", published 1902-06-02, assigned to Shelby Electric Co
- ↑ "The Shelby Incandescent Lamp". The Electrical World. XXIX (6): 215–16. February 6, 1897.
- ↑ "The Shelby Electric Company's Lamp Filaments". Electrical Review. 30 (10): 111. March 10, 1897.
External links
- Benca, Jeanine. "Tests shine light on the secret of the Livermore light bulb". The Mercury News. Retrieved May 10, 2016.
- Covington, Edward J. "Adolphe A. Chaillet". home.frognet.net/~ejcov/. Retrieved May 10, 2016.
- Crockett, Zachary. "The Mysterious Case of the 113-Year-Old Light Bulb". Priceonomics. Retrieved May 10, 2016.