Great
Barrington 1886
The first practical AC power delivery system

William
Stanley was the mastermind behind the first AC distribution
system in North America and the Stanley Transformer
which changed the world. The transformer has been called "the
heart of the alternating-current system" His system at Great
Barrington is very similar to modern electric distribution systems.
Engineers before 1886 knew that AC voltage could be controlled using
transformers but no one had built a full working system.
Stanley was the first person to understand the behavior of the magnetic
core of a transformer, and he was the first to understand the concept
of counter electromotive force.
Great
Barrington: Battleground in the War of Currents
While
Stanley was building his AC system funded by Westinghouse, Edison
Company had already installed a DC system in the same town. Stanley's
system quickly showed superiority in its use as Stanley kept adding
more and more stores and mansions to his system. The DC power system
was very limited in distance and did not compete. At the time the
residents of Great Barrington did know know the significance of
Stanley's system. They were simply impressed to have more electric
light available.
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FEATURES
of this Power Generation Site:
Notable
features: First Alternating Current system with transformers
Frequency:
Single-Phase, Alternating Current
Power Transmission Length: 1500-2000 feet (455+ meters)
Power system built by: Westinghouse, Siemens alternator,
and Edison incandescent lights
Notable Engineers: William
Stanley, Stanley system based on work of Lucien Gaulard
and John D. Gibbs
Maximum Power Output: ____ kW 500 volts
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A
first prototype transformer built by Stanley in 1885

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William
Stanley was by hired in by George Westinghouse Jr. to work
in his Pittsburgh factory and began to work on the idea
of a transformer. Westinghouse had bought the patents of
the Gaulard and Gibbs transformers, and the Z.B.D. transformers
designed in Budapest Hungary in 1885. This was the first
inductance coil device to use the iron core. Before this
the open core inductance coils had existed, but could not
reliably regulate voltage. George Westinghouse worked on
making the transformer square in shape, this was very important
because the Gaulard and ZBD transformers were toroidal which
was very expensive to make. Stanley worked with Westinghouse
in Pittsburgh. He became ill and moved to Great Barrington,
Massachusetts (southeast of Albany) in 1885. While in Great
Barrington he continued his work. Stanley had been sick
in Pittsburgh do the extreme level of air pollution from
the Carnage Steel Mills. A doctor recommended he continue
his work in the countryside. Continue below.
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Electronics
Explained:
The Problem of Transmitting
Power:
DC
power was mainly in used in the 1880's and it was hard
to transmit over distance because:
-To transmit over long distance you need high voltage
on a skinny wire or low voltage on a wide
wire. High voltage on DC is very dangerous, and with low
voltage the wire would have to be so thick that it would
not be practical. Also with high voltage you couldn't not
step down the voltage so it could be used with home light
bulbs.
Using
the water analogy: imagine that a small wire with high
voltage is like a garden hose with high pressured water
moving fast inside. Imagine that this hose fills 2 gallon
jugs of water in one minute. Now think of a 6" wide
drain pipe filled with water. You can deliver the same amount
of water to the destination in the same time period without
needing so much pressure.
With AC power you also use high voltage to move the
electricity down a long wire. AC becomes more practical
because once you send the power to the destination, you
can use a transformer to change the voltage down to a manageable
level. The power is stepped down several times by the time
it reaches you home. The power line coming into your home
is at 240 volts, from your breaker box it is split into
lines of 120 volts for most of your home sockets and 240
for appliance sockets. (The main home socket in Europe and
other parts of the world is 240 volts).

Transformer
- a device that transfers electrical energy from one circuit
to another circuit using inductively coupled conductors.
In other words by putting two coils of wire close together
while not touching, the magnetic field from the first coil
called the primary winding effects the other coil
(called the secondary coil). This effect is called
"inductance". Inductance was discovered
by Joseph
Henry and Michael Faraday in 1831.
Now if you would like to change the voltage on a powerline,
you could do this by changing current going into the primary
coil (voltage stays high). The current level affects the
induced voltage on the secondary coil. A changing magnetic
field induces a changing electromagnetic force (EMF)
or "voltage". To put it simply: by changing the
current you can obtain the desired voltage on the other
side.
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Continued
from above - Stanley developed the transformer in the tranquility
of his new home in Great Barrington. He designed his own transformer
which would revolutionize the industry. His first patented design
was induction coils with single cores of soft iron and adjustable
gaps in order to regulate the electromagnetic force which affects
the secondary coil. See the illustration below:
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Above:
The first Stanley Transformer that changed the world of electricity

William
Stanley
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The
Great Barrington System:
He
used a Siemens steam engine in a rubber mill near Cottage
Street that produced 500 volts. He stepped-up the voltage
to 3000 and sent the power to Main Street. There he had
6 step-down transformers located in basements to bring down
the power to 100 volts so it could be used for lights at
each location. There were 36 incandescent bulbs total in
all the shops that were lit by the system. The power transmission
cable was strung up to the large Elm trees on the street.
He
used transformers in parallel to prevent load changes on
one device from affecting all other devices downstream.

A transformer built by Stanley used in the first Great Barrington
electrification
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Photos
of the Great Barrington Site:

The Great Barrington countryside
in 2010 is much different than in the 1880's, in the time of Stanley
it was stripped of all trees to make charcoal which was used to
create super hot fires used to process iron ore located in these
low mountains.

Siemens
single phase AC generators (Alternators) in 1885. This illustration
shows two generators in use in London. Stanley would use one of
these types of Siemens generators in the rubbermill in Great Barrington.
Stanley later wrote Westinghouse that the Siemens alternators proved
to be a dissapointment. Stanley then designed his own and sent the
drawings to Westinghouse.
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The rubbermill
owned by Horace Day was rented by Stanley and used as a power
house. Part of the Housatonic river was routed under this mill
and used to turn the Siemens generator.
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The route of the power
across the river and towards main street.
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IEEE
Plaque near the site
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Actual remains of the
rubbermill or causeway across the river from the viewpoint.
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The Rubbermill
site and Housatonic River 2010
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Rendered vision of
the rubber mill as it once stood across the river
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Main Street(right), on
the corner of the two streets. Wires were most likely sent via the
large trees in front of this property, but it is possible it was
sent behind, and then turned right to meet main |

The row of shops which
were first lit by electric light in 1886. The wires supplying
power were strung to large elm trees which used to grow on the
right.
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After
the success of the Great Barrington AC system, George Westinghouse,
William Stanley, and Oliver B. Shallenberger worked together to
create the first commercial AC installation in the US at Buffalo,
New York.
The
Future of Stanley:
William
Stanley later established the Stanley Electric Company in 1890 in
nearby Pittsfield Massachusetts. There his company built and sold
the first transformers. In 1903 General Electric bought the company
and continued to develop transformers and capacitors there. The
Stanley Electric Company is the root of GE's transformer and capacitor
business.

A postcard
featuring the Stanley Electric Company in Pittsfield, MA
Sources:
The General Electric Story - A Hall of Electrical
History Publication (book)
Wikipedia article on transformers
MIT website: Inventor of the Week" William Stanley
IEEE Global History Network: Milestones: Alternating Current Electrification
1886
The Power Makers: Steam, Electricity, and the Men Who Invented
Modern America by Maury Klein.
2009.
Photos by Michael Whelan,
Great Barrington Historical Society
Technical information by Steve Normandin, Rick DeLair
Edison Tech Center, Schenectady, NY
Early
AC links:

Schaghticoke
Power Station and Steinmetz's monocyclic power experiment

Mechanicville
Power Station, Mechanicville, New York 1897, HVDC experiements
in 1932

Redlands Mill Creek 1 powerhouse Redlands,
CA 1893
Folsom
Powerhouse, Folsom California 1895
Dolgeville
Dynamo Dolgeville Mill, Dolgeville, NY 1879
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