Con Edison Two Hundred Years and Counting, Part I

Deck: 

Prelude to Brilliance

Fortnightly Magazine - August 2023
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From the dawn of creation, time was divided into the hours of daylight and the hours of darkness. While this provided a natural rhythm to life daily, it imposed obvious limitations on human activities.

Fire, of course, had been tamed to controllable flame for lighting indoors and out by various familiar means including oil lamps, candles, and torches for millennia, but these all offered only a meager glow against the enveloping void of night, and they required constant tending to maintain the flame.

Against this backdrop, a whole new form of artificial illumination was introduced to the City of New York on March 26, 1823, when the state legislature granted a charter to the New York Gas Light Company, direct corporate forebear to today’s Consolidated Edison.

To commemorate its bicentennial this year, Con Edison was invited to ring the opening bell of the trading session at the New York Stock Exchange on Monday, March 27. It’s by far the longest listed company on the Exchange.

Gas lighting had first been introduced to the public by William Murdoch in a grand outdoor display at the Soho Foundry in England in 1802 to the utter astonishment of the local population. Five years later, Pall Mall in London was illuminated by gas streetlamps.

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