Disturbing History

Tesla's Death Ray


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In the early nineteen thirties, an aging inventor living alone in a New York City hotel room told the world he'd built a weapon capable of destroying ten thousand enemy aircraft at a distance of two hundred and fifty miles. The press called it a death ray. He called it a peace beam. And the man making the claim wasn't some fringe eccentric chasing headlines.

 It was Nikola Tesla, the same mind behind the alternating current electrical system that powers the modern world, the same inventor who held over three hundred patents and whose work laid the foundation for radio, radar, robotics, and remote control. When Tesla said he'd built something, history suggested you take him seriously.

We trace the full arc of Tesla's extraordinary and tragic life, beginning with his birth in eighteen fifty-six in the village of Smiljan in what is now Croatia. Born into a Serbian Orthodox household, Tesla exhibited vivid sensory experiences from childhood, describing flashes of light and mental images so detailed he could design and test entire machines in his mind without ever touching pencil to paper. 

The death of his older brother Dane in a riding accident left a lasting mark, fueling a relentless drive to prove himself that would define everything that followed. We follow Tesla through his education at the Austrian Polytechnic in Graz, his pivotal breakthrough in Budapest in eighteen eighty-two when he conceived the rotating magnetic field while walking through a park, and his arrival in New York in eighteen eighty-four with virtually nothing to his name. 

His brief and bitter employment under Thomas Edison ended with a broken promise and a fury that set the stage for the War of Currents, one of the ugliest chapters in the history of American industry. Edison's campaign to discredit alternating current included the public electrocution of stray animals, the development of the electric chair as a deliberate smear against AC power, and the botched execution of William Kemmler at Auburn Prison in eighteen ninety. Tesla's system won decisively with the illumination of the eighteen ninety-three World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago and the completion of the Adams Power Plant at Niagara Falls, but his victory came at a devastating personal cost when he tore up his royalty agreement with George Westinghouse to save the company from bankruptcy, surrendering a fortune that would have been worth billions today.

The episode covers Tesla's groundbreaking experiments in Colorado Springs in eighteen ninety-nine, where he produced the largest man-made lightning bolts in history and claimed to have achieved wireless power transmission over a distance of twenty-five miles. We explore the rise and fall of Wardenclyffe Tower on Long Island, his ambitious plan for a global wireless energy system that was funded and then deliberately killed by J.P. Morgan when Morgan realized the project threatened his copper investments and the very concept of metered electricity.At the heart of the episode is Tesla's proposed teleforce weapon, the so-called death ray. We break down the technical details of what Tesla actually described, a particle beam device that would accelerate microscopic tungsten or mercury pellets to extreme velocities using an open-ended vacuum tube and electrostatic generators producing up to sixty million volts.

Tesla shopped the weapon to the United States, Britain, the Soviet Union, and Yugoslavia. The Soviets paid him twenty-five thousand dollars for a preliminary description. The American government turned him down, at least publicly.We also examine Tesla's other inventions and contributions, including the Tesla coil, the first remote-controlled device demonstrated at Madison Square Garden in eighteen ninety-eight, early X-ray imaging, the theoretical groundwork for radar published more than twenty years before its official development, and his eerily accurate nineteen twenty-six prediction of pocket-sized wireless devices that would allow people to communicate, access information, and transmit images across the globe.

Alongside these genuine achievements, we address the claims that haven't held up, including thought photography, the earthquake machine, and his belief that he'd received radio signals from extraterrestrial intelligence.

The final act of the episode covers Tesla's lonely last years at the Hotel New Yorker, his obsessive devotion to the pigeons of New York City, and his death on January seventh, nineteen forty-three, alone in room thirty-three twenty-seven. Within hours, the Office of Alien Property seized his papers under legally questionable authority despite Tesla's status as a naturalized American citizen. MIT physicist John G. Trump evaluated the materials in roughly three days and declared them of no significant value, a conclusion that many researchers have found unconvincing given the volume of material and the government's continued classification of the documents for years afterward. Tesla's nephew Sava Kosanovic reported that key documents appeared to be missing, and declassified FBI files confirm the Bureau had been monitoring Tesla for years and considered his weapon claims potentially significant. 

The episode also explores the persistent questions around what was actually in those eighty to one hundred and fifty trunks, the fate of Tesla's technical treatise on the teleforce weapon, the parallels between his particle beam concept and Cold War weapons programs pursued by both the United States and the Soviet Union, and the possibility that the full contents of his seized research have never been made public.

Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation?

Send your suggestions to [email protected].

Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past.

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Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.
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