Battery Jar, 1887-1890

01

Artifact Overview

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, people used batteries to power telegraph and telephones systems, ring bells and alarms, or spark gasoline engines. The Standard Carbon Company of Cleveland, Ohio, produced wet cell batteries in the late 1880s. The glass jar held a conductive solution surrounding the carbon and zinc elements that produced an electrochemical reaction.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Battery jar

Date Made

1887-1890

Location

Not on exhibit to the public.

Object ID

2017.0.34.1016

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Material

Glass (Material)
Paper (Fiber product)
Metal

Color

Colorless
White (Color)
Red

Dimensions

Height: 8 in
Diameter: 4.5 in

Inscriptions

on label: INSTRUCTIONS / For setting up and maintaining / this Single Cylinder Cell. / [...] / The Standard Carbon [missing] / CLEVELAND, / O.