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- Light Bulb -

- Collections - Artifact
Light Bulb
- Light Bulb -

- Collections - Artifact
Light Bulb
- Cover of The Daily Graphic Newspaper for January 3, 1880, "Edison and His Electric Light" -

- December 31, 1879
- Collections - Artifact
Cover of The Daily Graphic Newspaper for January 3, 1880, "Edison and His Electric Light"
- Advertising Poster for Edison Mazda Lamps, "Electric Light is Inexpensive," circa 1925 - General Electric promoted its bright, long-lasting Edison Mazda light bulb through an advertising campaign featuring illustrations by artists including Maxfield Parrish and Norman Rockwell. Advertisements depicting the history and power of light ran in popular magazines like <em>The Saturday Evening Post</em> and <em>Ladies' Home Journal</em>. The images were also reproduced for point-of-purchase materials and posters like this one.

- circa 1925
- Collections - Artifact
Advertising Poster for Edison Mazda Lamps, "Electric Light is Inexpensive," circa 1925
General Electric promoted its bright, long-lasting Edison Mazda light bulb through an advertising campaign featuring illustrations by artists including Maxfield Parrish and Norman Rockwell. Advertisements depicting the history and power of light ran in popular magazines like The Saturday Evening Post and Ladies' Home Journal. The images were also reproduced for point-of-purchase materials and posters like this one.
- General Electric Light Bulb -

- Collections - Artifact
General Electric Light Bulb
- Edison Mazda Lamps Manufactured for Pathex Motion Picture Projector, 1923-1931 - Pathe, a French phonograph and cinema equipment company, introduced a small, affordable film projector for home use to the U. S. market in 1925. The Model D projector ran 9.5-millimeter film -- a competitor to the more expensive 16-millimeter film made by the U. S. firm, Kodak. Pathex, the company's U. S. subsidiary, also distributed humorous and educational films for the home entertainment market.

- 1923-1931
- Collections - Artifact
Edison Mazda Lamps Manufactured for Pathex Motion Picture Projector, 1923-1931
Pathe, a French phonograph and cinema equipment company, introduced a small, affordable film projector for home use to the U. S. market in 1925. The Model D projector ran 9.5-millimeter film -- a competitor to the more expensive 16-millimeter film made by the U. S. firm, Kodak. Pathex, the company's U. S. subsidiary, also distributed humorous and educational films for the home entertainment market.
- Edison Lamp Company Indicator, 1886-1889 -

- 1886-1889
- Collections - Artifact
Edison Lamp Company Indicator, 1886-1889
- Exhibit of Early Electrical Lighting at Columbia University, circa 1929 -

- circa 1929
- Collections - Artifact
Exhibit of Early Electrical Lighting at Columbia University, circa 1929
- Eve Curie Visiting Menlo Park Laboratory in Greenfield Village, April 1939 - Eve Curie, daughter of two-time Nobel Prize recipient Marie Curie, visited Greenfield Village on April 1, 1939. Eve had written a biography about her famous mother and was on a tour of America, lecturing on the history of women in science. Ten years earlier, Marie had visited Greenfield Village for the Light's Golden Jubilee celebration and had spoken highly of the event.

- April 01, 1939
- Collections - Artifact
Eve Curie Visiting Menlo Park Laboratory in Greenfield Village, April 1939
Eve Curie, daughter of two-time Nobel Prize recipient Marie Curie, visited Greenfield Village on April 1, 1939. Eve had written a biography about her famous mother and was on a tour of America, lecturing on the history of women in science. Ten years earlier, Marie had visited Greenfield Village for the Light's Golden Jubilee celebration and had spoken highly of the event.
- Invitation Sent to Members of "The City Government" for a Lighting Exhibition at Menlo Park Laboratory, December 18, 1880 -

- December 18, 1880
- Collections - Artifact
Invitation Sent to Members of "The City Government" for a Lighting Exhibition at Menlo Park Laboratory, December 18, 1880