Edison National Historic Site

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Edison National Historic Site
Edison National Historic Site
Location Essex County, New Jersey, USA
Nearest city Newark, New Jersey
Coordinates 40°47′02″N 74°14′00″W / 40.78389, -74.233333
Area 21 acres (0.08 km²)
Established September 5, 1962
Visitors 11,663 (in 2003)
Governing body National Park Service

The Edison National Historic Site preserves Thomas Edison's laboratory and residence, Glenmont, in West Orange, New Jersey. For more than forty years, the laboratory had a major impact on the lives people worldwide. Out of the West Orange laboratories came the motion picture camera, improved phonographs, sound recordings, silent and sound movies and the nickel-iron alkaline electric storage battery.

The area was designated as Edison Home National Historic Site on December 6, 1955 and was redesignated as Edison Laboratory National Monument on July 14, 1956. On September 5, 1962, the 21 acre site once again became a United States National Historic Site overseen by the National Park Service. In 2002, the group They Might Be Giants released a song called "The Edison Museum" about this site.

Except for Glenmont, the Edison National Historic Site is currently closed to visitors due to major rehabilitation work on buildings within the site. This project was expected to be completed sometime in 2007, but as of February 2008 the labratory is still closed. The site is located about 5 miles (8 kilometers) west of Newark, New Jersey, just off of Interstate 280 on Main Street.

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[edit] External links

31 photos, 13 drawings, 12 data pages], at Historic American Building Survey. Note numberous other HABS photo sets available for outbuildings and Edison's laboratories, also (Search HABS here).