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1919 THOMAS ALVA EDISON Autograph Note Signed by the Historic American Inventor

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:1,400.00 USD Estimated At:1,500.00 - 1,800.00 USD
1919 THOMAS ALVA EDISON Autograph Note Signed by the Historic American Inventor
Autographs
April 1919 Thomas Edison Autograph Note Signed
THOMAS ALVA EDISON (1847-1931). American Inventor, who invented or perfected many of the 20th century's most ubiquitous devices, including the Light Bulb, the Phonograph, and Moving Pictures, among many others.
April of 1919-Dated, Rare Autograph Note Signed, “Edison,” written upon the transcription of a poem written by a young girl to President Theodore Roosevelt, 1 page, measuring 7.875” x 8”, Choice Very Fine. Edison writes boldly in dark pencil vertically along the left edge:

"April 1919. - Some Girl! - It's in the blood capacity for high mental action accompanies the germ plasm although it is denied. - (Signed) Edison”. The typed printed poem portion is in violet ink and reads, in full:

"Where Banners Wave

Clear-Eyed, Clear-Souled, Intense American!

You Lived Your Noble Life, A Noble Man:

Ando 'er your resting place beside the sea

A thousand flags resurge in harmony.

A Thousand Flashing Banners of the Lands

That Honor You ... From Egypt's Wasting Sands

To Where Norwegian Mountains Lift Their Snows

To Catch the Last Tint of the Sunset Glows.

Soul of the Nation! Why Were You Called that Hour,

You Who were Simple, Loved Despite your Power!

And Now, When Day is Done, Above Your Grave

We See A Thousand Mystic Banners Wave!

Catherine Parmenter - March 1919"

A notation at the bottom from William H. Meadowcroft, one of Edison's associates, reads:

"Mr. Edison, Isn't this fine for a little girl poet, 13 years old. She is the granddaughter of our good friend F.A. Whiting, the enthusiastic disc phono ‘fan.’ Meadowcroft"

Roosevelt died earlier that year on January 9, 1919. An interesting note from one of the greatest scientific minds of the last century.
With over 1,000 patents issued to his name, Edison was certainly the most prolific and probably one of the greatest inventors of all time. His important inventions included an electric vote recorder (1869), the carbon transmitter and a new receiver for the telephone (1876), a tin foil phonograph (1877), the carbon filament incandescent light bulb (1879) and a motion picture system (1889). Edison established the first large-scale industrial research laboratory in Menlo Park, N.J. (1876), moving it later to West Orange, N.J. (1887).