20 Insane Things You Never Knew About Nikola Tesla


20 Insane Things You Never Knew About Nikola Tesla


Everything You Never Knew About the Historic Name

Nikola Tesla is a household name at this point—his inventions still power today’s tech, museums were built in his honor, and he was a force to be reckoned with almost immediately. However, there are some things you likely don’t know about the mastermind. 

File:Nikola Tesla, with his equipment EDIT.jpgPhotographer: Dickenson V. Alley Restored by Lošmi on Wikimedia

1. It Was a Dark and Stormy Night…

Family legend has it that Tesla was practically born from electricity. It’s said a rather powerful lightning storm took place the night of his birth on July 10, 1856. Though some claimed it was a bad omen, his mother allegedly believed it was a sign of good things to come. 

lightning strike on black cloudsGleb Lucky on Unsplash

2. Defying Expectations

Tesla’s mind was a powerful thing right from the start, exceeding expectations in school and at home. He had a particular interest in language and physics, and his photographic memory helped him solve complex calculations. He was so smart, in fact, that his high school teachers thought he was cheating—but he was simply a step above the rest. He finished four terms in three and graduated in 1873. 

File:Tesla circa 1890.jpegNapoleon Sarony on Wikimedia

3. He Nearly Lost His Life as a Teenager

Graduation is a time for opportunities, but Tesla’s road was nearly cut short after he contracted cholera in 1873. He spent a whopping nine months in bed and nearly lost his life. However, the experience would be a blessing in disguise as his father promised to send him to the best engineering school if Tesla pulled through, which he eventually did. 

File:Nikola Tesla Manufacturer & Builder.gifThe Manufacturer and builder Journal on Wikimedia

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4. Well-Read Mountain Man

Tesla fled the following year to the village of Tomingaj near Gračac. The decision not only helped him evade conscription but also allowed the chance to live in nature. For the next year, he roamed the mountains with nothing more than hunter’s garb and a handful of books. He later wrote, “This contact with nature made me stronger in body as well as in mind.”

Sagui AndreaSagui Andrea on Pexels

5. He Failed School and Dropped Off the Map 

1875 wasn’t the most prosperous year for Tesla, despite enrolling in the Imperial-Royal Technical College in Graz. Though he excelled in school, he left after three years and historians still struggle to pinpoint why. Whatever the reason, Tesla’s own family didn’t even hear from him after he left and wouldn’t find him for at least a year afterward in 1879.  

File:N.Tesla.JPGUnknown authorUnknown author on Wikimedia

6. Engineering at Edison

After a brief stint in school, Tesla moved to Budapest in 1881 to work under Tivadar Puskás. He initially worked at the Budapest Telephone Exchange until Puskás found him work at the Continental Edison Company in 1882. It wouldn’t take long for Tesla to make waves at the company, soon being recognized for his brilliance and climbing the ranks to a traveling repairman.  

File:Nikola Tesla, Barraud.jpgBarraud on Wikimedia

7. An Exaggerated Fued 

In 1884, Tesla’s boss was asked to manage Edison Machine Works in NYC. He took the wunderkind with him and it was here that Tesla worked for Thomas Edison, founder of the company, for about six months. Stories of their feud are greatly exaggerated—historians believe the two only met a handful of times and even had a cordial relationship until Tesla left the company in 1885 over monetary disputes.

File:Thomas Edison2.jpgLouis Bachrach, Bachrach Studios, restored by Michel Vuijlsteke on Wikimedia

8. Ahead of His Time 

Despite the tumultuous end, Tesla didn’t need anyone else to soar. He started the Tesla Electric Company in April 1887 and spent the next several years working on inventions like AC induction motors, the Tesla coil, and his infamous wireless transmission tower, Wardenclyffe. By the end of his career, he’d have hundreds of patents to his name.

File:Nikola-Tesla-experimenting-768x646.jpgUnknown Author on Wikimedia

9. Mark Twain’s Constipation

Tesla will always have a leg up on his competitors—no one else’s creations cured Mark Twain’s constipation. These two became fast friends in the late 1800s, growing so close that Twain felt comfortable enough to complain about his digestive issues. Tesla had the solution, a vibrating disk of his own creation that he thought would loosen Twain’s...problem. Twain got atop, the oscillating disk started to shake, and it reportedly only took a few minutes before Twain ran to the bathroom. 

File:MarkTwain.LOC.jpgUnknown author on Wikimedia

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10. Messages From Mars

Constipation cures have their place in science, but people believed Tesla's inventions were otherworldly. In 1899, he picked up signals in his lab that some thought came from outer space, Tesla included. The story naturally picked up steam among reporters, though today’s historians say the signals were likely from another transmitter. 

Timon ReinhardTimon Reinhard on Pexels

11. An Ugly Side to His Beliefs

Supposed contact with aliens wasn’t his only uncomfortable belief. In 2012, Smithsonian Magazine dug up evidence that Tesla supported eugenics. The findings came from a 1935 issue of Liberty magazine, which featured several of Tesla’s predictions for the future—one of them that eugenics would be “universally established” by 2100. He didn’t specifically go into race, but did further his opinion with, “A century from now it will no more occur to a normal person to mate with a person eugenically unfit than to marry a habitual criminal.” 

PixabayPixabay on Pexels

12. Tesla Never Found Love

Tesla may have had some disturbing thoughts about marriage but he never actually settled down. In fact, there isn’t any evidence to support he took a lover at all. He was completely devoted to his inventions, a sentiment he later admitted to reporters may have been too great a sacrifice. 

File:Nikola Tesla statue in Zagreb.jpgBernard Gagnon on Wikimedia

13. He Was a Loner

Though he never bent a knee, he also shied away from making friends. Tesla bumped elbows with some pretty impressive people back in the day, but his social circle was rather small. Overall, he preferred to work in solitude and didn’t open the door for many human beings.

File:Nikola Tesla by Sarony c1885.jpgNapoleon Sarony on Wikimedia

14. A Fascination With Pigeons

Animals were fair game for friendship and Tesla was known for his strange obsession with pigeons. He’d feed them every day and even spent $2,000 rehabilitating an injured pigeon’s broken wing. That bird in particular wound up in his diary: “I loved that pigeon as a man loves a woman, and she loved me. As long as I had her, there was a purpose to my life.”

selective focus photography of white and black pigeonsShashi on Unsplash

15. He Was a Germophobe

It’s probably not a shock to learn that Tesla was a notorious germophobe. However, he wasn’t your everyday stickler—he reportedly disliked handshakes, hated touching people’s hair, and would only eat boiled food. The behaviors baffled people back then but historians now believe he exhibited symptoms of OCD.  

File:Photo statue nikola-tesla 01 adjusted.JPGBerthold Probst on Wikimedia

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16. Weird Secrets to Longevity

A 1935 interview in Physical Culture revealed some of Tesla’s strange secrets to longevity. Among them was abstinence, walking ten miles a day, and not drinking coffee. His worst one was the “waterless bath”; he told the magazine of his plans to somehow invent a contraption that would make “electric baths safe.” 

Clem OnojeghuoClem Onojeghuo on Pexels

17. He Outlived Many People

We can laugh (and certainly avoid some of those beliefs) but Tesla himself outlived a lot of people. He passed away in 1943 at the age of 86. It’s impressive even by today’s standards, but in the 1900s that age was practically unheard of. 

File:Nikola Tesla (19125122247).jpgHenry Kellner on Wikimedia

18. He Won Many Awards, But Never the Prize

Tesla received several accolades before his passing, namely the Elliot Cresson Medal, the AIEE Edison Medal, and the John Scott Medal. However, there was one prize he never received—the Nobel Prize. Despite the 1915 rumors that Edison and Tesla would receive the Nobel Prize in Physics, it actually went to Henry and Lawrence Bragg.  

File:William Henry Bragg Nobel.jpgNobel foundation on Wikimedia

19. Gone But Not Forgotten

Even if Tesla never won the Nobel Prize, his name lives on forever. There’s a magnetic field named after him, a Nikola Tesla Day Festival, and several monuments throughout Canada and the United States. He also has several awards named after him. 

File:Nikola Tesla by Djuradj Vujcic.jpgDjuradj Vujcic on Wikimedia

20. His Legacy Continues

It’s hard to imagine a world without Nikola Tesla’s inventions. From radios and televisions to X-rays and remote controls, his name touches nearly every piece of modern technology—and his inventions paved the way for some serious breakthroughs after his passing. 

DetmoldDetmold on Pixabay


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