HomeCuriosity CornerDecember 20 - Electricity Theme Day

December 20 – Electricity Theme Day

Posted December 20, 2020

Here I am updating my post for 12/20/2009:

On this day in 1879, Thomas Edison privately demonstrated his incandescent light bulb at his Menlo Park research lab.

December 20 - Electricity Theme Day


Remember, Edison didn’t invent or even discover electricity (known from ancient 
times), and he didn’t invent the first light bulb (Sir Humphrey Davy made an arc lamp in 1809, and Frederick de Moleyns got the first patent for an incandescent bulb in 1841). What Edison did was to make the first commercially practical light bulb and an entire system of electric lighting. Edison said on the last day of 1879, “We will make electricity so cheap that only the rich will burn candles.”

December 20 - Electricity Theme Day

<–Broadway (Time Square) in 1904


December 20 - Electricity Theme Day

Broadway (Time Square) Today –>


On this day in 1880, the famous street called Broadway in Manhattan, NYC, became one of the first streets in the U.S. lit by electricity. A mile of the street was lit by carbon-based Brush arc lamps, which provided much brighter light than the incandescent light bulbs of the time. Since then, that section of Broadway, which features the Theatre District and Times Square, has become known as “The Great White Way” because it is lit by millions of lights on marquees and billboards.


December 20 - Electricity Theme DayOn this day in 1901, Robert J. Van de Graaf was born. This American physicist invented a high-voltage electrostatic generator, which looks like a large silver ball mounted on a pedestal. It makes your hair stand on end, but more importantly, it can be used as a particle accelerator in physics research.

On this day in 1938, Russian-American inventor Vladimir Zworykin (sometimes called the “true father of television,” although most give Philo Farnsworth that honor) was finally granted a patent for his iconoscope, an early television camera. (This camera had already been used for the historic TV transmission of the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin.)

December 20 - Electricity Theme Day



December 20 - Electricity Theme DayOn this day in 1951, the first electricity ever generated by nuclear energy was created near Arco, Idaho. (The Experimental Breeder Reactor in Idaho produced enough energy to light four 200-watt light bulbs that day.)

By 1952, the Paley Commission was already somewhat pessimistic about nuclear power and called for “aggressive research in the whole field of solar energy.” And by 1955, the Arco Reactor was the first reactor in the U.S. to experience partial meltdown.

December 20 - Electricity Theme Day

Do some electricity experiments!

Try the ideas here. And these experiments are so easy, they’re considered “snack size.”

December 20 - Electricity Theme Day


Build electric circuits with information found here.

December 20 - Electricity Theme Day

December 20 - Electricity Theme Day




Learn more.


Here is a great explanation of how electricity works.
Here are some games about the electromagnetic force.
Here is an interactive website about electricity.


Also on this date:


December 20 - Electricity Theme Day


Baseball executive Branch Rickey’s birthday






December 20 - Electricity Theme Day


Day of Mourning in Panama



December 20 - Electricity Theme Day

Anniversary of Macau’s transfer to the People’s Republic of China





December 20 - Electricity Theme Day
Anniversary of an innovation that led to corrugated cardboard



December 20 - Electricity Theme Day



Anniversary of Elvis being drafted into the army





December 20 - Electricity Theme Day
Electricity theme day
(original post)




December 20 - Electricity Theme Day

Anniversary of first cantilever bridge over Niagara Falls



December 20 - Electricity Theme Day



Poet Laureate Day





December 20 - Electricity Theme Day


Birthday of artist Ivana Koblica






December 20 - Electricity Theme Day

Anniversary of Cardiff becoming the capital city of Wales



Plan ahead:


Check out my Pinterest pages on:
  • December holidays
  • December birthdays
  • Historical anniversaries in December

And here are my Pinterest boards for:
  • January holidays 
  • January birthdays 
  • Historical anniversaries in January

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