1888-Spokane


Within the first year, Edison Electric Illuminating has insufficient output to meet demand. With the financial backing of Sydney Z. Mitchell and Edison Electric New York investors, a new plant is built with four times the capacity. For the first time 24 hour service is offered, lines extend to residences, and electricity powers the presses at the Spokane Chronicle newspaper.  

A November 1888 headline in The Morning Review Daily newspaper proclaimes, "Unrivaled: Spokane Leads All Other Cities of its Size."
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How the Incandescent Light Bulb and Electricity Transform a Frontier Town

In the late 19th century, electrification was transforming American cities. Electricity, along with railroads and the telegraph, were reshaping the American landscape. Contemporaries saw these as emblematic of intellectualism, nationalism, and civilization. These were the symbols of American progress, destiny made manifest. John Gast popularized attitudes in his 1863 painting American Progress, where Columbia advances west, flanked by the railroad, a coil of telegraph wire over one arm, and bringing light from the east behind her.