March 22, 1886-Seattle


Edison agents, Sidney Z. Mitchell and F. H. Sparling turn on first electric lightbulb in the west in Seattle.  "Instantly the room was made brilliant with a clear white light," (cite).  The first central station system for incandescent electric light west of the Rocky Mountains is started when Seattle purchases 250 incandescent bulbs from Sydney Z. Mitchell, representing Thomas Edison, J.P. Morgan, and George Westinghouse.

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.