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Gaulard and Paris
Gaulard was born in Paris, France.

Gaulard and was
The practical value of Gaulard and Gibbs ' transformer was demonstrated in 1884 at Turin where the transformer was used to light up forty kilometres ( 25 miles ) of railway from a single alternating current generator.
A power transformer developed by Gaulard of France and John Dixon Gibbs of England was demonstrated in London, and attracted the interest of Westinghouse.

Gaulard and due
Alternating current had first developed in Europe due to the work of Guillaume Duchenne ( 1850s ), Ganz Works ( 1870s ), Sebastian Ziani de Ferranti ( 1880s ), Lucien Gaulard, and Galileo Ferraris.
In 1882, 1884, and 1885 Gaulard and Gibbs applied for patents on their transformer ; however, these were overturned due to actions initiated by Sebastian Ziani de Ferranti and others.

Gaulard and patents
Although George Westinghouse had bought Gaulard and Gibbs ' patents in 1885, the Edison Electric Light Company held an option on the U. S. rights for the Z. B. D.
Westinghouse had bought the patents of Lucien Gaulard and John Dixon Gibbs on the subject, and had purchased an option on the designs of Károly Zipernowsky, Ottó Bláthy and Miksa Déri.
Westinghouse also acquired other patents for AC transformers from Lucien Gaulard and John Dixon Gibbs.

Gaulard and on
In 1885, Stanley built the first practical alternating current device based on Lucien Gaulard and John Dixon Gibbs ' idea.
In 1885, William Stanley, Jr. built the first practical transformer based on Gaulard and Gibbs's idea, the precursor of the modern transformer.
Ferraris has published an extensive and complete monograph on the experimental results obtained with open-circuit transformers of the type designed by the power engineers Lucien Gaulard and John Dixon Gibbs.

Gaulard and .
Lucien Gaulard and John Dixon Gibbs first exhibited a device with an open iron core called a " secondary generator " in London in 1882, then sold the idea to the Westinghouse company in the United States.
The new transformers were 3. 4 times more efficient than the open-core bipolar devices of Gaulard and Gibbs.
transformers were 3. 4 times more efficient than the open core bipolar devices of Gaulard and Gibbs.
That same year in London Lucien Gaulard and John Dixon Gibbs demonstrated the first transformer suitable for use in a real power system.
Lucien Gaulard ( 1850-November 26, 1888 ) invented devices for the transmission of alternating current electrical energy.
Gaulard and Gibbs first exhibited a device in London in 1881 and then sold the idea to the American company Westinghouse.

died and institution
Although involved in the planning of the new institution, Mudd died before it opened.
When James Smithson died and left his estate to the U. S. government to build an institution of learning, congress wanted to appropriate the money for other purposes.
The Phoenix was established in honour of Sir Francis, who died in 1781, as a symbolic rising from the ashes of Dashwood's earlier institution, and to this day the dining society abides by many of its predecessor's tenets.
Institutions informally adopted out children as well, a mechanism treated as a way to obtain cheap labor, demonstrated by the fact that when the adopted died, their bodies were returned by the family to the institution for burial.
John Russell Young died in January 1899, and “ President William McKinley found himself faced with the responsibility of appointing a Librarian of Congress who should preside over the affairs of the institution whose building had been completed but years ago .” President McKinley requested Herbert Putnam to be appointed to the task, and Putnam was officially confirmed to the duties of Librarian of Congress on December 12, 1899.
When his sister Rose died in 1996 after many years in a mental institution, she bequeathed $ 7 million from her part of the Williams estate to The University of the South as well.
" The children who died in the institution were interred in the graveyard behind the school.
She also explores research that identifies mood disorders in such famous writers and artists as Ernest Hemingway ( who shot himself after electroconvulsive treatment ), Virginia Woolf ( who drowned herself when she felt a depressive episode coming on ), composer Robert Schumann ( who died in a mental institution ), and even the famed visual artist Michelangelo.
; 1842: Nadir Baxter, of the Church Pastoral Aid Society, died in 1842 and donated £ 1, 000 in his will, stating that it be paid " towards the political restoration of the Jews to Jerusalem and to their own land ; and as I conscientiously believe also that the institution by the Anglican Church of the bishopric of Jerusalem is the actual commencement of the great and merciful work of Jehovah towards Zion ".
They go to see Ryking, who was being held in a mental institution, only to find out that he had just died of a brain hemorrhage the night before.
On July 17, 1901, Butterfield died in Cold Spring, New York ; he was buried with an ornate monument in West Point Cemetery at the United States Military Academy, although he had not attended that institution.
His name can be found on the affluent Lawrence Park and Lawrence Park West neighborhoods, the Houlihan Lawrence Real Estate Corporation, and on Lawrence Hospital in downtown Bronxville, an institution that was created when Lawrence ’ s son, Dudley, nearly died en route to a hospital in neighboring New York City.
He died as governor of the Parisian veterans institution Les Invalides.
Lt. General Andrew Anderson, born in Elgin, also of the East India Company, died in 1824 and bequeathed £ 70, 000 to the town to found an institution for the welfare of the elderly poor and for the education of orphans.
The Arms of Memorial University have as their central element a cross moline, which is a fitting symbol for an institution dedicated to the memory of soldiers of Newfoundland who died during the Great Wars.
The fate of her son's father is unknown, but Janice's son Harpo (" Hal ") was said to be living on the streets, her father " Johnny Boy " died of cancer, her Uncle Junior suffered from Alzheimer's disease after being committed to life imprisonment in a mental institution, her cousin Tony Blundetto was murdered by her brother Tony S., and even her distant cousin, Christopher Moltisanti, was murdered by Tony S. after being seriously injured in a car accident.
Indeed, at least four patients have died in the course of either preparation for or institution of bone marrow transplantation for epidermolysis bullosa, out of a small group of patients treated so far.
He was eventually committed to a Russian mental institution in 1884, where he died.
By 1859, 4000 troops would enlist in the official military boot-camp (), which was established by King Pedro V. Unfortunately, the institution was abolished in the following year, when 94 recruits died from an infectious disease.
To help the institution better fulfill its mandate, administrative changes were slowly introduced after 1969, the year Mildred Bliss died.
He was ten when his father died in a car accident, and his mother, who suffered a nervous breakdown afterwards, was committed to a mental institution in Florida.
She was told they had died, and kept in an institution where they were the subjects of medical research and experimentation.
His son Tudor, who was living in Paris, suffered from schizophrenia after 1950, and had to be committed to an institution ( where he died in 1955 ).
Edward McLean eventually died in a mental institution.

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