Livermore, CA – Little Lightbulb Turns 110 Years

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    Livermore, CA – The world’s oldest lightbulb turns 110 in Livermore, California, a tiny 4-watt night light that has burnt its way into the Guinness World Records.

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    The bulb first lit up in 1901 when it was donated to the fire department – before the Titanic sank and before San Francisco endured its disastrous quake.

    On Saturday, the Livermore Firehouse, which has moved the bulb three or four times since 1901, is to celebrate the birthday with cakes, parades, speeches and a brass band.

    What other lightbulb has its own profile on Facebook and is watched over by a webcam which offers round-the-clock proof of its continued activity?

    ”In our guestbook we have people from Germany, China, Japan, Russia, England, you name it,” beams Lynn Owens, 67, the former division chief for the Livermore Fire Department who has looked after the bulb for 30 years.

    As ”spokesperson” for the Centennial Lightbulb, Owens has an answer to all questions but one. ”Why does she burn longer than all the others? That is the mystery that nobody knows,” he says.

    Lots of experts have tried to establish precisely why, but none of them came to a convincing conclusion. ”No one turns it on and off, maybe that’s why it lasts so long,” Owens guesses.

    The bulb hangs well over five metres above the floor of the fire station, and the small switch at its base is out of reach. The hand-blown bulb was made in the 1890s by Shelby Electrics Company in Ohio.

    The owner of an energy company in Livermore gave it as a present to the local Fire Department, which was at the time still using kerosene lamps. So as not to not leave the station completely in the dark at night, the bulb was left burning ’round the clock. ”She was meant to be a little nightlight, it just gives the room a little warm glow,” Owens notes.

    With a carbon filament and just 4 watts, it tirelessly gives off a gentle, amber-yellow light. Night or day, nobody turns it off.

    The bulb first caught the public eye in 1972, when a newspaper reporter looked into its longevity and suggested it should be in the Guinness World Records.

    The true test came in 1976, with the move to a new firehouse.

    Wrapped in foam, with a siren-wailing police guard, it was rushed to a new site where it was carefully hung from the ceiling. ”It was off maybe at the most seven, eight minutes,” Owens recalls.

    A soft click on the old switch at the base, and it glowed on. It has not stopped since. Not even a power cut can get it, because it is plugged onto an emergency power appliance.

    This bulb, which survived the 1906 San Francisco quake disaster 60 km distant from Livermore and numerous energy crises since, runs no risk of being replaced by a power-saving light bulb.

    ”Nobody will ever touch it again,” Owens says. ”And if she burns out one day, the bulb will never leave Livermore.”

    Just in case, Ripley’s Believe It Or Not Museum has already enquired about the possibility of taking it.

    The bulb shows no signs of aging, not even a nervous flicker before its 110th birthday. ”In this mobile society, where everything moves so fast, this little lightbulb represents stability,” Owens boasts with nostalgia. ”It is doing today what is has done for 110 years.”


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    10 Comments
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    Benjey
    Benjey
    12 years ago

    I guess if if companys would produce products like this they would not make money thats why we live in a disposable world

    skvererebbe
    skvererebbe
    12 years ago

    turo shul also had a bulb that was i think older and burnt for longer !? anyone remember ?

    LiberalismIsADisease
    LiberalismIsADisease
    12 years ago

    well too bad the liberals and the envirowakos yemach sh’mom got hold of it and ruined it for everyone. now we have to buy those expensive CFL bulbs which despite their claims burn out WAY too fast, not to mention when they break you have to call the EPA for a major cleanup!

    Luckshin
    Luckshin
    12 years ago

    Stupid people, getting so crazy about a stupid bulb, let them think a second how old the world is and who created it and its the same world for 1000’s of years

    Ivrianochi
    Ivrianochi
    12 years ago

    Why don’t they make all lightbulbs this way?! I am sure you can.

    Berel13
    Berel13
    12 years ago

    I guess it is a “ner tamid”

    12 years ago

    A moshul of the Jewish People

    12 years ago

    Mah nishtanah – why is this light bulb different from all others? Perhaps a mistake was made in its original destination and it was supposed to go to a shul to become the “eternal flame”.