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Charles Grafton Page (January 25, 1812 – May 5, 1868) was an American electrical experimenter and inventor, physician, patent examiner, patent advocate, and professor of chemistry.
Charles Grafton Page (1812 – 1868) was an American inventor, physicist and and professor of chemistry. He is considered the father of the modern circuit breaker.
Charles Grafton Page, [Salem (Massachusetts), 1812 – Washington DC, 1868]. Fue un inventor, médico, abogado y profesor de química. Destacó por sus investigaciones en torno a la electricidad. Descubrió el interruptor, así como la Dynamic Multiplier, base de la bobina de inducción, y la llamada música galvánica.
Charles Grafton Page invented the first high-voltage induction coil in 1836. The high-voltage induction coil became an important tool of scientific research, and a standard component of automobile ignition systems in the twentieth century. Page was born in Salem, Massachusetts.
A number of pieces of apparatus manufactured by Daniel Davis were designed by Charles Grafton Page (1812-1868) or developed from his suggestions. Page graduated from Harvard College and later from the Harvard Medical School, and was, at various times in his career a physician, a patent examiner and a patent agent.
This paper describes details of one electrical experiment that Charles Grafton Page conducted in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1836. This experiment – involving spiral conductors and batteries – was an important step in the development of the induction coil. Page’s experiment ignored barriers present in modern science between body and
Following discoveries of self-induction made by Faraday (1834) and Henry (1832/1835), Harvard medical student Charles Grafton Page took bodily shocks in 1836 from his homemade spiralled conductor while interrupting its battery connection.