Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword by Gary Hoover
Preface
Introduction
1. Origins
2. Working on the Railroad
3. It’s Hard to Stop a Train
4. The Smoky City
5. Straight Air Brakes
6. Automatic Air Brakes
7. What’s a Wilmerding?
8. Two Trains, One Track
9. Solitude
10. Gas Pains
11. More Energy
12. AC or DC
13. Assembling the Pieces
14. The Greatest Inventor Who Ever Lived
15. The Greatest Experimenter Who Ever Lived
16. Bankers Always Win
17. Dying for Electricity
18. The Worst of Times
19. The White City
20. Over a Barrel at Niagara
21. New Lands to Conquer
22. Rotary Redux
23. Trolleys and Trains
24. Panic!
25. Homes and Family
26. Retirement, Honors, and Death
27. Memorials
28. The Next Century
Appendix I—Westinghouse Family Genealogy
Appendix II—Automatic Air Brake Operation
Appendix III—Electrical Engineering 101
Appendix IV—How Does an Induction Motor Work?
Appendix V—How Does a Turbine Operate?
Appendix VI—Patent Law Primer
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
Index
William R. Huber worked at Bell Telephone Laboratories and other major American technology companies before becoming an expert witness in patent litigation cases. He lives near Pinehurst, North Carolina.
“Huber is a Pittsburgh native and clearly an admirer of
Westinghouse, his contributions to Pittsburgh, and his relatively
humane treatment of employees. Huber writes well: compared to the
previous biographies, this one is better illustrated and more
informative.... The detailed, illustrated appendixes included in
the book will assist readers wishing to understand Westinghouse's
technical accomplishments...recommended”—Choice
“Excellent...filled with evocative pictures, maps and detailed
diagrams...Huber unfolds a richly textured story about how one
man’s persistence almost invariably paved a successful path to
solving daunting problems.”—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
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