Category: Electrical Age
- The Invention of "Death Rays"
This theory held that advanced electrical inventors were moving beyond light, telegraphy, and motors toward invisible long-range weapons capable of killing silently at great distance. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, rapid developments in electricity encouraged public speculation that the next breakthrough would be a remote “electric cannon” or death ray. The historical record clearly shows that press culture repeatedly attached extraordinary weapon rumors to celebrated inventors, especially later to Nikola Tesla, and that the language of invisible electrical force made such ideas seem plausible. What remains largely unproven for the nineteenth century is the existence of an actual operational long-range death ray. The importance of the theory lies in how early electrical modernity turned inventors into suspected architects of unseen warfare.