He was running on July 10, 1856 in Croatia (actually in more places) and saw Nikola Tesla's first rays of sunlight.
Interestingly, and perhaps as a foreshadowing of his destiny as an electrical engineer, he was born after his mother gave birth.
As we mentioned, he studied electrical engineering at the University of Prague, achieving discreet grades, since his main occupation at that time was the knowledge and handling of the Mus game, as a good university student.
After moving to Paris, France, Europe, he began to work as a 'spark' in one of the Thomas Edison franchises, specifically in McEddie, at number 23 Sobona Street.
Disgusted with suffering the penalties of a mileurista and tired of doing overtime (although he was paid for them, through an ETT), he decided to hitchhike to New York. Unfortunately, upon reaching Finisterre he was forced to abandon this method of transportation and look for other ways to cross 'the pond'.
Arrived in New York, after almost three and a half hours of travel, stopping for a coffee, he settles in what will be the laboratory where Nikola will make history.
Despite being a character really vilified by the most orthodox books, Nikola drags with him a load of inventions that, due to his carelessness and little friendliness towards paperwork and bureaucracy, few patented.
Nikola, in his laboratory, achieves the great milestone of building the alternating current induction motor (today widely used) and in turn achieves the first wireless electromagnetic transmission, before the famous Marconi. These two advances are patented and recognized (in the case of transmission after litigation with Marconi) as their authorship, however, as we mentioned, Marconi has taken the honors.
With Nikola's advances, in 1893 the first hydroelectric power station in the country was built in Niagara Falls, supplying electricity to the entire city of Buffalo. This fact makes Nikola Tesla the father of the electrical industry.
Without any sense, after his death, the United States Government seized all the documents found in Nikola's laboratory. Today those documents have not been declassified. The most conspiracy theories speak of strange electrical machines capable of controlling the weather in a large area. And even an electric sandwich maker capable of spreading the toast itself. These machines (except the sandwich maker) were designed to use the capabilities of the Ionosphere as a transmitter of electricity in the form of waves to any place.
His last years were lived as a person from the Urana, totally obsessed with the existence of extraterrestrial life. A lonely person. One of the most brilliant minds in the history of mankind, punished precisely for that history.
A mind that woke up dead in Central Park next to a bag of breadcrumbs and a bunch of pigeons.