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Science Quickly

Franklin's Lightning Rod Served Political Ends

Science Quickly

Scientific American

Science

4.41.4K Ratings

🗓️ 4 July 2017

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Whether lightning rods should have rounded or pointy ends became a point of contention between rebellious Americans and King George III.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is Scientific Americans 60 Second Science.

0:05.0

I'm Steve Mursky.

0:07.0

Besides helping to create the United States of America,

0:09.9

Benjamin Franklin of course invented the lightning rod, which sits atop buildings and protects

0:15.4

them by attracting lightning strikes and conducting them to the ground, rather than through

0:20.5

the structure, which can cause fires or outright electrocutions.

0:25.6

But what's better, a lightning rod with a round end, or one that comes to a sharp point?

0:30.5

According to the book Revolutionary Science by Steve Jones at University College London,

0:36.0

Franklin liked lightning rods to be, in Franklin's own words, made sharp as a needle.

0:41.0

And so in North America, Jones writes, the use of one or the other was interpreted

0:46.5

as a statement in favor of the rebels or of the crown.

0:50.4

In fact, Jones continues, George the third to advertise his displeasure at the colonial revolt

0:55.9

had the sharpened structures on Buckingham Palace replaced with rounded versions.

1:01.2

The king even pressured the Royal Society, the leading scientific

1:04.2

organization of the time and still highly regarded today, to endorse the idea that

1:09.1

round-ended lightning rods were better than Franklin's pointy ones, to which the president of the Royal

1:15.2

Society responded, I will always do my best to fulfill the wishes of his majesty, but I am able to change

1:22.0

neither the laws of nature nor the effects of its forces.

1:27.0

Some Americans today, especially a few in positions of authority,

1:31.0

would do well to acknowledge the reality of the laws of nature and the effects

1:36.4

of its forces.

1:39.2

For Scientific Americans 60 Second Science, I'm Steve Mursky.

...

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