Career
With Edwin J. Houston, a former teacher and later colleague of Thomson's at Central High School, Thomson founded the Thomson-Houston Electric Company. Notable inventions created by Thomson during this period include an arc-lighting system, an automatically regulated three-coil dynamo, a magnetic lightning arrester, and a local power transformer. In 1892 the Thomson-Houston Electric Company merged with the Edison General Electric Company to become the General Electric Company.
The historian Thomas P. Hughes writes that Thomson "displayed methodological characteristics in the workshop and the laboratory as [an] inventor and in the business world as [an] entrepreneur. He also chose to solve problems in the rapidly expanding field of electric light and power." Thomson's name is further commemorated by the British Thomson-Houston Company (BTH), and the French companies Thomson and Alstom.
Thomson was notable both for his emphasis on models and for the singular focus with which he pursued his research, with Thomson referring to his workshop as a "model room" rather than a laboratory. Between 1880 and 1885, Thomson averaged twenty-one patent applications annually, doubling that average between 1885 and 1890. Upon his namesake company's merger to form General Electric, Thomson relocated his laboratory to a location near Boston away from GE's headquarters to ensure his control over his research. After being asked to become the director of GE, Thomson rejected the offer preferring continued research to management.
As a record of Thomson's inventive work there are about six hundred patents in the United States alone, many of the inventions being of such importance that they have gone into extensive use in lighting, railways, power transmission, etc. The Thomson Electric Meter, as an example, which received first prize in a meter competition in Paris in 1890, is now numbered by millions in use. His pioneer discoveries and inventions in alternating currents are well known. It is not so well known that he is the inventor of the electric air drill as used today. Thomson was pioneer also in high frequency work, upon which in later years wireless methods have been based. He was the originator of the art of electric welding by the resistance method, a process which is being more and more extensively applied to metal manufactures, and which in fact is essential to many of them.