| Author/Contributor(s): | Murray, Tom |
| Publisher: | Lyons Press |
| Date: | 3/2/2027 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
By the turn of the twentieth century, Grandpa Murray and his family relocated to Brooklyn, where he began working with Thomas Edison, eventually designing and building the first ten power stations that were the foundation of what we now know as Con Edison. At the same time, Grandpa was inventing and innovating, piling up some five hundred patents—the electric fuse box among them—most focused on the safe use of electricity by consumers around the world. All of this memorialized in Murray family lore by a phrase heard countless times over the years: “Thomas Edison may have invented the light bulb, but it was Thomas E. Murray who turned it on.”
But with every family, there’s invariably another story, untold and hidden away. The Murrays are no different, and their story is defined by a clash between darkness and light. The author’s great-grandfather spent his life largely in the pursuit of the light and electrical energy he delivered to the world, with his power stations, inventions, and innovations. But in the decades ahead, a dark, deadly shadow of dysfunction and despair cut a wide swath through three generations of Murray men, destructive, deadly, and lurking beneath the gilded surface of the family compound at Wickapogue, a place of indescribable happiness but also unspeakable tragedy.
That is the story told in Wickapogue: Genius, Madness, and the Murrays of Southampton.