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RE: Hot Springs it's Beauty, Healing Power and Rich History? Al Capone, Tunnels under the city and infamous The Vapors bombing and explosion!

in #tunnels2 months ago

So did Nikola Tesla also design the hotel and not just the private power plant underneath the New Yorker Hotel?

Facts that could point to Tesla design.

  • Tesla actually invented the radio and not globalist backed Marconi.

Check out lyrics to We built this City.
Zuck took my thread down, but here is some of my archived evidence on this song and it's importance in order to continue #TestingtheNarrative. . .

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Nikola Tesla Greatest Inventor and Gift Giver to humanity! Why did it behoove the controllers to stifle his gift of Free Energy? Why did the profiteers credit others with his tech inventions? Follow the Money!

https://steemit.com/nikolatesla/@artistiquejewels/nikola-tesla-greatest-inventor-and-gift-giver-to-humanity-why-did-it-behoove-the-controllers-to-stifle-his-gift-of-free-energy

According ro Untapped New York,
there were Protecto Ray bathrooms with UV sanitation at the New Yorker Hotel.

https://untappedcities.com/2016/09/13/the-top-10-secrets-of-the-new-yorker-hotel/5/

Tesla and Uncle John Trump designed the only hotel in New York to have it's own power grid/plant beneath. Tesla used this to send himself into the future, then into the past before returning to the present.

https://altered-states.net/barry/tesla/
Find more info inside of here,

https://steemit.com/airships/@artistiquejewels/andrews-airship-of-1863-did-amos-dolbear-know-something-alexander-graham-bell-didn-t-sam-tillman-what-did-he-know-aero-clubs

As found in my above deep research article
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Was the ground floor of the New Yorker Hotel built from the same piezoelectric material as the Giza Pyramids?

It is said that the first story was in clad in Deer Island granite 12,000 sq.Ft and the 2nd through fourth in Indiana Limestone.

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From this article in Popular Mechanics from 2014 states,

A new documentary about Nikola Tesla’s experimental work at Wardenclyffe, his Long Island laboratory that still stands in Shoreham, got its world premiere on Oct. 4 at the Grand Ballroom of the New Yorker Hotel in Manhattan, where the visionary inventor spent his last days.

Called Tower to the People, this feature-length film directed by the award-winning filmmaker Joseph Sikorski capped off a night devoted to the great Serbian-American immigrant, which featured a special performance by piano virtuoso Marina Arsenijevic, an Emmy-nominated Serbian-American composer, whose music was used in the documentary’s soundtrack.

Also onstage before the film screening was Jane Alcorn, president of the Tesla Science Center at Wardenclyffe, a nonprofit she and other Long Islanders formed many years ago when the prospect of preserving Tesla’s lab looked like a pipe dream. The property’s owner, Agfa Corp., which had bought Wardenclyffe from Peerless Photo and wound up spending untold millions of dollars cleaning up the contaminated site, was asking $1.6 million—and developers were interested in subdividing it.

But the dream has now become reality, as the film showed the daunting effort the group took to acquire the site, aided in no small measure by Matthew Inman, whose bluntly worded fundraising appeal on his popular website “The Oatmeal,” called “Operation Let’s Build a Goddamn Tesla Museum,” helped raise more than a million dollars in a remarkably short time.

Featured in the film are interviews with Inman, celebrity magician Penn Jillette, and author Jack Hitt, to name a few, plus rare images of the inventor and restored photos from the archives of the Tesla Museum in Belgrade, Serbia, where Wardenclyffe’s blueprints were found. One of the highlights of the evening was the unveiling of a model tower, done to scale, at the back of the ballroom. The original stood 187 feet tall in Shoreham and was visible by people across the Sound in Connecticut.

At Tesla’s peak before World War I, he had the support of J.P. Morgan, who financed the lab that was designed by acclaimed American architect Stanford White. During its construction, Tesla would come out by train from Manhattan to oversee the work, and his lunch would be sent to Wardenclyffe from the Waldorf-Astoria, where Tesla was staying thanks to his close friendship with John Jacob Astor. But as Sikorski movingly chronicled in the film, Tesla’s hopes to supply free electricity wirelessly to the people of the world came to a crashing halt, once Morgan withdrew his support. All Tesla wanted was another $150,000. Instead, he got nothing and later the tower was sold for scrap.

Sikorski and his friends finished Tower to the People on credit cards and a laptop. He’d spent the seed money for the feature film he and his producers have been hoping to complete, called Fragments From Olympus: The Vision of Nikola Tesla, to help the Tesla Science Center reach its goal. Sikorski’s trailer and screenplay for that project have won awards at film festivals.

On premiere night, the show was sold out and the New Yorker Hotel had to cram rows of seats in the back of the ballroom and up on the balcony. In attendance were indie-director Jim Jarmusch and artist Rob Wilson, as well as the consul general of the Republic of Serbia. Sikorski told the Press that Serbia’s biggest newspaper, VESTI Today, made it front-page news.

As for what’s next, we hope to attract enough attention to attain distribution, specifically broadcast television, and perhaps small theatrical release,” Sikorski told the Press. “At the same time we will focus on getting Fragments funded.”

To find out more visit: TeslasDream.com and FragmentsFromOlympus.com

https://www.longislandpress.com/2014/10/08/tesla-tower-to-the-people-premieres-at-new-yorker-hotel/

From Quality Comics

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Tesla with a large bulb that could generate light from a human.

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https://steemit.com/plasmaenergy/@artistiquejewels/what-is-plasma-energy-who-is-mehran-keshe-and-what-awaits-us-in-the-new-energy-industry-that-will-help-humanity-in-health-and

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M0014782 Nikola Tesla, with his equipment
Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images
[email protected]
http://wellcomeimages.org
Nikola Tesla, with his equipment for
producing high-frequency alternating currents.
Inscribed: ‘To my illustrious friend Sir William Crookes of whom I always think and whose kind letters I never answer! Nikola Tesla June 17, 1901’
Photograph
1901 Published: –

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Remember what happened to Yugoslavia?

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Tesla's Wardencliff lab and the New Yorker Hotel

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Wardenclyffe sits on the last undeveloped sixteen acres of the original 200-acre plot of rocky farmland that Tesla bought from James Warden to build his lab on in 1901. Tesla enlisted the help of his personal friend and renowned architect Stanford White to design the building. White also designed the giant tower that would become the symbol of the site and the wrought iron chimney cap which was recently restored and unveiled at the birthday expo in 2018.

Inside the laboratory at Wardenclyffe there were three sections. Three is a number that Tesla was particularly fond of and would become obsessed with later in life. The center of the lab was the main workshop that was surrounded by a balcony from which one could look down and observe the work being done. After Tesla left the lab, subsequent owners of the property attached various types of commercial buildings to structure designed by White. The facade visible today is actually the back of the building, as the front is blocked by another structure, but since White’s design for the lab was symmetrical, both sides are the same. Friends of Science East, Inc. recently freed the eastern side of the building, which had been blocked by a commercial structure for over sixty years. The organization also hired an architectural firm that specializes in historic restorations to determine what is left of Tesla’s original laboratory and what was added by subsequent tenants. The public is not yet allowed inside due to mold.

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Tesla would ride the train east from New York City, where he was living at the Waldorf Astoria, everyday on a special line that took him and his heavy equipment to the Wardenclyffe. There Tesla worked on what could have been his biggest breakthrough, a worldwide web of free wireless power. To achieve this lofty goal, Tesla had White design a giant transmission tower. The tower stood 187 feet, or 18 stories high and was rooted 120 feet deep in the ground. At the time, it was the tallest structure on Long Island. The 55-ton steel hemispherical structure at the top had a diameter of 68 feet. On a tour led by the Telsa Science Center at Wardenclyffe president Jane Alcorn, she told the group that in the winter local teenagers would climb the tower to ice skate on frozen water that collected on the tower’s platform!

Tesla described his vision for the possibilities of his wireless network in a 1908 article for Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony:

What Tesla envisioned and wrote!

“As soon as completed, it will be possible for a business man in New York to dictate instructions, and have them instantly appear in type at his office in London or elsewhere. He will be able to call up, from his desk, and talk to any telephone subscriber on the globe, without any change whatever in the existing equipment. An inexpensive instrument, not bigger than a watch, will enable its bearer to hear anywhere, on sea or land, music or song, the speech of a political leader, the address of an eminent man of science, or the sermon of an eloquent clergyman, delivered in some other place, however distant.”

Sounds a lot like the phones we all carry today! Tesla fervently believed that what he saw as the future of wireless technology was “not a dream” but a “simple feat of scientific electrical engineering, only expensive,” as he described it in 1905. Were he successful in his execution, Tesla could have ushered in the information age nearly 100 years earlier.

WAS he successful and the technology was stolen?
You decide!
Or did he have to go underground so to speak due to all of the controllers not wanting humanity gifted with this "ground breaking" technology Tesla continued to offer?

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Tesla’s Lab and Tower in 1904, Image via Wikimedia Commons
It has been allegedly stated,

Tesla had an office in the building but was kicked out after only a few months for failure to pay his rent. When news of Italian scientist Guglielmo Marconi’s successful transmission of a signal from England to Newfoundland reached Tesla, he ramped up his plans for Wardenclyffe. These pricier plans wound up costing more than the $150,000 J.P. Morgan had agreed to front. When Morgan denied additional funding, Tesla went ahead with the plans anyway.

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https://teslauniverse.com/nikola-tesla/articles/world-system-wireless-transmission-energy

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