The Electrician


The Electrician, published in London from 1861 to 1952, was the earliest and foremost electrical engineering periodical and scientific journal. Originally established in 1861, it was discontinued after about three years. In 1878 a new journal with the same title was launched and thereafter published weekly. The Electrician billed itself in the early 1860s as "a weekly journal of Telegraphy, Electricity, and Applied Chemistry" and was published by Thomas Piper. the new Electrician that appeared in the late 1870s had a somewhat different focus and was published by James Gray on behalf of the proprietors, John Pender and James Anderson of the Eastern Telegraph Company, the biggest cable firm of the day. It described itself as "a weekly illustrated journal of electrical engineering, industry and science" and also featured more theoretical aspects of electrical engineering such as electromagnetism. In the late nineteenth century, The Electrician Printing and Publication Company Limited was established and began publishing shorter electrical engineering texts including well-known early electrical engineering titles such as Oliver Heaviside's Electromagnetic Theory, Oliver Lodge's The Work of Hertz and Some of His Successors, and many others. Some of these publications were based on papers presented elsewhere and published in full in The Electrician. The new series of The Electrician quickly established itself in the field of electrical engineering and was regularly quoted and cited in Nature and elsewhere.
Between 1889 and 1895 an American journal also called The Electrician was published in New York by Williams & Co. Often referred to as the American Electrician, it was merged into another electrical engineering periodical, Electrical World.