Who Was Thomas Henry Moray? (Part 1)
I have been researching T. Henry Moray for a couple of years now and his story is a fascinating one. He developed one of the most expert observed "free energy" device to date and I have been working over the last year+ to figure out how he was able to produce usable electricity and create a modern version, since almost all of his blueprints/schematics and prototypes were destroyed and he was very secretive with his ideas in order to prevent the Russian and American governments from co-opting his tech for destructive purposes. Over the next several posts I will go into his past and share his bio, what we know of his device and recorded witness testimony, and the work I have put into reframing his ideas through the lens of modern semiconductor and plasma physics. Below is his early years bio and the start of Thomas Henry Moray's journey. In 1892, Thomas Henry Moray was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He grew up with a natural pull toward electrical engineering and eventually pursued formal education in the field. But the pivotal chapter of his story began overseas. As a young man, Moray traveled to Sweden on a Mormon mission, and it was there that he allegedly discovered a peculiar mineral specimen that would come to be known as the "Swedish Stone." Moray believed this stone held extraordinary electrical properties, and when he returned home, he spent years incorporating it into a device he claimed could pull usable electrical power from the environment. What he eventually built was a roughly 60-pound apparatus housed in a wooden box, connected to an antenna and a ground. He called his core components "Moray valves," hand-built elements containing the Swedish Stone and other semiconductor-type materials that he kept deliberately secret. By the 1920s, Moray was demonstrating this device publicly, claiming it could light banks of bulbs and run motors with no conventional power source. He wasn't doing this quietly, either. Over the span of roughly 10 to 15 years, Moray conducted demonstrations for a wide range of observers, including engineers and government officials. He invited skeptics. He ran the device in remote locations away from power lines. The wooden box, the antenna, the glowing bulbs; dozens of people saw it with their own eyes. Whatever was happening inside that box, Moray was clearly not afraid to show it off.