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In 1890, the Electric Storage Battery Company installed the first practical
storage battery at the Germantown Electric Lighting Company in Philadelphia.
The battery furnished the lighting current, while a dynamo charged the
battery. Soon after, the battery company received a request for 13,000
cells to power six new electric streetcars for the Lehigh Avenue Railway
Company in Philadelphia. These streetcars became the first self-propelled
vehicles to challenge the supremacy of the horse. Throughout the 1890s,
the demand for storage batteries increased, forcing the Electric Storage
Battery Company to move to larger facilities.
The possibilities for storage batteries continued to grow. The Pullman
Company used Chloride Accumulators to light a few of its luxury railroad
cars, and small batteries were sold to operate electric fans, sewing
machines and phonographs. In 1898, batteries powered the U.S. Navy's
first submarine. Just before the turn of the century, Electric Storage
Battery Company batteries were used as power sources in electric locomotives,
streetcars, passenger cars, surface boats and telephone exchanges, and
for the nation's first automatic switching and signaling systems for
railroads.
As the new century dawned, electric taxicabs first
appeared in many large cities. They became so popular that The Electric
Storage Battery Company developed a product of greater capacity and
less weight especially for the "Ply-for-hire" trade. This new battery,
introduced in 1900, was the first to bear the trade name "Exide," short
for "Excellent Oxide."

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