I have not TG.
But I do remember there being a porch light to a museum in New York that was lit by one of Einstein's early bulbs that stopped working when there was a big ole blackout in the North East. If I recall correct it was in the mid 1980's and the rumor was aliens caused it.
When the power returned to bulb did not come back on (if I understood the story right).
A link to the top 7 oldest working light bulbs.
https://www.oldest.org/technology/light-bulbs/
Here's one from my bucket list:
A Franco toy pistol flashlight from about 1912. They were made for give away prizes by contract with Franco by a few newspapers way back in the early 1910's. The newspapers held contests to see who could sell the most subscriptions and the Franco's were one of the prizes. Very hard to come by but not especially sought after by collectors. I figured at least 2 zeros to acquire one if ever. I got it for $22 shipped.
Overall in good shape but parts inside to make it go are missing hence the low price.
Parts that would not be hard to make but I just keep it on a shelf as is.
It was a 2aa light.
Bonus: and reason for the post.
The original 1912-ish bulb still worked when 3 volts was applied.
It is probably filled with argon.
I have a few other working bulbs from that era that arrived in old flashlights and still work but I pulled them imediately and installed Tung Sol E10 bulbs from the 1960's.