In that old thread, one post:
"Has anyone mentioned that around that time, both before, during and after Lilienfeld, that some radio amateurs, not being rich enough to afford a tube, fiddled with point contactS (yes, plural) on crystals? Various configurations were used, including pressure on one or more of the contacts, as well as various *biasing* schemes. And there were claims of gain . . but . . reproducibility was sadly lacking. Adding true and verified stories with dates would enrich the history!"
I didn't see any evidence.
Bell Labs was able to make a commercially viable device, using prior art. But did they invent the (self-named) transistor?
Nobody really understood conduction mechanisms through solids, models of the atom were not great, high-purity minerals hard to find.