The Telegraph
The Telegraph
Sources
Invention. Samuel F.B. Morse was not the only contender for the title of inventor of the telegraph. By the late 1830s many other inventors had come up with similar devices, but it was Morse who managed to outlast the other sixty-two claimants. One reason the telegraph attracted so many inventors was that the technology of sending communications through a wire was not particularly complex. An operator tapped out a message by opening and closing an electric circuit in a coded pattern while at the receiving end the current flowed through an electromagnet which moved a long arm (much like a doorbell works), typing out the message as a series of dots and spaces on a strip of paper. Morse, however, was the first to prove the idea practicable, with the use of his flexible “Morse code” of dots and dashes to represent letters. In 1840 Morse managed to patent his telegraph, but investors balked at the invention, and it took three more years of mechanical tinkering and political lobbying before Morse could convince Congress to fund an experimental line from Washington to Baltimore, at a cost of $30, 000.
“The Great Highway of Thought.” Finished on schedule, Morse officially opened the first intercity electromagnetic telegraph in the world on 24 May 1844 by sending from Washington to Baltimore the massage “What Hath God Wrought.” Five days later came the most publicized use of the early telegraph. Morse’s agent in Baltimore had been covering the Democratic Party’s convention in that city, and on 29 May he transmitted to Morse at the capital the surprising news that James K. Polk, the nation’s first “dark horse” candidate, had just been nominated for president. Democrats still in Washington sent back their congratulations to Polk, which were promptly read aloud on the convention floor. For the politicians crowding around Morse in the capital, and the newspapermen at the Baltimore end of the line, this event showed the revolutionary potential of the telegraph. For the first time in human history, in the words of historian Menahem Blondheim, “persons at great distances from each other could interact in virtually real time,” using a communications medium that was not dependent on the speed of a messenger. As one wondering commentator put it, “time and space” had been “overcome.”
Business Applications. Morse proved the telegraph would work, but at first no one seemed to know what to do with the new gadget. The government only used the line from Washington to Baltimore three times in first year. Traffic was so slow that a few people proposed using the line for a long-distance chess game. The only high-volume users were the newspapers and commercial shippers of Baltimore and Washington. Such light use convinced Congress that a federally owned system could never pay for itself, and they refused to fund the telegraph’s development. Consequently, Morse and his partners transferred their rights to private development corporations. By the mid 1850s six regional companies had constructed twenty-three thousand miles of telegraph lines. Once lines extended between major commercial and news centers, the traffic became enormous. The telegraph virtually created the agricultural commodities markets, making possible not only the rapid transmission of crop prices around the nation but also better integration of supply and demand. Railroads used the lines to ensure the safety of their trains and to serve their freight customers better by tracking shipments.
Newspapers. Telegraphs eventually became indispensable to the transportation industry, but the heaviest initial users were the highly competitive daily newspapers, who lived and died by the “scoop.” At first some newspapers tried to monopolize the new medium by buying up all the time on a telegraph line between major cities such as New York and Washington. If no breaking news arrived at either end of the line, agents of the papers would simply transmit sections of the Bible to keep the line open. On slow days operators might get all the way from Genesis to Deuteronomy. Telegraph companies quickly changed the first-come-first-served policy that made these practices possible, opting instead for a fifteen-minute maximum-use rule. Unable to monopolize the lines, newspapers cooperated to form the Associated Press in 1848, an organization in which the big dailies formed “press pools” to share nonlocal news coming in over the wires. Another effect of the fifteen-minute rule was to make time available for individuals, resulting in an exponential increase in private transmissions between distant friends and relatives, one of Morse’s original goals for the telegraph.
Menahem Blondheim, News over the Wires: The Telegraph and the Flow of Public Information in America , 1844–1897 (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1994);
Carleton Mabee, The American Leonardo: A Life of Samuel F.B. Morse (New York: Knopf, 1944);
Robert L. Thompson, Wiring a Continent: The History of the Telegraph Industry in the United States, 1832–1866 (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1947).
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Joseph Jefferson's Lincoln: Vindication of an autobiographical legend
Magazine article from: Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society; 7/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...of the nineteenth century, Joseph Jefferson. His Autobiography tells...in its substantial details. Joseph Jefferson (1829-1905) stands alongside...take their children to enjoy Joseph Jefferson not only understood the stage...
|
|
Renaming American Fault Lines in the Joseph Jefferson Version of Rip Van Winkle
Magazine article from: Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film; 1/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...nearly a half-century later by Joseph Jefferson and Dion Boucicault - a telling...Rip Van Winkle through which Joseph Jefferson himself would become a national...In the 1889 Autobiography of Joseph Jefferson, the actor/playwright recalled...
|
|
Robert Joseph Jefferson.(DEATHS)
Newspaper article from: Telegram & Gazette (Worcester, MA); 3/23/2007; 486 words
; ROCKY HILL, CT Robert Joseph Jefferson, 63, of West St., Rocky Hill...Clifford T. and Frances (Gublo) Jefferson, Sr. Robert lived in North Carolina...survived by one daughter, Nicole Jefferson of Bossier City, LA; one brother...
|
|
Mellow drama: how Jeff Committee staged happy ending in theater awards dispute. (Joseph Jefferson Awards Committee)
Magazine article from: Crain's Chicago Business; 10/27/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...Twenty-nine years after the Joseph Jefferson Awards Committee was formed...understood outside the 40-member Jefferson Awards Committee. "This is...awards took their name from Joseph Jefferson Ill, a member of the first...
|
|
OBIT - BROWN, JOSEPH JEFFERSON JR.
Newspaper article from: Roanoke Times & World News; 4/24/2007; 455 words
; Joseph Jefferson Brown, Jr., 89, of Golden...he was a son of the late Joseph Edward Brown and Lula Margaret...Pat of Talbot, Tenn., Joseph W. Brown and wife, Janice...American Cancer Society 1808 Jefferson St. Bluefield, W.Va...
|
|
Tinseltown Dreams; It's never too late to become a star.(Edith and Joseph Jefferson resume acting careers in the 80s)(Cover Story)
Magazine article from: Newsweek; 1/17/2005; ; 700+ words
; Byline: David J. Jefferson Of all the battles I expected my...said. Never mind that Edith and Joseph Jefferson hadn't performed since before...publicist, I must report that Edith Jefferson will turn 90 on April 24. Don...
|
|
Aviva Crane: 1930 - 2006: Staple of state's theater circuitActress played leading roles on stages across Illinois and enlisted benefactors to create Joseph Jefferson Awards for Chicago productions.
Newspaper article from: Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL); 12/18/2006; 700+ words
; ...own version of the Tony Awards and so started the Joseph Jefferson Awards. Mrs. Crane, 76, died Tuesday, Dec...community, Mrs. Crane put together what became the Joseph Jefferson Awards Committee in 1968, and the first honors were...
|
|
Could It Be Magic? The Barry Manilow Songbook Wins Black Theatre Alliance Award and is Honored With Two Joseph Jefferson Award Nominations.
PR Newswire; 9/25/2001; 700+ words
; ...Award. The production was further honored with two Joseph Jefferson Award nominations. The production is now running...Musical Direction. Further accolades came from the Joseph Jefferson Awards committee, which nominated Could It Be Magic...
|
|
Chi Shakespeare tops Jeff kudos.(LEGIT)(Chicago Shakespeare's Joseph Jefferson Awards)(Brief article)
Magazine article from: Daily Variety; 10/21/2008; ; 700+ words
; Following up on its regional Tony Award, Chicago Shakespeare led Chi's Joseph Jefferson Awards on Monday night, taking home five trophies. Chicago Shakespeare won four awards for its production of "The Comedy of...
|
|
Jeff puffs Chi's Court.(The Court Theater wins Joseph Jefferson Awards)
Magazine article from: Daily Variety; 11/8/2006; ; 700+ words
; The Court Theater emerged as local royalty Monday, taking 10 Joseph Jefferson Awards: six for its revisionist take on musical "Man of La Mancha" and four for its staging of August Wilson's "Fences...
|
|
Joseph Jefferson
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Joseph Jefferson American actor Joseph Jefferson (1829-1905) is remembered chiefly for his characterization...Van Winkle. He was one of America's best comic actors. Joseph Jefferson was born on Feb. 20, 1829. His great-grandfather had...
|
|
Jefferson, Joseph
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Theatre
Jefferson, Joseph (1774–1832), comic actor. Although best remembered as the grandfather of the famous Joseph Jefferson , he was one of the most accomplished and beloved comedians of his own...
|
|
Wright, Joseph Jefferson Burr
Book article from: The Oxford Essential Dictionary of the U.S. Military
Wright, Joseph Jefferson Burr (1801–1878) U.S. army medical officer. Born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, attended the University of...
|
|
Jefferson, Thomas
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States
Jefferson, Thomas (b. Shadwell [now Albemarle...States, 1801–1809. Thomas Jefferson exerted a profound influence on the...Alexander Hamilton , John Marshall , and Joseph Story . Jefferson and James Madison produced the Kentucky...
|
|
Joseph Emerson Brown
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Joseph Emerson Brown Georgia governor and U.S. senator Joseph Emerson Brown (1821-1894) is chiefly remembered...attitude toward the policies of Confederate president Jefferson Davis. Joseph E. Brown was born in Pickens District, S.C...
|