Samuel Finley Breese Morse
Samuel Finley Breese Morse
Samuel Finley Breese Morse (1791-1872), American artist and inventor, designed and developed the first successful electromagnetic telegraph system.
Samuel F. B. Morse was born in Charlestown, Mass., on April 27, 1791; he was the son of Jedidiah Morse, a clergyman. Samuel graduated from Yale College in 1810. At college he had painted miniatures on ivory and wished to pursue a career in art, but his father was opposed to this. Samuel took a job as a clerk in a Charlestown bookstore. During this time he continued to paint, and his work soon came to the attention of two of America's most respected artists, Gilbert Stuart and Washington Allston, both of whom spoke highly of his abilities. His father reversed his decision and in 1811 allowed Morse to travel to England with Allston. He studied with Allston for 4 years in London. During this time Morse also worked at the Royal Academy with the venerable American artist Benjamin West.
In 1815 Morse returned to America and set up a studio in Boston. He soon discovered that his large canvases attracted favorable comment but few customers. In those days Americans looked to painters primarily for portraits, and Morse found that even these commissions were difficult to secure. He traveled extensively in search of work, finally settling in New York City in 1823. Perhaps his two best-known canvases are his portraits of the Marquis de Lafayette, which he painted in Washington, D.C., in 1825.
In 1826 Morse helped found, and became the first president of, the National Academy of Design, an organization which was intended to help secure commissions for artists and to raise the taste of the public. The previous year Morse's wife had died; in 1826 his father died. The death of his mother in 1828 dealt another severe blow, and the following year Morse left for Europe to recover.
In October 1832 Morse returned to the United States aboard the packet Sully. On the voyage he met Charles Thomas Jackson, an eccentric doctor and inventor, with whom he discussed electromagnetism. Jackson assured Morse that an electric inpulse could be carried along even a very long wire. Morse later recalled that he reacted to this news with the thought that "if this be so, and the presence of electricity can be made visible in any desired part of the circuit, I see no reason why intelligence might not be instantaneously transmitted by electricity to any distance." He immediately made some sketches of a device to accomplish this purpose.
Morse again returned to his artistic career, becoming a professor of painting and sculpture at the University of the City of New York. At the same time he entered politics. Like
many Americans, he was intolerant of both immigrants and Catholics, and he became a candidate for mayor of New York on a "nativist" platform. In later life his prejudices softened, and he was better able to tolerate the ethnic diversity of the growing country.
The telegraph was never far from Morse's mind during these years. He had long been interested in gadgetry and had even taken out a patent. He had also attended public lectures on electricity. His knowledge of the subject was rudimentary, however, and outdated by the rapid developments in the field during this period. His shipboard sketches of 1832 had clearly laid out the three major parts of the telegraph: a sender which opened and closed an electric circuit, a receiver which used an electromagnet to record the signal, and a code which translated the signal into letters and numbers. By January 1836 he had a working model of the device which he showed to Leonard Gale, a colleague at the university. Gale advised him of recent developments in the field of electromagnetism and especially of the work of the American physicist Joseph Henry. As a result, Morse was able to greatly improve the efficiency of his device.
In September 1837 Morse formed a partnership with Alfred Vail, who contributed both money and mechanical skill. They applied for a patent, and Morse went to Europe seeking patents there as well. He was rejected in England, where a similar device had already been developed. The American patent remained in doubt until 1843, when Congress voted $30,000 to finance the building of an experimental telegraph line between the national capital and Baltimore, Md. It was over this line, on May 24, 1844, that
Morse tapped out his famous message, "What hath God wrought!"
Morse was willing to sell all his rights to the invention to the Federal government for $100,000, but a combination of congressional indifference and private greed frustrated the plan. Instead he turned his business affairs over to Amos Kendall. Morse then settled down to a life of acclaim and wealth. He was generous in his philanthropies and was one of the founders of Vassar College in 1861. His last years were marred, however, by controversies over the priority of his invention and questions as to how much he had been helped by others, especially Joseph Henry. Morse died in New York City on April 2, 1872.
Further Reading
The standard biography of Morse is Carleton Mabee, The American Leonardo: A Life of Samuel F. B. Morse (1943). A shorter study is Oliver W. Larkin, Samuel F. B. Morse and American Democratic Art (1954). The development of the telegraph network is described in Robert L. Thompson, Wiring a Continent (1947). □
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Amendment 41's rules will be clarified.(Commentary/Editorial)
Newspaper article from: Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO); 1/8/2007; 700+ words
; ...votes have been counted. Not so with Amendment 41. The Colorado electorate jumped on...since Election Day, questions about Amendment 41 have accumulated like snow. Can a...its language. At issue is Section 9 of Amendment 41, which states: "Legislation may...
|
|
AMENDMENT OPPOSITION RESURFACES : RUBIN ASSAILS PLAN FOR BALANCED BUDGET.(News)
Newspaper article from: Daily News (Los Angeles, CA); 11/14/1996; 700+ words
; ...open the door a bit to a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced federal budget...actively oppose'' the adoption of any such amendment. In an interview, Rubin dismissed a...that Clinton held out Tuesday: that the amendment could be written with an escape hatch...
|
|
Amendment challenge.(CIVICS SKILLS)
Magazine article from: Current Events, a Weekly Reader publication; 10/22/2007; 700+ words
; The first 10 amendments to the U.S. Constitution...write the number of the amendment the sentence describes. --1. This amendment provides protection against...seizures." --2. This amendment guarantees the right to a...
|
|
Anticipated amendments. (to House defense authorization bill)
Newspaper article from: Defense Daily; 9/12/1990; 700+ words
; ANTICIPATED AMENDMENTS STRATEGIC DEFENSE INITIATIVE...Dornan will offer an amendment to increase SDI funding...and Bozer will offer an amendment to terminate the SDI program...agencies. Under this amendment the SDI Organization would...
|
|
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS TAKE SOME RESEARCH
Newspaper article from: Evansville Courier & Press; 2/29/2004; ; 647 words
; ...that. The 27th Amendment is a pretty interesting...wrote the original amendments to the Constitution...there were 12 amendments proposed, 10 of...original first amendment dealt with how...legislatures. The 12 amendments were proposed in...by 1791 the pay amendment had been approved...
|
|
Amendment 1 puts some Colorado issuers' status in doubt.
Magazine article from: The Bond Buyer; 6/5/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...status under the state's debt-limiting Amendment 1 despite a court ruling in May that...the three-year-old constitutional amendment said last week they expect more litigation...issue is whether an issuer falls under Amendment 1, which would subject it to two votes...
|
|
Amendment to Ban Gay Marriage in Utah Hits Opposition.
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 5/13/2004; 700+ words
; ...Commission, says the amendment is more about election...reviewing proposed amendments during the legislative...never reviewed the amendment, skipping over the...similar constitutional amendments in California and Hawaii...state gay marriage amendment." At the State Republican...
|
|
Marriage amendments all expected to pass; May be factor in presidential race.(PAGE ONE)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 10/28/2004; 700+ words
; ...constitutional amendment defining the...institution. The amendments in Michigan...constitution, amendment supporters...considering marriage amendments, eight...for both the amendments and Mr. Kerry...that [the amendment] will help...
|
|
Amendment skirmishes continue; Louisiana measure on ballot; legal appeal likely in Michigan.(NATION)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 9/6/2004; 700+ words
; ...followed with these amendments." In Louisiana late...state's proposed amendment and cleared the way...which opposes the amendment, is considering an...block votes on marriage amendments. The Oklahoma case...challenged marriage amendment petitions in at least...
|
|
AMENDMENTS C & D
Newspaper article from: Wyoming Tribune-Eagle; 10/30/2004; 700+ words
; ...Constitutional Amendments C & D. Wyoming...decide on these two amendments when they go to...polls on Tuesday. Amendment C The proposal...passage of proposed Amendment D will allow that...both proposed amendments C & D because...
|
|
Constitutional Amendment
Encyclopedia entry from: West's Encyclopedia of American Law
...ratified. Of the amendments ratified, only...twenty-first amendment, which repealed...Twenty-sixth Amendments. Commentators...out that the amendment process is not...law" (Fifth Amendment). Subsequent amendments have dealt with...
|
|
Constitutional Amendments
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States
...only by the First Amendment) might now be...constitutional amendments in other ways. The Eleventh Amendment was arguably less...States. But three amendments adopted after the...The Thirteenth Amendment prohibited involuntary...
|
|
Second Amendment
Encyclopedia entry from: West's Encyclopedia of American Law
...central government extracted the amendment as a compromise from those...The precise wording of the amendment was changed two times before...form. As with many of the amendments, the exact wording proved...which included the Second Amendment. In its final form, the...
|
|
Third Amendment
Encyclopedia entry from: West's Encyclopedia of American Law
THIRD AMENDMENT The Third Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads: No Soldier shall, in time...manner to be prescribed by law. Ratified in 1791, the Third Amendment to the U.S. Constitution sets forth two basic requirements...
|
|
Twenty-Seventh Amendment
Encyclopedia entry from: West's Encyclopedia of American Law
...curious and unprecedented. The amendment was first drafted by james...bill of rights. The proposed amendment did not fare well, as only...period in which the first ten amendments were ratified by the requisite...fourths of the states. The amendment was largely neglected for...
|