登陆注册
18903100000017

第17章

During the summer of 1842 he insulated a wire two miles long with hempen threads saturated with pitch-tar and surrounded with india-rubber. On October 18, during bright moonlight, he submerged this wire in New York Harbour, between Castle Garden and Governor's Island, by unreeling it from a small boat rowed by a man. After signals had been sent through it, the wire was cut by an anchor, and a portion of it carried off by sailors. This appears to be the first experiment in signalling on a subaqueous wire. It was repeated on a canal at Washington the following December, and both are described in a letter to the Secretary of the Treasury, December 23, 1844, in which Morse states his belief that 'telegraphic communication on the electro-magnetic plan may with certainty be established across the Atlantic Ocean. Startling as this may now seem, I am confident the time will come when the project will be realised.'

In December, 1842, the inventor made another effort to obtain the help of Congress, and the Committee on Commerce again recommended an appropriation of 30,000 dollars in aid of the telegraph. Morse had come to be regarded as a tiresome 'crank' by some of the Congressmen, and they objected that if the magnetic telegraph were endowed, mesmerism or any other 'ism' might have a claim on the Treasury. The Bill passed the House by a slender majority of six votes, given orally, some of the representatives fearing that their support of the measure would alienate their constituents. Its fate in the Senate was even more dubious; and when it came up for consideration late one night before the adjournment, a senator, the Hon. Fernando Wood, went to Morse, who watched in the gallery, and said,'There is no use in your staying here. The Senate is not in sympathy with your project. I advise you to give it up, return home, and think no more about it.'

Morse retired to his rooms, and after paying his bill for board, including his breakfast the next morning, he found himself with only thirty-seven cents and a half in the world. Kneeling by his bed-side he opened his heart to God, leaving the issue in His hands, and then, comforted in spirit, fell asleep. While eating his breakfast next morning, Miss Annie G. Ellsworth, daughter of his friend the Hon. Henry L. Ellsworth, Commissioner of Patents, came up with a beaming countenance, and holding out her hand, said--'Professor, I have come to congratulate you.'

'Congratulate me!' replied Morse; 'on what ?'

'Why,' she exclaimed,' on the passage of your Bill by the Senate!'

It had been voted without debate at the very close of the session.

Years afterwards Morse declared that this was the turning-point in the history of the telegraph. 'My personal funds,' he wrote,' were reduced to the fraction of a dollar; and had the passage of the Bill failed from any cause, there would have been little prospect of another attempt on my part to introduce to the world my new invention.'

Grateful to Miss Ellsworth for bringing the good news, he declared that when the Washington to Baltimore line was complete hers should be the first despatch.

The Government now paid him a salary of 2,500 dollars a month to superintend the laying of the underground line which he had decided upon. Professors Gale and Fisher became his assistants. Vail was put in charge, and Mr. Ezra Cornell, who founded the Cornell University on the site of the cotton mill where he had worked as a mechanic, and who had invented a machine for laying pipes, was chosen to supervise the running of the line. The conductor was a five-wire cable laid in pipes; but after several miles had been run from Baltimore to the house intended for the relay, the insulation broke down. Cornell, it is stated, injured his machine to furnish an excuse for the stoppage of the work.

The leaders consulted in secret, for failure was staring them in the face. Some 23,000 dollars of the Government grant were spent, and Mr.

Smith, who had lost his faith in the undertaking, claimed 4000 of the remaining 7000 dollars under his contract for laying the line. A bitter quarrel arose between him and Morse, which only ended in the grave. He opposed an additional grant from Government, and Morse, in his dejection, proposed to let the patent expire, and if the Government would use his apparatus and remunerate him, he would reward Alfred Vail, while Smith would be deprived of his portion. Happily, it was decided to abandon the subterranean line, and erect the conductor on poles above the ground. A start was made from the Capitol, Washington, on April 1, 1844, and the line was carried to the Mount Clare Depot, Baltimore, on May 23, 1843. Next morning Miss Ellsworth fulfilled her promise by inditing the first message. She chose the words, 'What hath God wrought?' and they were transmitted by Morse from the Capitol at 8.45 a.m., and received at Mount Clare by Alfred Vail.

This was the first message of a public character sent by the electric telegraph in the Western World, and it is preserved by the Connecticut Historical Society. The dots and dashes representing the words were not drawn with pen and ink, but embossed on the paper with a metal stylus.

The machine itself was kept in the National Museum at Washington, and on removing it, in 1871, to exhibit it at the Morse Memorial Celebration at New York, a member of the Vail family discovered a folded paper attached to its base. A corner of the writing was torn away before its importance was recognised; but it proved to be a signed statement by Alfred Vail, to the effect that the method of embossing was invented by him in the sixth storey of the NEW YORK OBSERVER office during 1844, prior to the erection of the Washington to Baltimore line, without any hint from Morse. 'I have not asserted publicly my right as first and sole inventor,' he says, 'because I wished to preserve the peaceful unity of the invention, and because I could not, according to my contract with Professor Morse, have got a patent for it.'

同类推荐
  • 太上洞玄灵宝往生救苦妙经

    太上洞玄灵宝往生救苦妙经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 鸳鸯针

    鸳鸯针

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 息除中夭陀罗尼经

    息除中夭陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 巴西集

    巴西集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 参同直指

    参同直指

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 问帝纪元

    问帝纪元

    一个杀手穿越异界,世间毁誉,世人冷眼,与我何干?我自淡然一笑;以吾本性,快意恩仇,以吾本心,遨游世间,我命由我不由天。看其如何踏上异世巅峰,成为一代邪君!
  • 霸上仙君:你可省点心吧

    霸上仙君:你可省点心吧

    【作为一只妖,一只会法术的莲花妖,温玉寄居在曾杀妖无数的某尊上的山头上甚是悲摧,费劲脑力,一翻斗争终于离开了那个生活了几百年的火坑,下山历练。可刚出了狼窝又进了虎穴,落到了冷到爆炸的某上神手里,跑腿,倒茶,捏肩……温玉仰天长啸:上天啊你还要闹哪样,活不下去了,你一个雷劈死我吧!某上天默默表示,你有上神罩着,谁敢劈你。欲哭无泪~】
  • 猎神守则

    猎神守则

    一场波澜壮阔、毁天灭地的惊世阴谋……一个身如蝼蚁、不安天命的复仇少年……一条精彩纷呈、快意热血的修仙之路……宿命与灵魂交织,命途与热血相触。猎神之途,轰然开幕!
  • 实用风水现用现查手册

    实用风水现用现查手册

    风水术是一种传统的文化观,一种广泛流传的民俗,一种趋吉避凶的术数,一种有关环境与人的学问,同时也是调整和改造命运的一种玄学。人生活于天地间,不能脱离周围的环境,但环境千差万别,具有不平衡性。客观上存在着相对较好的,适合人们生活的,给人们带来幸运、吉祥的环境,也存在着相对而言险恶,给人们生活带来不便、困苦和不吉利的环境。创造、改变自己周围的环境,使我们有一个更加美好、祥和、吉利的生活空间。
  • 都市贴身狂少

    都市贴身狂少

    神州大陆医仙门公子杨潇杯具的惨死在女人肚皮之上,阴差阳错之下灵魂穿梭空间,与意外猝死的大二学生灵魂融合,来到了现代世界。从此他带着小弟砸砸场子,吹着口哨勾引各色美女,收集天材地宝聚集金山银山,张狂彪悍的人生不需要解释。“呵护美女是我义不容辞的责任。就让诱惑来的更猛烈些吧!”无耻的杨潇这样说道。
  • 乡下丫头小慧

    乡下丫头小慧

    《乡下丫头小慧》是作家吴万夫近年来微型小说的精品选集,收录60篇作品,内容涉及都市情感、婚恋爱情、官场浮沉、乡村民风,以及底层百姓的日常情态。作者文笔老辣、流畅,故事既好读,又有深刻的内涵和意味。吴万夫是中国当代文坛实力派作家,无论是在中短篇故事创作领域,亦或是在微型小说创作上,均取得重大成绩,令人瞩目。该书所收作品全部在公开报刊发表过,有的或获奖,或被转载,或入选各种读本,或被翻译成外文介绍到国外。他的作品,使人们在阅读中,能够真实地检视历史与现实,回溯人生历程的坎坷与莫测,省察命运的遭际和悲喜。
  • 古树上的甜橙

    古树上的甜橙

    作者从青春年少到事业稳定这几年青春的虐心岁月。从思想懵懂稚气的小男孩一直到事业运筹帷幄的男人。回望青春,走过太多坎坷的道路,被算计、被陷害、然后重新脚踏实地的奋斗。本书主要讲述四个方面。青春最宝贵的校园恋情、初入社会接触花花世界的诱惑、为爱犯下大祸开始决心悔改、“卧薪尝胆”终于赢得成就。年少时,一颗古树上结出一颗甜橙。如今,橙子还在,味淡了。
  • 药王夫君请入瓮

    药王夫君请入瓮

    徐子衿一朝穿越,魂穿到了古代的自己身上。聪明机智如她,果断把穿越小说里主角做过的事都做了一遍,进青楼,泡美男,闯江湖,女扮男装,游山玩水,做长公主,当小混混,在古代混的那叫一个风生水起!看到某个高冷禁欲男主标配的药王谷谷主?不哔哔,直接上!果断捕捉药王夫君一只!上床霸王花,下床白莲花!药王谷谷主最近很郁闷,面对如此有追求的小娘子,他该怎么对付?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 绝品符徒

    绝品符徒

    从小被打上符术天才的陆小凤,从没想到自己的一生是如此坎坷。从无忧无虑的生活到惶惶如丧家之犬,只需要半个小时,从底层奋斗到绝世枭雄,却需要半生。
  • 全世界最贵的总裁管理课:杰克·韦尔奇的秘诀

    全世界最贵的总裁管理课:杰克·韦尔奇的秘诀

    本书以杰克·韦尔奇的管理生涯为脉络,介绍了杰克·韦尔奇塑造个人领导魅力的法则,分享了让下属保持高效、高度负责的方法,内容涉及商务活动的诸多层面,包括商业的要旨、企业领导的管理智慧、普通员工的求职与晋升之道,以及如何实现工作与生活的平衡。无论是大公司,还是小企业,无论是基层员工、毕业大学生,还是项目经理、企业高管,都能从韦尔奇的经验中受益匪浅。