What Hath God Wrought? The Invention of the Telegraph Presentation by Ben Sulser, Article by Daniel Walker Howe, Professor of American History at Oxford.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Of all of the innovations and inventions you read about yesterday, which was the most important to you? Why? WARM-UP.
Advertisements

PRESENTED BY PAYTON FAKER JAWS, JANUARY 22, 2015.
Lesson 6 Electronic Communications. in 1835, Samuel Morse proved that signals could be transmitted by wire. He used pulses of current to deflect an.
Chapter 13 Section 1 Life in the North. Technology and Industry Industrialization changed the way Americans worked, traveled, and communicated. In the.
North and South The North’s Economy p
Economic Revolutions and Nationalism Unit 4, Lesson 2.
The History of Morse Code Ford Amateur Radio League David Treharne, N8HKU November 9, 2006.
Chapter 7, Section 3 Pages The Industrial North.
Communicating by Wire The Telegraph. Introduction  The electronic revolution in communications began in the 1800s with the invention and development.
MORE TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES MELANIE FORERO DANIELA MARTINEZ DANIEL MORENO DIEGO RIVADA JUAN CAMPO NICHOLAS PARRA.
 Robert Fulton designed a steam engine for a steamboat that could move against the current of a river or against the wind.  The steamboat created.
NC Unit 3. Fourth Grade Unit 4 Revolutionaries Topic: A man whose revolutionary ideas changed the world Featuring: Historical Fiction Primary Sources.
What Hath God Wrought? Daniel Walker Howe, American Heritage. Zach Dillard.
Communication Timeline
American Free Enterprise-...make your own $ choices
Economic Beginnings in the United States A Future of Improvement.
Unit 7 – North and South Lesson 40 – Northern Economy.
M AKAYLIA J ONES Time Line Mechanical semaphore is invented in France.
 Morse code is a method of communication that relies on the transmitting of an alphabet constructed from dots and dashes.
THE NORTH TRANSFORMED.  Early American cities were significantly smaller than other major cities throughout the world  By the 1800s, U.S. cities began.
Chapter 13: North and South Section 1: The North’s Economy
The personal computer, both small and powerful is invented.
Technology Speeds Transportation and Communication.
The Industrial Revolution
North and South. Vocabulary Trade unions – an association of workers who work together to get better pay and working conditions. Strike – Refusal to work.
Nationalism and Further Growth Chapter: Nine Pages:
Chapter 19-2 Inventions. Communication Changes Inventions in communication improved and transformed American life. They helped unify different regions.
The North Ch 12 8 th Grade U.S. History. The Industrial Revolution transformed the way goods were produced in the United States. People began using machines.
Chapter 11 Section 4 MORE TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES.
Jeopardy Review Game Get into groups for Jeopardy review Copy Essay Prompt to prepare for test.
Industry and Transportation
By: D’Kihya Cooper.  The first messages are sent.
Markets Expand, New Inventions Flourish, and the U.S. is United.
North and South The North’s Economy p Industrialization  By the early 1800’s, changes took place in the Northern states.  Power-driven machinery.
Industrial Revolution. As more inventions and technology increased, many Americans began working in factories and moving to large cities.
Industrial Revolution Ms. Torre December 7/8, 2015.
The Industrial North The industrial revolution – 1750’s – 1800’s. Farming goods and hand made goods transition to manufactured goods. Many mills would.
Morse’s Telegraph. 1. Compare and contrast Morse’s telegraph and other contributing inventions and decide which one was the most important to the Industrial.
Industrial Innovations 8.H.3.2 Explain how changes brought about by technology and other innovations affected individuals and groups in North Carolina.
The Industrial Revolution: Developments and Impact.
Westward Expansion & Inventions STEAMBOAT. Inventions & Westward Expansion Notes Cotton Gin— Machine separated cottonseeds from cotton fiber Invented.
Belief in the right of “Manifest Destiny”—The idea that expansion was for the good of the country and was the right of the country USI.8b.
Morse’s Telegraph. 1. Compare and contrast Morse’s telegraph and other contributing inventions and decide which one was the most important to the Industrial.
Northern Economy & Industrial Revolution. Northern Economy Manufacturing and business begins to grow. 1700s: Most Europeans & Americans were farmers,
Chapter 7, Section 3 Pages  Industrial Revolution – the birth of modern industry and the social changes that accompanied it  Occurred from.
National & Regional Growth ( ) Early Industry and Inventions.
CHAPTER 13: SECTION 1 THE NORTH’S ECONOMY. TECHNOLOGY AND INDUSTRY  The industrialization of the North developed in three phases:  1) Manufacturers.
Cotton Gin Who invented the cotton gin and in what year? Eli Whitney, 1793 How did the machine work and what was its purpose? It quickly and efficiently.
Transportation and Inventions? EQ: Which inventions made the Industrial Revolution possible for the factories and for the farms?
The Industrial Revolution began in Great Britain in the 1760’s, but gradually spread to the United States after the War of During the Industrial.
Famous Inventions of the Industrial Revolution
Inventors and Inventions of the Industrial Revolution
Causes of the Industrial Revolution: Transportation
By: Sarah Satel, Alejandra Achury, Sungjae Ahn, and Kayla Sampayo

Moving people, Goods, and Messages
Manifest Destiny & Expansion
Communicating through dots and dashes
Industrial Revolution
DONE BY;SUHAIL HAMAD ALSAEDI GRADE;8B.
Lesson 3- The Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution In England
Communication in the Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
Warm-Up: 1/3/2018 Welcome Back! Imagine that you are starting your own business What kind of business is it? Write down at least 5 things that your business.
The Market Revolution & Growing Industry in America
The Growth of Cities.
North and South Take Different Paths
North and South 1820 to 1860 Chapter Fourteen.
Famous Inventions of the Industrial Revolution
Presentation transcript:

What Hath God Wrought? The Invention of the Telegraph Presentation by Ben Sulser, Article by Daniel Walker Howe, Professor of American History at Oxford University and the University of California, Los Angelos.

Why was the invention of the telegraph a revolution in communication (accroding to Howe)? -The telegraph's invention allowed, for the first time in World History, for messages to be sent faster than a man on horseback. -The telegraph lines were easy to build and spread, ensuring that even remote and removed farmsteads could now recieve the latest information. -The rapid messaging system sped up and transformed the economy of both the United States and the world, spreading globilization.

In What context did Morse invent his Telegraph? -The mid 1840's were a period of migration- both from European countries, and a push for westward expansion ("Manifest Destiny"). -Railroads began to connect and criss-cross the country, bringing people and goods across the Nation in increasingly shorter times. -Ties with Mexico are strained as the Santa Fe trade is closed.

Who was involved in the invention of the Telegraph? - Professor Samuel F.B. Morse- The cheif inventor and the man credited with the invention, he formulated the idea of the telegraph, and built the first working prototype in 1837, although, due to an econimic disaster, was not formally recognized until Joseph Henry, Professor of Chemistry at University of New York- provided assistance with using an electrical circuit to boost a signal, and invented a relay system for long-distance signals. -Ezra Cornell, Morse's construction engineer- Solved the dilemma of spreading the telegraph lines by mounting the wires on tall poles and trees, spreading lines across the U. S. and inventing the telegraph pole.

Contributions by others: Telegraph Pole Telegraph Relay

What was the lasting impact of Morse's work? 1. Telegraph lines opened and spread along the newly-built railroads, ensuring fast and stable means of communication anywhere along these avenues of transportation- eventually, across the Atlantic Ocean (1866) 2. The Morse code used in Telegraphs would be used to send simple signals and transmissions rapidly- extensivley used in navies and aircraft worldwide, continuing through the modern era, primarily with the use of radios. 3. Even after the telegraph passed into obsoleteness, the telegraph poles themselves would be modified to carry telophone wires, electricity, and internet cables.

Applications of the telegraph Field telegraph issued to U.S. soldiers in WW1 Telegraph relays at a train station in England, 1909.

What evidence supports Howe's thesis? -The newly built telegraph systems could relay messages in under a few minutes to virtually anywhere connected to a telegraph line- transatlantic communication now only took 2 hours per message, a then-unheard of speed. -Corrospondents for Newspapers, another spreading invention, could send reports and messages from miles away to the local news print, facilitating the spread of information. -Farmers and bankers now had acess to far-off and international prices of goods, contributing to the industrial change in the 1840's.

Telegraph Lines in 1853

Telegraph Lines in 1891

What are arguments against Howe's thesis? - Telegraphs, though they could send messages extremley quickly, required a skilled operator that knew Morse code and could read- these were not acessible to illiterate, uneducated majority of Americans. - Charles Wheatstone, an English inventor, developed his own electrical telegraph independently from Morse in the same time period. -The steam printing press, also invented in 1943, greatly contributed to the spread of information by allowing newspapers, magazines, books, documents and even telegrams to be printed quickly and in great quantities.

Sources - Daniel Walker Howe, What hath God wrought (published in American Heritage magazine, volume 59, No. 4) -Dageuerrotype by Mathew Brady, around Telegraph reproduction from American Museum of Radio and Technology - (Library of Congress Website) -Telegraph pole picture taken at Yuma, Arizona. -Telegraph maps from the website -Robert A. Divine, America Past and Present.