THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Samuel Morse demonstrates the telegraph with the message, “What hath God wrought?” – 1844

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What Hath God Wrought?” – Station HYPO

WORLDKINGS - On This Day – January 06, 2021 - Samuel Morse Demonstrates The  Telegraph, in 1838. - WCSA.WORLD

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THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Samuel Morse demonstrates the telegraph with the message, “What hath God wrought?” – 1844

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How the Telegraph Went From Semaphore to Communication Game Changer | Arts & Culture| Smithsonian Magazine

Samuel Morse and the Invention of the Telegraph

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THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Samuel Morse demonstrates the telegraph with the message, “What hath God wrought?” – 1844

Via History.com

In a demonstration witnessed by members of Congress, American inventor Samuel F.B. Morse dispatches a telegraph message from the U.S. Capitol to Alfred Vail at a railroad station in Baltimore, Maryland. The message–“What Hath God Wrought?”–was telegraphed back to the Capitol a moment later by Vail. The question, taken from the Bible (Numbers 23:23), had been suggested to Morse by Annie Ellworth, the daughter of the commissioner of patents.

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THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Morse demonstrates telegraph – 1838

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On this day in 1838, Samuel Morse’s telegraph system is demonstrated for the first time at the Speedwell Iron Works in Morristown, New Jersey. The telegraph, a device which used electric impulses to transmit encoded messages over a wire, would eventually revolutionize long-distance communication, reaching the height of its popularity in the 1920s and 1930s.

Samuel Finley Breese Morse was born April 27, 1791, in Charlestown, Massachusetts. He attended Yale University, where he was interested in art, as well as electricity, still in its infancy at the time. After college, Morse became a painter. In 1832, while sailing home from Europe, he heard about the newly discovered electromagnet and came up with an idea for an electric telegraph. He had no idea that other inventors were already at work on the concept.

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