1-Marcom-History of Morse Code
1-Marcom-History of Morse Code
He quickly determined that this method was not going to work well,
though. The conversion of numbers to words was too limiting.
The Alphabetic Code
Morse developed the code for both letters and
numbers around 1935. This allowed for unlimited
communication. Here is an early aid for learning the
code.
Timeline to Demonstrations
1838: Demonstrated messaging on 3 miles of
wire around New York University Exhibition
Hall
1843: Morse finally secured a $30,000 grant
to make a demonstration
Original Line made between Baltimore to
Washington DC. Insulation failures prevented
underground installation, B&O Railroad
Counsel John Latrobe convinced Morse to
string the wires on poles along the rail track.
Convincing Demonstration
May 24, 1844: Messages were sent back and
forth between Baltimore and the Supreme Court
chamber, including the infamous phrase: “What
Hath God Wrought”
Messages from the capital to Baltimore in the
ensuing days and weeks gave the Baltimore
Patriot the scoop over rivals, and the value of the
telegraph as a communication media was firmly
established. Newspapers touted the transmission
via “Telegraph” across their mastheads.
Start of Commercial Business
Samuel Morse made his first patent application
in 1837.
Attempted to sell his invention to the
government for $100,000.
Started the Magnetic Telegraph Company in
1845.
Western Union bought up the various telegraph
companies in 1857.
Royalties made Morse quite wealthy by the end
of the Civil War.
Final Tidbits
Telegraph: Greek:
Tele=Distant, Graphos= Writing
Morse attempted to choose the shortest code
for the most often used letters. He toured
New York print shops and counted their letter
type to choose the final code.
When Marconi sent the first wireless
transmissions overseas, Morse Code was the
logical method, easy to use, and well known
to all telegraph operators (he sent “s”)
Credits
QST: April 1991: Samuel F. B. Morse, Radio’s
Mysterious Progenitor
http://www.morsehistoricsite.org/general/links.html
http://www.faradic.net/~gsraven/index.shtml#contents