By Nancy J. Farrier

I’m sure my kids roll their eyes when I talk about growing
up in the 1960’s. We would go on vacation for two or three weeks – a road trip
– without a phone. My dad would call home once or twice to check on family and
the farm, but we didn’t have daily contact, and those back home had no way to
contact us.
Consider how families must have felt when loved ones
traveled west by wagon train. They knew the chances of seeing one another again
were very slim. They could try to send letters, but with no known address, the
letters might travel for months to catch up to the recipient. Once
the family settled, contact was easier, but still took weeks or months.
Communication woes began to change in the mid-1800’s.
Building on the discoveries of several men, Samuel Morse invented a more practical
way of connecting with one another when he designed a magnetized magnet and
invented the telegraph. In 1835, Morse proved that messages could be sent by
using pulses of electricity and a code of dots and dashes, later refined and
called “Morse Code.”
Morse gave a public demonstration of his new method of
corresponding in 1838, but didn’t get any backing until several years later. In
1843 Congress funded an experimental line that stretched forty miles from
Washington to Baltimore. On May 1, 1844, the first news was dispatched when
Morse’s partner telegraphed the message that Henry Clay had been nominated by
the Whig Party at their national convention.

The shortest telegram in the English language was from the
Irish writer Oscar Wilde. He was living in
Paris and he cabled his publisher in Britain to see how his new book was doing.
The message read: “?” The publisher cabled back: “!” (I found it funny that a "?" and "!" were considered English.)
Samuel Morse’s invention changed the way people
communicated. In 1871, Morse, a frail 80-year-old, was honored in a day’s
celebration that included the unveiling of a statue of Morse. Telegraph
messages congratulating Morse came from around the world. The events of the day
were communicated via a series of telegraph instruments, hidden from view of
the guests, but connected to every city that had a Morse telegraph. Samuel
Morse himself arrived for the end of the ceremonies, and the announcement was
made that he would send a final message. A Western Union operator typed Morse’s
words, “Greeting and thanks to the Telegraph fraternity throughout the world.
Glory to God in the Highest, on Earth, Peace, Goodwill to men.” Morse finished the
message by signing his name, S.F.B. Morse.
In 1848, a Pennsylvania preacher penned this poem about the telegraph:
Along the smooth and
slender wires, the sleepless heralds run,
Fast as the clear and
living rays go streaming from the sun;
No pearls of flashes,
heard or seen, their wondrous flight betray,
And yet their words
are quickly caught in cities far away.
Have you ever sent or received a telegraph message? Do you
know any Morse code? Most of us at least know the distress signal – SOS – dot dot
dot – dash dash dash – dot dot dot. What other messages do you know?
