Page:Hamel Telegraph history England 1859.pdf/76

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telegram preserved in the Museum of the Historical Society at Hartford, in Connecticut, and have not failed to take an exact copy of it.

I do not intend at present to say more about the spreading of the telegraph in both hemispheres. My object here has been to give a true and accurate account of the first beginning of the art of telegraphing by means of galvanism and electro-magnetism.

I have shown that in the month of August this year, (1859) it will be half a century since the first galvanic telegraph was made, and I have further demonstrated that it was the Russian Baron Schilling's electro-magnetic telegraph which, without its being known to be his, was brought to London, and caused, since 1838, the establishment of the first practically useful telegraph lines, not only in Great Britain, but in the world.


The small sprout, nursed on the Neva, which had been


    departure for England. The pretext was that he might make some explanatory references and add a duplicate drawing. Morse sent in a new specification on the 16th May, 1840 It has been supposed that he introduced into this new document a very important Improvement with which he had got acquainted in London, and through which it became possible to telegraph to great distances. mean, the Belays, the linking of fresh circuits to those already exhausted on a long line.