Text messaging goes mainstream.
Samuel Morse
Alfred Vail
Samuel Morse independently developed and patented a recording electric telegraph in 1837. Morse's assistant
Alfred Vail developed an instrument that was called the register for recording the received messages. It embossed dots and dashes on a moving paper tape by a stylus which was operated by an electromagnet.
[26] Morse and Vail developed the
Morse code signalling
alphabet. The first telegram in the United States was sent by Morse on 11 January 1838, across two miles (3 km) of wire at
Speedwell Ironworks near Morristown, New Jersey,
en.wikipedia.org
in 1825 New York City had commissioned Morse to paint a portrait of Lafayette in Washington, DC. While Morse was painting, a horse messenger delivered a letter from his father that read, "Your dear wife is
convalescent". The next day he received a letter from his father detailing his wife's sudden death.
[9] Morse immediately left Washington for his home at New Haven, leaving the portrait of Lafayette unfinished. By the time he arrived, his wife had already been buried.
[10] Heartbroken that for days he was unaware of his wife's failing health and her death, he decided to explore a means of rapid
long distance communication.
[11]
While returning by ship from Europe in 1832, Morse encountered
Charles Thomas Jackson of
Boston, a man who was well schooled in
electromagnetism. Witnessing various experiments with Jackson's
electromagnet, Morse developed the concept of a single-wire
telegraph. He set aside his painting,
The Gallery of the Louvre.
[12] The original Morse telegraph, submitted with his
patent application, is part of the collections of the
National Museum of American History at the
Smithsonian Institution.
[13] In time the
Morse code, which he developed, would become the primary language of telegraphy in the world. It is still the standard for
rhythmic transmission of data.