The Perils of Slow Communication

If you didn’t know anything about Samuel Morse, but were told he was one of the inventors behind the telegraph, it is likely you’d think he was an engineer or a scientist of some sort. In reality he was an accomplished artist. He attended London’s Royal Academy and studied the works of Michelangelo and Raphael. His most famous painting is often seen as a masterpiece of the time period (pictured below).

In 1825, Morse was commissioned by wealthy patrons to paint a canvas of Marquis de Lafayette, one the most influential French supporters of the American Revolution. While painting it, a horse messenger arrived with a message from his father. The message read “Your dear wife is convalescent.” The very next day, another messenger delivered the notice of his wife’s death.

As noted, sending messages by horse is very slow. By the time Morse arrived back in New Haven, Connecticut, his wife had already been buried. As you might expect, he was devastated. The incredibly slow, but predictable, communication caused him to miss his wife’s funeral, something he regretted for the rest of his life.

Because of this failure in the communication system (granted it would likely have failed more due to its slow nature than any mistake on the part of the messenger), Morse dedicated the rest of his life to developing a communication system that eliminated the need for horse messengers.

It took him a little over a decade to develop his first interpretation of the electric telegraph. It wasn’t until 1932 when he met Charles Thomas Jackson of Boston while traveling in Europe, that he learned about electromagnetism. It was after watching several of Jackson’s experiments that Morse first got the idea of using electromagnets and electricity to transmit coded text over a single wire.

Samuel Morse did not invent the telegraph. Not only were there non-electric versions available for almost a millennia before his birth, but other types of electric telegraphs were invented around the same time. Morse fought for the rest of his life in court over the patent rights of the telegraph. He was awarded the patent in the United States, but not in Europe as Cooke and Wheatstone had beaten him to filing for the patent in the UK.

In 1848, Morse wrote of his legal troubles: “I have been so constantly under the necessity of watching the movements of the most unprincipled set of pirates I have ever known, that all my time has been occupied in defense, in putting evidence into something like legal shape that I am the inventor of the Electro-Magnetic Telegraph!”

Despite his legal troubles regarding the patent, the Morse telegraph system would soon outshine the system that was being propagated in the UK by Cooke and Wheatstone. By 1852, according to Encyclopedia of the Age of the Industrial Revolution, 1700-1920, more than 23,000 miles of wire were being used in the United States under the control of 20 different companies. In the UK, where Cook and Wheatstone’s system was in control, around 2200 miles of wire were in use.

Samuel Morse learned a harsh lesson because of the slow speed of communication during his early years. Speed of communication had always been a worry, especially in times of war. According to A History of the Telegraph by Stephen Roberts, before telegraphy, a letter from London to New York would take around 12 days. A letter from London to Australia would take a whopping 73 days. According to some sources, it would take around 4 days to travel between New York City and Washington DC, about the distance the messenger would have had to travel to alert Samuel Morse of his wife’s sickness and demise.

With the invention of the telegraph system, and the adoption of Morse Code, long distance communication was changed forever. Morse code is still used for text-based long distance communication, especially in the military. And while society as a whole has advanced to telephones, text messages, email and Snap Chat, telegraphy played an important role in communications until the 1930s.