The History of the Telephone - Alexander
Graham Bell

in the 1870s, two inventors Elisha Gray
and Alexander Graham Bell both independently designed devices that could transmit speech electrically (the telephone). Both men
rushed their respective designs to the patent office within hours of each
other, Alexander Graham Bell patented
his telephone first. Elisha Gray and Alexander Graham Bell entered into a
famous legal battle over the invention of the telephone, which Bell won.
The telegraph
and telephone are both wire-based electrical systems, and Alexander Graham
Bell's success with the telephone came as a direct result of his attempts to
improve the telegraph.
When Bell began experimenting with
electrical signals, the telegraph had been an established means of
communication for some 30 years. Although a highly successful system, the
telegraph, with its dot-and-dash Morse code, was basically limited to receiving
and sending one message at a time. Bell's extensive knowledge of the nature of
sound and his understanding of music enabled him
to conjecture the possibility of transmitting
multiple messages over the same wire at the same time. Although the idea of a
multiple telegraph had been in existence for some time, Bell offered his own
musical or harmonic approach as a possible practical solution. His
"harmonic telegraph" was based on the principle that several notes
could be sent simultaneously along the same wire if the notes or signals differed
in pitch. By October 1874, Bell's research had
progressed to the extent that he could inform his future father-in-law, Boston
attorney Gardiner Greene Hubbard, about the possibility of a multiple
telegraph. Hubbard, who resented the absolute
control then exerted by the Western Union Telegraph Company, instantly saw the
potential for breaking such a monopoly and gave Bell the financial backing he
needed. Bell proceeded with his work on the multiple telegraph, but he did not
tell Hubbard that he and Thomas Watson, a young electrician whose services he
had enlisted, were also exploring an idea that had occurred to him that summer
- that of developing a device that would transmit speech electrically. While
Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Watson worked on the harmonic telegraph at the
insistent urging of Hubbard and other backers, Bell nonetheless met in March
1875 with Joseph Henry,
the respected director of the Smithsonian Institution, who listened to Bell's
ideas for a telephone and offered encouraging words. Spurred on by Henry's
positive opinion, Bell and Watson continued
their work. By June 1875 the goal of creating a device that would transmit
speech electrically was about to be realized. They had proven that different
tones would vary the strength of an electric current in a wire. To achieve
success they therefore needed only to build a
working transmitter with a membrane capable of varying electronic currents and
a receiver that would reproduce these variations in audible frequencies.
On June 2, 1875, Alexander Graham
Bell while experimenting with his technique called "harmonic
telegraph" discovered he could hear sound
over a wire. The sound was that of a twanging clock spring.
Bell's greatest success was achieved
on March 10, 1876, marked not only the birth of the telephone but the death of
the multiple telegraph as well. The communications potential contained in his
demonstration of being able to "talk with electricity" far outweighed
anything that simply increasing the capability of a dot-and-dash system could
imply.
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