FIG. 63–A TELEGRAPHIC CIRCUIT WITH RELAY AND SOUNDER
In the telegraphic circuit only one connecting wire is needed. The earth, being a good conductor of electricity, is used as part of the circuit. It is necessary, therefore, to make a ground connection at each end of the line, the instruments being connected between the line wire and the earth. For long-distance telegraphy a current from a dynamo is used instead of a battery current. Fig. 64 shows a simple telegraphic circuit.
FIG. 64–A SIMPLE TELEGRAPHIC CIRCUIT
Two keys are shown at K K, and two switches at S S. When one key is to be used the switch at that station must be open, and the switch at the other station closed.
A telegraphic message travels with the speed of light, for the speed of electricity and the speed of light are the same. A telegraphic signal would go more than seven times around the earth in one second if it travelled on one continuous wire. The relays that must be used, however, cause some delay.
In 1835 Morse's experimental telegraph was completed, and in 1837 it was exhibited to the public, but seven years more passed before a line was established for public use. Aid from Congress was necessary. Going to Washington, Morse exhibited his instrument in the halls of the Capitol, sending messages through ten miles of wire wound on a reel. The invention was ridiculed, but the inventor did not despair. A bill for an appropriation to establish a telegraphic line between Washington and Baltimore passed the House by a small majority. The last day of the session came. Ten o'clock at night, two hours before adjournment, and the Senate had not acted. A senator advised Morse to go home and think no more of it, saying that the Senate was not in sympathy with his project. He went to his hotel, counted his money, and found that he could pay his bill, buy his ticket home, and have thirty-seven cents left. All through his work he had firmly believed that a Higher Power was directing his work, and bringing to the world, through his invention, a new and uplifting force; and so when all seemed lost he did not lose heart.
In the morning a friend, Miss Ellsworth, called and offered her congratulations that the bill had been passed by the Senate and thirty thousand dollars appropriated for the telegraph. Being the first to bring the news of his success, Mr. Morse promised her that the first message over the new line should be hers. In about a year the line was completed, and Miss Ellsworth dictated the now famous message: "What hath God wrought!"
Soon afterward the Democratic Convention, in session in Baltimore, received a telegraphic message from Senator Silas Wright, in Washington, declining the nomination for the Vice-Presidency, which had been tendered him. The convention refused to accept a message sent by telegraph, and sent a committee to Washington to investigate. The message was confirmed, and Morse and his telegraph became famous. Fig. 65 shows the first telegraph instrument used for commercial work.