How did a simple series of dots and dashes transform worldwide communication? To find out, Sabrina recreates the telegraph, Samuel Morse's groundbreaking 1832 invention (and your cell phone's cool greatgrandparent). Learn more in this episode of History Remade with Sabrina.
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CREDITS
Executive Producer
Sabrina Cruz
Melissa Fernandes
Taha Khan
Producer
Molly Williams
Researcher
George Lawson
Craft Engineer
Jade Codinera
Writer
Sabrina Cruz
Host
Sabrina Cruz
Director
Melissa Fernandes
BCam / DIT
River Shepperd
Production Assistant
Gabrielle Augustin
Varman Nava
Story Editor
Stephanie Castillo
Editor
Chase Madsen
Animators
Krisztina Varga
Olivér Varga
Executive Producers
Sarah Walker
Brian Huffman
Executive Creative Director, A+E Networks
Tim Nolan
VP, Marketing Production, A+E Networks
Kate Leonard
VP, Brand Creative, History
Matt Neary
Music Courtesy of
Audio Network
Additional Footage and Photos Provided By
Wikimedia Commons
Pexels.com
Freepik.com
Metmuseum.org
Library of Congress
Produced by Answer in Progress for HISTORY®
©2021 A&E TELEVISION NETWORKS, LLC
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
SOURCES
DotDash to Dot.Com How Modern Telecommunications Evolved from the Telegraph, (2011) A. Wheen, Springer New York.
“Essay on the development of Morse telegraphy by Werner von Siemens 'induction telegraphy and enhanced magnetic systems’” (2021) in Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik, Vol.138 (45).
ReMaking History, Volume 2: Industrial Revolutionaries (2016) W. Gurstelle, Maker Media.
Samuel F. B. Morse and the Dawn of the Age of Electricity, (2015) G. Botjer, Lexington Books.
“The Influence of the Telegraph in the United States Society in the 19th Century” (2010) by F. Saez de Adana in 2010 Second Region 8 IEEE Conference on the History of Communications available at DOI: 10.1109/HISTELCON.2010.5735291
http://www.samuelmorse.net/
https://www.loc.gov/collections/samue...
http://w1tp.com/perbuild.htm
https://www.loc.gov/item/todayinhis...
Wiring the World: the Social and Cultural Creation of Global Telegraph Networks (2016) S. Muller, Colombia University Press.
“The Transatlantic Telegraph Cable” (2000) by G. Cookson, in History Today, Vol.50 (3).
Welcome to the joke under the fold!
When I was a kid, I really wanted to learn Morse Code... My hopes were dashed.