The Telephone and Its Several Inventors
A History
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About the Book
On March 7, 1876, the U.S. Patent Office issued to a young inventor named Alexander Graham Bell what is arguably the most valuable patent ever: entitled “improvements in telegraphy,” in truth it secured for Bell the basic principles involved in a telephone.
On the same day that Bell filed his patent application, a caveat (a preliminary patent document) was filed by Elisha Gray. This coincidence sparked the first of many debates over whether Bell was the true inventor of the telephone. In the early 1860s Johann Phillipp Reis developed a version of the instrument, but his claims against Bell were hampered by the bungling of his lawyers in demonstrating his instrument in court. This work is a first look at the many men who developed the telephone and an examination of their claims against Bell’s patent. A lay description of the phone is also provided, as well as a history of the development of the telephone system.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Lewis Coe
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 240
Bibliographic Info: 53 photos, appendices, glossary, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2006 [1995]
pISBN: 978-0-7864-2609-6
eISBN: 978-1-4766-2145-6
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Telephone Chronology viii
Introduction ix
1. The Patent 1
2. The Poor Schoolmaster 16
3. Yellow Breeches Creek 25
4. Under Pressure 31
5. Inventors Galore! 39
6. A Great Undertaking 47
7. Long Distance 58
8. A Man from Oberlin 67
9. Western Union 75
10. The Military Telephone 85
11. Down on the Farm 102
12. Collecting Telephones 116
13. Hackers and Phreaks 135
14. Over the Waves 144
15. The Singing Wires 156
16. How They Worked 173
17. The New Kids on the Block 180
18. Conclusion 186
Appendices 175
1. Cities with Independent Telephone Companies 189
2. Cities That Once Had Independent Telephone Companies 190
3. Associations and Publications Related to Telephony 192
4. Insulator Manufacturers in the United States 194
5. Telephone Manufacturers 195
6. Some Communications Museums in the United States 197
7. Affidavits of Zenas Fisk Wilber 198
8. Affidavits of Alexander Graham Bell in Reply to That of Zenas Fisk Wilber 204
9. The Untold Story of the Telephone 206
10. Alexander Graham Bell’s Original Patent Application, 1876 214
11. Alexander Graham Bell’s Patent Application, 1877 220
Glossary 225
Bibliography 226
Index 227
Book Reviews & Awards
“history buffs will find the book of interest. All levels”—Choice; “a labor of love…exceptionally well-researched, and contains a fine balance of technical and often startling historical information that grips the reader’s interest well past bedtime”—Inventor’s Digest; “excellent”—Dots and Dashes.