The Story of the Atlantic Telegraph

audiobook

The Story of the Atlantic Telegraph

by Henry M. (Henry Martyn) Field

EN·~10 hours·23 chapters

Chapters

23 total
1

E-text prepared by Chris Curnow, Stephen H. Sentoff, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive (http://www.archive.org)

1:07
2

THE STORY OF THE ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH

0:25
3

PREFACE

4:06
4

CHAPTER I. THE BARRIER OF THE SEA.

21:16
5

CHAPTER II. CAN THE OCEAN BE SPANNED?

13:02
6

CHAPTER III. THE COMPANY ORGANIZED.

19:57
7

CHAPTER IV. CROSSING NEWFOUNDLAND.

16:47
8

CHAPTER V. THE DEEP-SEA SOUNDINGS.

22:26
9

CHAPTER VI. THE WORK BEGUN IN ENGLAND.

31:23
10

CHAPTER VII. SEEKING AID FROM CONGRESS.

31:33

Description

A vivid chronicle of one of the nineteenth‑century’s most daring engineering feats, this narrative follows the vision that sparked the idea of linking continents with a single wire. It introduces the relentless drive of a determined American entrepreneur and the early skeptics who dismissed the project as a fanciful dream, setting the stage for a battle against both nature’s fury and public doubt.

The book details the early experiments, the costly setbacks at sea, and the international collaborations that gradually turned hope into tangible progress. Readers will feel the tension of each storm‑tossed cable, the painstaking work of crews laboring on remote vessels, and the quiet moments of ingenuity that kept the venture alive.

Through careful research and personal insight, the author paints a portrait of perseverance, showing how patience, faith, and a blend of American ambition with British expertise forged a new era of global communication. The story invites listeners to appreciate the human spirit behind a triumph that reshaped the world.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (588K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2010-12-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Henry M. (Henry Martyn) Field

Henry M. (Henry Martyn) Field

1822–1907

An energetic 19th-century minister, editor, and travel writer, he brought far-off places and public debates to a wide American audience. His books mixed firsthand observation with a journalist’s eye, helping make religious commentary and travel writing feel vivid and accessible.

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