
This compact volume offers a clear‑sighted look at the rise of the electric telegraph, tracing its invention from the early experiments of visionary scientists to the sprawling networks that linked New York, London, and distant colonies. Readers will meet the engineers and entrepreneurs whose rivalries and collaborations shaped the technology, while learning how the telegraph reshaped commerce, journalism, and personal correspondence in a matter of minutes rather than weeks. The narrative also highlights how the new speed of information turned distant disasters and royal visits into instant headlines, making daily news affordable to a broader public.
The book gives special attention to the Canadian pioneers who laid the first wires across rugged terrain, adding colorful anecdotes that bring the frontier spirit to life. Brief sketches of later breakthroughs—submarine cables and the emergence of wireless signaling—show the telegraph’s evolution toward the modern communications age. Written in a concise, engaging style, it serves anyone curious about how a single invention compressed the world and set the stage for today’s instant connectivity.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (307K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-01-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1843–1935
A Presbyterian minister and local historian from Nova Scotia, he wrote detailed books that helped preserve the story of Cape Breton church life and community history. His work is still valued by readers interested in Scottish settlement, religion, and the people of Maritime Canada.
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