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Samuel Morse

Samuel Finley Breese Morse (April 27, 1791 – April 2, 1872) was an American inventor and painter. After having established his reputation as a portrait painter, in his middle age Morse contributed to the invention of a single-wire telegraph system based on European telegraphs. He was a co-developer of Morse code and helped to develop the commercial use of telegraphy.

Samuel Morse
Samuel F. B. Morse, c. 1857
Born
Samuel Finley Breese Morse

(1791-04-27)April 27, 1791
DiedApril 2, 1872(1872-04-02) (aged 80)
EducationYale College
Occupation(s)Painter, inventor
Known forThe invention and transmission of Morse code
Spouses
  • Lucretia Pickering Walker
  • Sarah Elizabeth Griswold
Children7
Parents
RelativesSidney Edwards Morse (brother)
Signature

Personal life

 
Birthplace of Morse, Charlestown, Massachusetts, c. 1898 photo
 
Daguerreotype of Samuel Morse Professor of Art while at NYU in 1839. One of the earliest existing American photographs by Dr John William Draper

Samuel F. B. Morse was born in Charlestown, Massachusetts, the first child of the pastor Jedidiah Morse[1] (1761–1826), who was also a geographer, and his wife Elizabeth Ann Finley Breese (1766–1828).[2] His father was a great preacher of the Calvinist faith and supporter of the Federalist Party. He thought it helped preserve Puritan traditions (strict observance of Sabbath, among other things), and believed in the Federalist support of an alliance with Britain and a strong central government. Morse strongly believed in education within a Federalist framework, alongside the instillation of Calvinist virtues, morals, and prayers for his first son. His first ancestor in America was Anthony Morse, of Marlborough, in Wiltshire, who had emigrated to America in 1635, and settled in Newbury, Massachusetts.[3]

After attending Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, Samuel Morse went on to Yale College to study religious philosophy, mathematics, and science. While at Yale, he attended lectures on electricity from Benjamin Silliman and Jeremiah Day and was a member of the Society of Brothers in Unity. He supported himself by painting. In 1810, he graduated from Yale with Phi Beta Kappa honors.

Morse married Lucretia Pickering Walker on September 29, 1818, in Concord, New Hampshire. She died on February 7, 1825, of a heart attack shortly after the birth of their third child.[4] (Susan b. 1819, Charles b. 1823, James b. 1825). He married his second wife, Sarah Elizabeth Griswold on August 10, 1848, in Utica, New York and had four children (Samuel b. 1849, Cornelia b. 1851, William b. 1853, Edward b. 1857).

Painting

 
Self-portrait of Morse in 1812 (National Portrait Gallery)

Morse expressed some of his Calvinist beliefs in his painting, Landing of the Pilgrims, through the depiction of simple clothing as well as the people's austere facial features. His image captured the psychology of the Federalists; Calvinists from England brought to North America ideas of religion and government, thus linking the two countries.[citation needed] This work attracted the attention of the notable artist, Washington Allston. Allston wanted Morse to accompany him to England to meet the artist Benjamin West. Allston arranged—with Morse's father—a three-year stay for painting study in England. The two men set sail aboard the Libya on July 15, 1811.

In England, Morse perfected his painting techniques under Allston's watchful eye; by the end of 1811, he gained admittance to the Royal Academy. At the academy, he was moved by the art of the Renaissance and paid close attention to the works of Michelangelo and Raphael. After observing and practicing life drawing and absorbing its anatomical demands, the young artist produced his masterpiece, the Dying Hercules. (He first made a sculpture as a study for the painting.)

To some, the Dying Hercules seemed to represent a political statement against the British and also the American Federalists. The muscles symbolized the strength of the young and vibrant United States versus the British and British-American supporters. During Morse's time in Britain, the Americans and British were engaged in the War of 1812. Both societies were conflicted over loyalties. Anti-Federalist Americans aligned themselves with the French, abhorred the British, and believed a strong central government to be inherently dangerous to democracy.

As the war raged on, Morse's letters to his parents became more anti-Federalist in tone. In one such letter, Morse wrote:

I assert ... that the Federalists in the Northern States have done more injury to their country by their violent opposition measures than a French alliance could. Their proceedings are copied into the English papers, read before Parliament, and circulated through their country, and what do they say of them ... they call them [Federalists] cowards, a base set, say they are traitors to their country and ought to be hanged like traitors.[5]

 
Jonas Platt, New York politician, by Morse. Oil on canvas, 1828, Brooklyn Museum.
 
The House of Representatives. Oil on canvass, 1822, National Gallery of Art.

Although Jedidiah Morse did not change Samuel's political views, he continued as an influence. Critics believe that the elder Morse's Calvinist ideas are integral to Morse's Judgment of Jupiter, another significant work completed in England. Jupiter is shown in a cloud, accompanied by his eagle, with his hand spread above the parties and he is pronouncing judgment. Marpessa, with an expression of compunction and shame, is throwing herself into the arms of her husband. Idas, who tenderly loved Marpessa, is eagerly rushing forward to receive her while Apollo stares with surprise.

Critics have suggested that Jupiter represents God's omnipotence—watching every move that is made. Some call the portrait a moral teaching by Morse on infidelity. Although Marpessa fell victim, she realized that her eternal salvation was important and desisted from her wicked ways. Apollo shows no remorse for what he did but stands with a puzzled look. Many American paintings throughout the early nineteenth century had religious themes, and Morse was an early exemplar of this. Judgment of Jupiter allowed Morse to express his support of Anti-Federalism while maintaining his strong spiritual convictions. Benjamin West sought to present the Jupiter at another Royal Academy exhibition, but Morse's time had run out. He left England on August 21, 1815, to return to the United States and begin his full-time career as a painter.

The decade 1815–1825 marked significant growth in Morse's work, as he sought to capture the essence of America's culture and life. He painted the Federalist former President John Adams (1816). The Federalists and Anti-Federalists clashed over Dartmouth College. Morse painted portraits of Francis Brown—the college's president—and Judge Woodward (1817), who was involved in bringing the Dartmouth case before the U.S. Supreme Court.

 
Morse maintained a studio at 94 Tradd St., Charleston, South Carolina, for a short period.

Morse also sought commissions among the elite of Charleston, South Carolina. Morse's 1818 painting of Mrs. Emma Quash symbolized the opulence of Charleston. The young artist was doing well for himself. Between 1819 and 1821, Morse went through great changes in his life, including a decline in commissions due to the Panic of 1819.

Morse was commissioned to paint President James Monroe in 1820. He embodied Jeffersonian democracy by favoring the common man over the aristocrat.

Morse had moved to New Haven. His commissions for The House of Representatives (1821) and a portrait of the Marquis de Lafayette (1825) engaged his sense of democratic nationalism.[citation needed] The House of Representatives was designed to capitalize on the success of François Marius Granet's The Capuchin Chapel in Rome, which toured the United States extensively throughout the 1820s, attracting audiences[6] willing to pay the 25-cent admission fee.

 
The Chapel of the Virgin at Subiaco, 1830

The artist chose to paint the House of Representatives, in a similar way, with careful attention to architecture and dramatic lighting. He also wished to select a uniquely American topic that would bring glory to the young nation. His subject did just that, showing American democracy in action. He traveled to Washington D.C. to draw the architecture of the new Capitol and placed eighty individuals within the painting. He chose to portray a night scene, balancing the architecture of the Rotunda with the figures, and using lamplight to highlight the work. Pairs of people, those who stood alone, individuals bent over their desks working, were each painted simply but with faces of character. Morse chose nighttime to convey that Congress' dedication to the principles of democracy transcended day.

The House of Representatives failed to draw a crowd when exhibited in New York City in 1823. By contrast, John Trumbull's Declaration of Independence had won popular acclaim a few years earlier. Viewers may have felt that the architecture of The House of Representatives overshadows the individuals, making it hard to appreciate the drama of what was happening.

Morse was honored to paint the Marquis de Lafayette, the leading French supporter of the American Revolution. He felt compelled to paint a grand portrait of the man who helped to establish a free and independent America. He features Lafayette against a magnificent sunset. He has positioned Lafayette to the right of three pedestals: one has a bust of Benjamin Franklin, another of George Washington, and the third seems reserved for Lafayette. A peaceful woodland landscape below him symbolized American tranquility and prosperity as it approached the age of fifty. The developing friendship between Morse and Lafayette and their discussions of the Revolutionary War affected the artist after his return to New York City.

In 1826, he helped found the National Academy of Design in New York City. He served as the academy's president from 1826 to 1845 and again from 1861 to 1862.

From 1830 to 1832, Morse traveled and studied in Europe to improve his painting skills, visiting Italy, Switzerland, and France. During his time in Paris, he developed a friendship with the writer James Fenimore Cooper.[7] As a project, he painted miniature copies of 38 of the Louvre's famous paintings on a single canvas (6 ft. x 9 ft), which he entitled The Gallery of the Louvre. He completed the work upon his return to the United States.

In 1832, after his return to the United States, Morse was appointed professor of painting and sculpture at the University of the City of New York, now New York University.[8]

On a subsequent visit to Paris in 1839, Morse met Louis Daguerre. He became interested in the latter's daguerreotype—the first practical means of photography.[9] Morse wrote a letter to the New York Observer describing the invention, which was published widely in the American press and provided broad awareness of the new technology.[10] Mathew Brady, one of the earliest photographers in American history, famous for his depictions of the Civil War, initially studied under Morse and later took photographs of him.

Some of Morse's paintings and sculptures are on display at his Locust Grove estate in Poughkeepsie, New York.[11]

Attributed artworks

Year Title Image Collection Comments
1820 Latham Avery (c. 1820), oil on canvas (attributed to Samuel F. B. Morse) view Subject: lived 1775–1845; husband of Betsey Wood Lester (m. 1816). IAP 8E110005
1820 Mrs. Latham Avery (c. 1820), oil on canvas (attributed to Samuel F. B. Morse) Subject: Betsey Wood Lester (1787–1837). IAP 8E110006

Telegraph

 
Original Samuel Morse telegraph

While returning by ship from Europe in 1832, Morse encountered Charles Thomas Jackson of Boston, a man who was well schooled in electromagnetism. Witnessing various experiments with Jackson's electromagnet, Morse developed the concept of a single-wire telegraph. He set aside his painting, The Gallery of the Louvre.[12] The original Morse telegraph, submitted with his patent application, is part of the collections of the National Museum of American History at the Smithsonian Institution.[13] In time, the Morse code that he developed would become the primary language of telegraphy in the world. It is still the standard for rhythmic transmission of data.

Meanwhile, William Cooke and Professor Charles Wheatstone had learned of the Wilhelm Weber and Carl Gauss electromagnetic telegraph in 1833. They had reached the stage of launching a commercial telegraph prior to Morse, despite starting later. In England, Cooke became fascinated by electrical telegraphy in 1836, four years after Morse. Aided by his greater financial resources, Cooke abandoned his primary subject of anatomy and built a small electrical telegraph within three weeks. Wheatstone also was experimenting with telegraphy and (most importantly) understood that a single large battery would not carry a telegraphic signal over long distances. He theorized that numerous small batteries were far more successful and efficient in this task. (Wheatstone was building on the primary research of Joseph Henry, an American physicist.) Cooke and Wheatstone formed a partnership and patented the electrical telegraph in May 1837, and within a short time had provided the Great Western Railway with a 13-mile (21 km) stretch of telegraph. However, within a few years, Cooke and Wheatstone's multiple-wire signaling method would be overtaken by Morse's cheaper method.

In an 1848 letter to a friend, Morse describes how vigorously he fought to be called the sole inventor of the electromagnetic telegraph despite the previous inventions.[14]

I have been so constantly under the necessity of watching the movements of the most unprincipled set of pirates I have ever known, that all my time has been occupied in defense, in putting evidence into something like legal shape that I am the inventor of the Electro-Magnetic Telegraph! Would you have believed it ten years ago that a question could be raised on that subject?

— S. Morse.[15]

Relays

 
Leonard Gale, who helped Morse achieve the technological breakthrough of getting the telegraphic signal to travel long distances over wire

Morse encountered the problem of getting a telegraphic signal to carry over more than a few hundred yards of wire. His breakthrough came from the insights of Professor Leonard Gale, who taught chemistry at New York University (he was a personal friend of Joseph Henry). With Gale's help, Morse introduced extra circuits or relays at frequent intervals and was soon able to send a message through ten miles (16 km) of wire. This was the great breakthrough he had been seeking.[16] Morse and Gale were soon joined by Alfred Vail, an enthusiastic young man with excellent skills, insights, and money.

At the Speedwell Ironworks in Morristown, New Jersey on January 11, 1838, Morse and Vail made the first public demonstration of the electric telegraph. Although Morse and Alfred Vail had done most of the research and development in the ironworks facilities, they chose a nearby factory house as the demonstration site. Without the repeater, Morse devised a system of electromagnetic relays. This was the key innovation, as it freed the technology from being limited by distance in sending messages.[17] The range of the telegraph was limited to two miles (3.2 km), and the inventors had pulled two miles (3.2 km) of wires inside the factory house through an elaborate scheme. The first public transmission, with the message, "A patient waiter is no loser", was witnessed by a mostly local crowd.[17]

Morse traveled to Washington, D.C. in 1838 seeking federal sponsorship for a telegraph line but was not successful. He went to Europe, seeking both sponsorship and patents, but in London discovered that Cooke and Wheatstone had already established priority. After his return to the US, Morse finally gained financial backing by Maine congressman Francis Ormand Jonathan Smith. This funding may be the first instance of government support to a private researcher, especially funding for applied (as opposed to basic or theoretical) research.[18]

Federal support

 
Plaque at the first telegraph office

Morse made his last trip to Washington, D.C., in December 1842, stringing "wires between two committee rooms in the Capitol, and sent messages back and forth" to demonstrate his telegraph system.[19] Congress appropriated $30,000 (equivalent to $872,000 in 2021) in 1843 for construction of an experimental 38-mile (61 km) telegraph line between Washington, D.C., and Baltimore along the right-of-way of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.[20] An impressive demonstration occurred on May 1, 1844, when news of the Whig Party's nomination of Henry Clay for U.S. president was telegraphed from the party's convention in Baltimore to the Capitol Building in Washington.[20]

On May 24, 1844, the line was officially opened as Morse sent the now-famous words, "What hath God wrought," from the Supreme Court chamber in the basement of the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C., to the B&O's Mount Clare Station in Baltimore.[21] Annie Ellsworth chose these words from the Bible (Numbers 23:23); her father, U.S. Patent Commissioner Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, had championed Morse's invention and secured early funding for it. His telegraph could transmit thirty characters per minute.[22]

In May 1845, the Magnetic Telegraph Company was formed in order to build telegraph lines from New York City toward Philadelphia; Boston; Buffalo, New York; and the Mississippi.[23] Telegraphic lines rapidly spread throughout the United States in the next few years, with 12,000 miles of wire laid by 1850.

Morse at one time adopted Wheatstone and Carl August von Steinheil's idea of broadcasting an electrical telegraph signal through a body of water or down steel railroad tracks or anything conductive. He went to great lengths to win a lawsuit for the right to be called "inventor of the telegraph" and promoted himself as being an inventor. But Alfred Vail also played an important role in the development of the Morse code, which was based on earlier codes for the electromagnetic telegraph.

Patent

 
Morse with his recorder. Photograph taken by Mathew Brady in 1857.

Morse received a patent for the telegraph in 1847, at the old Beylerbeyi Palace (the present Beylerbeyi Palace was built in 1861–1865 on the same location) in Istanbul, which was issued by Sultan Abdülmecid, who personally tested the new invention.[24] He was elected an Associate Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1849.[25] The original patent went to the Breese side of the family after the death of Samuel Morse.

In 1856, Morse went to Copenhagen and visited the Thorvaldsens Museum, where the sculptor's grave is in the inner courtyard. He was received by King Frederick VII, who decorated him with the Order of the Dannebrog for the telegraph.[26] Morse expressed his wish to donate his Thorvaldsen portrait from 1831 in Rome to the king.[27] The Thorvaldsen portrait today belongs to Margrethe II of Denmark.[28]

The Morse telegraphic apparatus was officially adopted as the standard for European telegraphy in 1851. Only the United Kingdom (with its extensive overseas empire) kept the needle telegraph of Cooke and Wheatstone.[a]

In 1858, Morse introduced wired communication to Latin America when he established a telegraph system in Puerto Rico, then a Spanish Colony. Morse's oldest daughter, Susan Walker Morse (1819–1885), would often visit her uncle Charles Pickering Walker, who owned the Hacienda Concordia in the town of Guayama. During one of her visits, she met Edward Lind, a Danish merchant who worked in his brother-in-law's Hacienda La Henriqueta in the town of Arroyo. They later married.[30] Lind purchased the Hacienda from his sister when she became a widow. Morse, who often spent his winters at the Hacienda with his daughter and son-in-law, set a two-mile telegraph line connecting his son-in-law's Hacienda to their house in Arroyo. The line was inaugurated on March 1, 1859, in a ceremony flanked by the Spanish and American flags.[31][32] The first words transmitted by Samuel Morse that day in Puerto Rico were:

Puerto Rico, beautiful jewel! When you are linked with the other jewels of the Antilles in the necklace of the world's telegraph, yours will not shine less brilliantly in the crown of your Queen![30]

Political views

 
Cover of Foreign Conspiracy Against the Liberties of the United States by Samuel F.B. Morse, 1835 edition

Anti-Catholic

Morse was a leader in the anti-Catholic and anti-immigration movement of the mid-19th century. In 1836, he ran unsuccessfully for mayor of New York under the anti-immigrant Nativist Party's banner, receiving only 1,496 votes. When Morse visited Rome, he allegedly refused to take his hat off in the presence of the Pope.

Morse worked to unite Protestants against Catholic institutions (including schools), wanted to forbid Catholics from holding public office, and promoted changing immigration laws to limit immigration from Catholic countries. On this topic, he wrote, "We must first stop the leak in the ship through which muddy waters from without threaten to sink us."[33]

He wrote numerous letters to the New York Observer (his brother Sidney was the editor at the time) urging people to fight the perceived Catholic menace. These were widely reprinted in other newspapers. Among other claims, he believed that the Austrian government and Catholic aid organizations were subsidizing Catholic immigration to the United States in order to gain control of the country.[34]

In his Foreign Conspiracy Against the Liberties of the United States,[35] Morse wrote:

Surely American Protestants, freemen, have discernment enough to discover beneath them the cloven foot of this subtle foreign heresy. They will see that Popery is now, what it has ever been, a system of the darkest political intrigue and despotism, cloaking itself to avoid attack under the sacred name of religion. They will be deeply impressed with the truth, that Popery is a political as well as a religious system; that in this respect it differs totally from all other sects, from all other forms of religion in the country.[36]

In the same book, published in 1835 under the name of "Brutus", in speaking of "the foreign Emissaries of Popery re-warded in their own country," said : "Where is Bishop Kelly of Richmond, Va.? He also sojourns with us until his duties to foreign masters are performed, and then is rewarded by promotion."[37] (Patrick Kelly was a native of Ireland, and the first bishop of Richmond, Virginia. When after a couple of years, differences regarding questions of jurisdiction arose between him and Ambrose Maréchal, Archbishop of Baltimore, Kelly was offered the recently vacant See of Waterford and Lismore in his homeland.)

Pro-slavery

In the 1850s, Morse became well known as a defender of slavery, considering it to be sanctioned by God. In his treatise "An Argument on the Ethical Position of Slavery," he wrote:

My creed on the subject of slavery is short. Slavery per se is not sin. It is a social condition ordained from the beginning of the world for the wisest purposes, benevolent and disciplinary, by Divine Wisdom. The mere holding of slaves, therefore, is a condition having per se nothing of moral character in it, any more than the being a parent, or employer, or ruler.[38]

Later years

Litigation over telegraph patent

In the United States, Morse held his telegraph patent for many years, but it was both ignored and contested. In 1853, The Telegraph Patent case – O'Reilly v. Morse came before the U.S. Supreme Court where, after very lengthy investigation, Chief Justice Roger B. Taney ruled that Morse had been the first to combine the battery, electromagnetism, the electromagnet, and the correct battery configuration into a workable practical telegraph.[39] However, in spite of this clear ruling, Morse still received no official recognition from the United States government.

The Supreme Court did not accept all of Morse's claims. The O'Reilly v. Morse case has become widely known among patent lawyers because the Supreme Court explicitly denied Morse's claim 8[40] for any and all use of the electromagnetic force for purposes of transmitting intelligible signals to any distance.[41]

The Supreme Court sustained, however, Morse's claim to such telecommunication when effectuated by means of Morse's inventive "repeater" apparatus. This was an electrical circuit in which a cascade of many sets comprising a relay and a battery were connected in series, so that when each relay closed, it closed a circuit to cause the next battery to power the succeeding relay, as suggested in the accompanying figure. This caused Morse's signal to pass along the cascade without degrading into noise as its amplitude decreased with the distance traveled. (Each time the amplitude of the signal approaches the noise level, the repeater [in effect, a nonlinear amplifier] boosts the signal amplitude well above the noise level.) This use of "repeaters" permitted a message to be sent to great distances, which was previously not feasible.

The Supreme Court thus held that Morse could properly claim a patent monopoly on the system or process of transmitting signals at any distance by means of the repeater circuitry indicated above, but he could not properly claim a monopoly over any and all uses of electromagnetic force to transmit signals. The apparatus limitation in the former type of claim limited the patent monopoly to what Morse taught and gave the world. The lack of that limitation in the latter type of claim (i.e., claim 8) both gave Morse more than was commensurate with what he had contributed to society and discouraged the inventive efforts of others who might come up with different and/or better ways to send signals at a distance using the electromagnetic force.[42]

The problem that Morse faced (the deterioration of the signal with distance)[43] and how he solved it is discussed in more detail in the article O'Reilly v. Morse. In summary, the solution, as the Supreme Court stated, was the repeater apparatus described in the preceding paragraphs.

The importance of this legal precedent in patent law cannot be overstated, as it became the foundation of the law governing the eligibility of computer program-implemented inventions (as well as inventions implementing natural laws) to be granted patents.[44]

Foreign recognition

 
Portrait of Samuel F. B. Morse taken by Mathew Brady, in 1866. Medals worn (from wearer's right to left, top row): Nichan Iftikhar (Ottoman); Order of the Tower and Sword (Portugal); Order of the Dannebrog (Denmark); cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic (Spain); Legion of Honour (France); Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (Italy). Bottom row: Grand cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic (Spain)

Assisted by the American ambassador in Paris, the governments of Europe were approached about their long neglect of Morse while their countries were using his invention. There was a widespread recognition that something must be done, and in 1858 Morse was awarded the sum of 400,000 French francs (equivalent to about $80,000 at the time) by the governments of France, Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands, Piedmont, Russia, Sweden, Tuscany, and the Ottoman Empire, each of which contributed a share according to the number of Morse instruments in use in each country.[45] In 1858, he was also elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.

Transatlantic cable

Morse lent his support to Cyrus West Field's ambitious plan to construct the first transoceanic telegraph line. Morse had experimented with underwater telegraph circuits since 1842. He invested $10,000 in Field's Atlantic Telegraph Company, took a seat on its board of directors, and was appointed honorary "Electrician".[46] In 1856, Morse traveled to London to help Charles Tilston Bright and Edward Whitehouse test a 2,000-mile-length of spooled cable.[47]

After the first two cable-laying attempts failed, Field reorganized the project, removing Morse from direct involvement.[48] Though the cable broke three times during the third attempt, it was successfully repaired, and the first transatlantic telegraph messages were sent in 1858. The cable failed after just three months of use. Though Field had to wait out the Civil War, the cable laid in 1866 proved more durable, and the era of reliable transatlantic telegraph service had begun.

In addition to the telegraph, Morse invented a marble-cutting machine that could carve three-dimensional sculptures in marble or stone. He could not patent it, however, because of an existing 1820 Thomas Blanchard design.

Last years and death

Samuel Morse gave large sums to charity. He also became interested in the relationship of science and religion and provided the funds to establish a lectureship on "the relation of the Bible to the Sciences".[49] Though he was rarely awarded any royalties for the later uses and implementations of his inventions, he was able to live comfortably.

Morsemere in Ridgefield, New Jersey takes its name from Morse, who had bought property there to build a home, but died before its completion.[50]

He died in New York City on April 2, 1872,[51] and was interred at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. By the time of his death, his estate was valued at some $500,000 ($11.3 million today).[52]

Honors and awards

Morse was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1815.[53]

Despite honors and financial awards received from foreign countries, there was no such recognition in the U.S. until he neared the end of his life when on June 10, 1871, a bronze statue of Samuel Morse was unveiled in Central Park, New York City. An engraved portrait of Morse appeared on the reverse side of the United States two-dollar bill silver certificate series of 1896. He was depicted along with Robert Fulton. An example can be seen on the website of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco's website in their "American Currency Exhibit":[54]

A blue plaque was erected to commemorate him at 141 Cleveland Street, London, where he lived from 1812 to 1815.

In 1848, Morse was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society.[55]

According to his The New York Times obituary published on April 3, 1872, Morse received respectively the decoration of the Atiq Nishan-i-Iftikhar (English: Order of Glory) [first medal on wearer's right depicted in photo of Morse with medals], set in diamonds, from Sultan Abdülmecid of Turkey (c.1847[56]), a "golden snuff box containing the Prussian gold medal for scientific merit" from the King of Prussia (1851); the Great Gold Medal of Arts and Sciences from the King of Württemberg (1852); and the Great Golden Medal of Science and Arts from Emperor of Austria (1855); a cross of Chevalier in the Légion d'honneur from the Emperor of France; the Cross of a Knight of the Order of the Dannebrog from the King of Denmark (1856); the Cross of Knight Commander of the Order of Isabella the Catholic, from the Queen of Spain, besides being elected member of innumerable scientific and art societies in this [United States] and other countries. Other awards include Order of the Tower and Sword from the kingdom of Portugal (1860), and Italy conferred on him the insignia of chevalier of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus in 1864. Morse's telegraph was recognized as an IEEE Milestone in 1988.[57]

In 1975, Morse was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame.

On April 1, 2012, Google announced the release of "Gmail Tap", an April Fools' Day joke that allowed users to use Morse Code to send text from their mobile phones. Morse's great-great-grandnephew Reed Morse—a Google engineer—was instrumental in the prank, which became a real product.[58]

Patents

  • US Patent 1,647, Improvement in the mode of communicating information by signals by the application of electro-magnetism, June 20, 1840
  • US Patent 1,647 (Reissue #79), Improvement in the mode of communicating information by signals by the application of electro-magnetism, January 15, 1846
  • US Patent 1,647 (Reissue #117), Improvement in electro-magnetic telegraphs, June 13, 1848
  • US Patent 3,316, Method of introducing wire into metallic pipes, October 5, 1843
  • US Patent 4,453, Improvement in Electro-magnetic telegraphs, April 11, 1846
  • US Patent 4,453 (Reissue #118), Improvement in Electro-magnetic telegraphs, June 13, 1848
  • US Patent 6,420, Improvement in electric telegraphs, May 1, 1849

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "It was in the month of J, a century ago, that Franklin made his celebrated experiment with the Electric Kite, by means of which he demonstrated the identity of electricity and lightning".[29]

Citations

  1. ^ In Lightning Man (listed below under "References"), Kenneth Silverman spells the name "Jedediah."
  2. ^ Mabee 2004.
  3. ^ Munro, John (1891). Heroes of the Telegraph . London: Religious Tract Society. p. 45 – via Wikisource.
  4. ^ "The Heartbreak That May Have Inspired the Telegraph". National Geographic News. April 26, 2016. from the original on May 25, 2020. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
  5. ^ Morse, Edward; Morse, Samuel (1912). "Letters of Samuel Morse 1812. I.". The North American Review. 195 (679): 773–787. JSTOR 25119774.
  6. ^ Bellion 2011, pp. 289–291.
  7. ^ McCullough (2011), pp. 61–62.
  8. ^ JacksonKellerFlood2010.
  9. ^ Natale, Simone (November 1, 2012). "Photography and Communication Media in the Nineteenth Century". History of Photography. 36 (4): 451–456. doi:10.1080/03087298.2012.680306. ISSN 0308-7298.
  10. ^ Morse 2006, Letter.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on December 6, 2010. Retrieved February 23, 2011.
  12. ^ Standage 1998, pp. 28–29.
  13. ^ "Morse's Original Telegraph". National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. from the original on January 22, 2009. Retrieved June 4, 2008.
  14. ^ McEwen 1997.
  15. ^ Morse 2013.
  16. ^ Standage 1998, p. 40.
  17. ^ a b McCullough (2011), pp. 80-88.
  18. ^ Audretsch; et al. (2002). "The Economics of Science and Technology". The Journal of Technology Transfer. 27 (2): 159. doi:10.1023/A:1014382532639. S2CID 143820412.
  19. ^ Standage 1998, p. 47.
  20. ^ a b Stover 1987, pp. 59–60.
  21. ^ Wilson 2003, p. 11.
  22. ^ Gleick 2011, p. 144.
  23. ^ Standage 1998, p. 54.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on October 10, 2007.
  25. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter M" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. (PDF) from the original on November 9, 2013. Retrieved April 22, 2011.
  26. ^ Silverman 2004.
  27. ^ Morse 2013, pp. 347–348 + 370–374, Letter. The portrait of Thorvaldsen became the property of Philip Hone.. ..and John Taylor Johnston
  28. ^ "Samuel Morse". Thorvaldsens Museum. July 3, 2016. from the original on August 6, 2020. Retrieved March 17, 2019.
  29. ^ NYT staff 1852.
  30. ^ a b NY/ Rafael Merino Cortes, "Taking the PE Out of PRT", NY Latino Journal, 20 July 2006 3 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ "150th. Anniversary of the Foundation of Arroyo, Puerto Rico". Elboricua.com. from the original on December 8, 2011. Retrieved May 14, 2012.
  32. ^ "Welcome to Puerto Rico". Topuertorico.org. from the original on October 12, 2011. Retrieved May 14, 2012.
  33. ^ Jstor.org Billington, Ray A. "Anti-Catholic Propaganda and the Home Missionary Movement, 1800–1860" October 1, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, Vol. 22, No. 3, (December, 1935), pp. 361–384
  34. ^ Curran, Thomas J. International Migration Digest, Vol. 3, No. 1, (Spring, 1966), pp. 15–25 Published by The Center for Migration Studies of New York, Inc. Jstor.org October 1, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ Foreign conspiracy against the liberties of the United States. 1835. Retrieved May 14, 2012.
  36. ^ Terry Golway (February 9, 2007). "America | The National Catholic Weekly – Return of the Know-Nothings". America. from the original on June 26, 2007. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  37. ^ Magennis, Michael I. J., "Bishop Patrick Kelly of Richmond, Va.", The American Catholic Historical Researches, New Series, Vol. 6, No. 4 (October,1910), pp. 347–349 American Catholic Historical Society  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  38. ^ Morse, Samuel (1863), "An Argument on the Ethical Position of Slavery in the Social System, and its Relation to the Politics of the Day", New York, Papers from the Society for the Diffusion of Political Knowledge (12) in Slavery Pamphlets # 60, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript library, Yale University Quoted in Yale, Slavery, & Abolition, from the original on September 21, 2019, retrieved October 17, 2009 — an online report about Yale honorees and their relation to slavery
  39. ^ Standage 1998, pp. 172–173.
  40. ^ Morse's actual language in his claim 8 was: "Eighth. I do not propose to limit myself to the specific machinery or parts of machinery described in the foregoing specification and claims, the essence of my invention being the use of the motive power of the electric or galvanic current, which I call electro-magnetism, however developed, for marking or printing intelligible characters, signs, or letters, at any distances, being a new application of that power of which I claim to be the first inventor or discoverer."
  41. ^ The Supreme Court said: "Professor Morse has not discovered that the electric or galvanic current will always print at a distance, no matter what may be the form of the machinery or mechanical contrivances through which it passes. You may use electro-magnetism as a motive power, and yet not produce the described effect, that is, print at a distance intelligible marks or signs. To produce that effect, it must be combined with, and passed through, and operate upon, certain complicated and delicate machinery, adjusted and arranged upon philosophical principles, and prepared by the highest mechanical skill. And it is the high praise of Professor Morse, that he has been able, by a new combination of known powers, of which electro-magnetism is one, to discover a method by which intelligible marks or signs may be printed at a distance. And for the method or process thus discovered, he is entitled to a patent. But he has not discovered that the electro-magnetic current, used as motive power, in any other method, and with any other combination, will do as well."
  42. ^ See O'Reilly v. Morse, 56 U.S. 62, 113, 120 (1853).
  43. ^ The Supreme Court said, "The great difficulty in their way was the fact that the galvanic current, however strong in the beginning, became gradually weaker as it advanced on the wire; and was not strong enough to produce a mechanical effect, after a certain distance had been traversed." 56 U.S. at 107.
  44. ^ See, for example, Alice Corporation Pty. Ltd v CLS Bank International, 573 U.S. __, 134 S. Ct. 2347 (2014); Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Labs., Inc., 566 U.S. __, 132 S. Ct. 1289 (2012); Bilski v. Kappos, 561 U.S. 593, 130 S. Ct. 3218 (2010); Gottschalk v. Benson, 409 U.S. 63 (1972) – all building on the Morse case as the seminal case in the field.
  45. ^ Standage 1998, p. 174.
  46. ^ Carter 1968, p. 104.
  47. ^ Carter 1968, p. 123.
  48. ^ Carter 1968, p. 149.
  49. ^ Standage 1998, p. 189.
  50. ^ "History of Ridgefield – Ridgefield, New Jersey". www.ridgefieldnj.gov. from the original on August 6, 2020. Retrieved November 29, 2019. Among the noted people who owned property in the new borough was Samuel F. B. Morse. He owned property running from Morse Avenue east to Dallytown Road (Bergen Boulevard). Morse bought the property with the intention of building a home here. A barn was the only structure completed when the inventor died in 1872.
  51. ^ Invent Now staff 2007.
  52. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved April 16, 2022.
  53. ^ "MemberListM". American Antiquarian Society. from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved August 26, 2015.
  54. ^ "American Currency Exhibit: Silver Certificate, $2, 1896". Frbsf.org. from the original on April 30, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  55. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. from the original on June 3, 2021. Retrieved April 14, 2021.
  56. ^ According to Turkish PTT e-telegraph page history section 2009-09-11 at the Wayback Machine, the Ottoman ruler was the first head of state to award a medal to Morse and it was issued after the demonstration in Istanbul.
  57. ^ "Milestones:Demonstration of Practical Telegraphy, 1838". IEEE Global History Network. IEEE. from the original on March 6, 2012. Retrieved July 26, 2011.
  58. ^ Introducing Gmail Tap September 8, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Mail.google.com. Retrieved on 2013-10-06.

References

  • Bellion, Wendy (2011), Citizen Spectator: Art, Illusion, and Visual Perception in Early National America, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, ISBN 978-0-8078-3388-9
  • Bellis, Mary (2009), Biography of Samuel F.B. Morse, Inventor of the Telegraph, retrieved April 27, 2020
  • Bellis, Mary (2009a), Samuel Morse and the Invention of the Telegraph, retrieved April 27, 2020
  • Carter, Samuel III (1968), Cyrus Field: Man of Two Worlds, New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons
  • Gleick, J. (2011), The Information: a History, a Theory, a Flood, London, Fourth Estate
  • Invent Now staff (February 19, 2007), , National Inventors Hall of Fame Foundation, archived from the original on October 27, 2013, retrieved October 20, 2013
  • Jackson, Kenneth T.; Keller, Lisa; Flood, Nancy, eds. (2010), The Encyclopedia of New York City (2nd ed.), Yale University Press, p. 855, ISBN 978-0-300-11465-2
  • Mabee, Carleton (2004), , archived from the original on December 12, 2006, retrieved February 14, 2007
  • McCullough, David (2011), The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 978-1-4165-7176-6
  • McCullough, David (September 2011), "Reversal of Fortune", Smithsonian, 42 (5): 80–88
  • McEwen, Neal (1997), Morse Code or Vail Code? Did Samuel F. B. Morse Invent the Code as We Know it Today?, The Telegraph Office, retrieved October 17, 2009
  • Morse, Samuel (December 26, 2006) [1839], , The Daguerrotipe, The Daguerreian Society, archived from the original on November 15, 2008, retrieved September 25, 2008
  • Morse, Samuel F. B. (May 2, 2013) [19], Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals (Part 5 of 9), FullTextArchive.com — Produced by Carlo Traverso, Richard Prairie, and PG Distributed Proofreaders. This file was produced from images generously made available by the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF/Gallica)
  • Morse, Samuel F. B. (June 20, 1840), U.S. Patent No. 1647, Telegraph Signs
  • NYT staff (November 11, 1852), "Franklin and his Electric Kite – Prosecution and Progress of Electrical researches – Historical Sketch of the Electric Telegraph – Claims of Morse and others – Uses of Electricity – Telegraphic Statistics", The New York Times
  • Silverman, Kenneth (2004), Lightning Man: The Accursed Life of Samuel F. B. Morse, Hachette Books, ISBN 978-0-306-81394-8
  • Stover, John F. (1987), History of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press, pp. 59–60, ISBN 978-0-911198-81-2
  • Standage, Tom (1998), The Victorian Internet, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
  • Wilson, Courtney B. (2003), The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Museum: The Birthplace of American Railroading, Baltimore, Maryland: Traub Company, p. 11, ISBN 978-1-932387-59-9

Attribution

Further reading

External video
  Booknotes interview with Kenneth Silverman on Lightning Man: The Accursed Life of Samuel F. B. Morse, February 22, 2004, C-SPAN
  • Reinhardt, Joachim, (1791–1872), Congo, 1988.
  • Mabee, Carleton, The American Leonardo: A Life of Samuel F. B. Morse, (1943, reissued 1969); William Kloss, Samuel F. B. Morse (1988); Paul J. Staiti, Samuel F. B. Morse (1989) (Knopf, 1944) (Pulitzer Prize winner for biography for 1944).
  • Samuel F. B. Morse, Foreign Conspiracy Against the Liberties of the United States: The Numbers Under the Signature (Harvard University Press 1835, 1855)
  • Paul J. Staiti, Samuel F. B. Morse (Cambridge 1989).
  • Lauretta Dimmick, Mythic Proportion: Bertel Thorvaldsen's Influence in America, Thorvaldsen: l'ambiente, l'influsso, il mito, ed. P. Kragelund and M. Nykjær, Rome 1991 (Analecta Romana Instituti Danici, Supplementum 18.), pp. 169–191.
  • Samuel I. Prime, Life of S. F. B. Morse (New York, 1875)
  • E. L. Morse (editor), his son, Samuel Finley Breese Morse, his Letters and Journals (two volumes, Boston, 1914)
  • Iles, George (1912). "Leading American Inventors". New York: Henry Holt and Company: 119–157. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Andrew Wheen, DOT-DASH TO DOT.COM: How Modern Telecommunications Evolved from the Telegraph to the Internet (Springer, 2011) pp. 3–29
  • James D. Reid, The Telegraph in America: Its Founders, Promoters and Noted Men New York: Arno Press, 1974.
  • Swayne, Josephine Latham (1906). The Story of Concord Told by Concord Writers. Boston: E.F. Worcester Press.
  • Robert Luther Thompson, Wiring A Continent, The History of the Telegraph Industry in the United States 1832–1866 Princeton University Press, 1947.
  • Vail, J. Cummings (1914). Early History of the Electro-Magnetic Telegraph, from Letters and Journals of Alfred Vail: Arranged by his Son, J. Cummings Vail. New York: Hine Brothers.
  • Wolfe, Richard J. / Patterson, Richard (2007). Charles Thomas Jackson – "Head Behind The Hands" – Applying Science to Implement Discovery and Invention in Early Nineteenth Century America. Novato, California: Historyofscience.com.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links

  • Art and the empire city: New York, 1825–1861, an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Morse (see index)
  • Samuel Morse at Find a Grave
  • given at the National Academy of Design, 1840, regarding the daguerreotype
  • by Morse regarding the early days of the daguerreotype
  • Samuel Finley Brown Morse Papers, 1911–1969 (call number JL016; 42.5 linear ft.) are housed in the Department of Special Collections and University Archives at Stanford University Libraries
  • Locust Grove (official site)
  • Works by Samuel Finley Breese Morse at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Samuel Morse at Internet Archive
  • Samuel Finley Breese Morse papers at the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library

samuel, morse, other, uses, disambiguation, samuel, finley, breese, morse, april, 1791, april, 1872, american, inventor, painter, after, having, established, reputation, portrait, painter, middle, morse, contributed, invention, single, wire, telegraph, system,. For other uses see Samuel Morse disambiguation Samuel Finley Breese Morse April 27 1791 April 2 1872 was an American inventor and painter After having established his reputation as a portrait painter in his middle age Morse contributed to the invention of a single wire telegraph system based on European telegraphs He was a co developer of Morse code and helped to develop the commercial use of telegraphy Samuel MorseSamuel F B Morse c 1857BornSamuel Finley Breese Morse 1791 04 27 April 27 1791Charlestown Massachusetts U S DiedApril 2 1872 1872 04 02 aged 80 New York City U S EducationYale CollegeOccupation s Painter inventorKnown forThe invention and transmission of Morse codeSpousesLucretia Pickering WalkerSarah Elizabeth GriswoldChildren7ParentsJedidiah Morse father Elizabeth Ann Finley Breese mother RelativesSidney Edwards Morse brother Signature Contents 1 Personal life 2 Painting 3 Attributed artworks 4 Telegraph 5 Relays 6 Federal support 7 Patent 8 Political views 8 1 Anti Catholic 8 2 Pro slavery 9 Later years 9 1 Litigation over telegraph patent 9 2 Foreign recognition 9 3 Transatlantic cable 9 4 Last years and death 10 Honors and awards 11 Patents 12 See also 13 Notes 14 Citations 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksPersonal life Birthplace of Morse Charlestown Massachusetts c 1898 photo Daguerreotype of Samuel Morse Professor of Art while at NYU in 1839 One of the earliest existing American photographs by Dr John William Draper Samuel F B Morse was born in Charlestown Massachusetts the first child of the pastor Jedidiah Morse 1 1761 1826 who was also a geographer and his wife Elizabeth Ann Finley Breese 1766 1828 2 His father was a great preacher of the Calvinist faith and supporter of the Federalist Party He thought it helped preserve Puritan traditions strict observance of Sabbath among other things and believed in the Federalist support of an alliance with Britain and a strong central government Morse strongly believed in education within a Federalist framework alongside the instillation of Calvinist virtues morals and prayers for his first son His first ancestor in America was Anthony Morse of Marlborough in Wiltshire who had emigrated to America in 1635 and settled in Newbury Massachusetts 3 After attending Phillips Academy in Andover Massachusetts Samuel Morse went on to Yale College to study religious philosophy mathematics and science While at Yale he attended lectures on electricity from Benjamin Silliman and Jeremiah Day and was a member of the Society of Brothers in Unity He supported himself by painting In 1810 he graduated from Yale with Phi Beta Kappa honors Morse married Lucretia Pickering Walker on September 29 1818 in Concord New Hampshire She died on February 7 1825 of a heart attack shortly after the birth of their third child 4 Susan b 1819 Charles b 1823 James b 1825 He married his second wife Sarah Elizabeth Griswold on August 10 1848 in Utica New York and had four children Samuel b 1849 Cornelia b 1851 William b 1853 Edward b 1857 PaintingThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Samuel Morse news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Self portrait of Morse in 1812 National Portrait Gallery Morse expressed some of his Calvinist beliefs in his painting Landing of the Pilgrims through the depiction of simple clothing as well as the people s austere facial features His image captured the psychology of the Federalists Calvinists from England brought to North America ideas of religion and government thus linking the two countries citation needed This work attracted the attention of the notable artist Washington Allston Allston wanted Morse to accompany him to England to meet the artist Benjamin West Allston arranged with Morse s father a three year stay for painting study in England The two men set sail aboard the Libya on July 15 1811 In England Morse perfected his painting techniques under Allston s watchful eye by the end of 1811 he gained admittance to the Royal Academy At the academy he was moved by the art of the Renaissance and paid close attention to the works of Michelangelo and Raphael After observing and practicing life drawing and absorbing its anatomical demands the young artist produced his masterpiece the Dying Hercules He first made a sculpture as a study for the painting To some the Dying Hercules seemed to represent a political statement against the British and also the American Federalists The muscles symbolized the strength of the young and vibrant United States versus the British and British American supporters During Morse s time in Britain the Americans and British were engaged in the War of 1812 Both societies were conflicted over loyalties Anti Federalist Americans aligned themselves with the French abhorred the British and believed a strong central government to be inherently dangerous to democracy As the war raged on Morse s letters to his parents became more anti Federalist in tone In one such letter Morse wrote I assert that the Federalists in the Northern States have done more injury to their country by their violent opposition measures than a French alliance could Their proceedings are copied into the English papers read before Parliament and circulated through their country and what do they say of them they call them Federalists cowards a base set say they are traitors to their country and ought to be hanged like traitors 5 Jonas Platt New York politician by Morse Oil on canvas 1828 Brooklyn Museum The House of Representatives Oil on canvass 1822 National Gallery of Art Although Jedidiah Morse did not change Samuel s political views he continued as an influence Critics believe that the elder Morse s Calvinist ideas are integral to Morse s Judgment of Jupiter another significant work completed in England Jupiter is shown in a cloud accompanied by his eagle with his hand spread above the parties and he is pronouncing judgment Marpessa with an expression of compunction and shame is throwing herself into the arms of her husband Idas who tenderly loved Marpessa is eagerly rushing forward to receive her while Apollo stares with surprise Critics have suggested that Jupiter represents God s omnipotence watching every move that is made Some call the portrait a moral teaching by Morse on infidelity Although Marpessa fell victim she realized that her eternal salvation was important and desisted from her wicked ways Apollo shows no remorse for what he did but stands with a puzzled look Many American paintings throughout the early nineteenth century had religious themes and Morse was an early exemplar of this Judgment of Jupiter allowed Morse to express his support of Anti Federalism while maintaining his strong spiritual convictions Benjamin West sought to present the Jupiter at another Royal Academy exhibition but Morse s time had run out He left England on August 21 1815 to return to the United States and begin his full time career as a painter The decade 1815 1825 marked significant growth in Morse s work as he sought to capture the essence of America s culture and life He painted the Federalist former President John Adams 1816 The Federalists and Anti Federalists clashed over Dartmouth College Morse painted portraits of Francis Brown the college s president and Judge Woodward 1817 who was involved in bringing the Dartmouth case before the U S Supreme Court Morse maintained a studio at 94 Tradd St Charleston South Carolina for a short period Morse also sought commissions among the elite of Charleston South Carolina Morse s 1818 painting of Mrs Emma Quash symbolized the opulence of Charleston The young artist was doing well for himself Between 1819 and 1821 Morse went through great changes in his life including a decline in commissions due to the Panic of 1819 Morse was commissioned to paint President James Monroe in 1820 He embodied Jeffersonian democracy by favoring the common man over the aristocrat Morse had moved to New Haven His commissions for The House of Representatives 1821 and a portrait of the Marquis de Lafayette 1825 engaged his sense of democratic nationalism citation needed The House of Representatives was designed to capitalize on the success of Francois Marius Granet s The Capuchin Chapel in Rome which toured the United States extensively throughout the 1820s attracting audiences 6 willing to pay the 25 cent admission fee The Chapel of the Virgin at Subiaco 1830 The artist chose to paint the House of Representatives in a similar way with careful attention to architecture and dramatic lighting He also wished to select a uniquely American topic that would bring glory to the young nation His subject did just that showing American democracy in action He traveled to Washington D C to draw the architecture of the new Capitol and placed eighty individuals within the painting He chose to portray a night scene balancing the architecture of the Rotunda with the figures and using lamplight to highlight the work Pairs of people those who stood alone individuals bent over their desks working were each painted simply but with faces of character Morse chose nighttime to convey that Congress dedication to the principles of democracy transcended day The House of Representatives failed to draw a crowd when exhibited in New York City in 1823 By contrast John Trumbull s Declaration of Independence had won popular acclaim a few years earlier Viewers may have felt that the architecture of The House of Representatives overshadows the individuals making it hard to appreciate the drama of what was happening Morse was honored to paint the Marquis de Lafayette the leading French supporter of the American Revolution He felt compelled to paint a grand portrait of the man who helped to establish a free and independent America He features Lafayette against a magnificent sunset He has positioned Lafayette to the right of three pedestals one has a bust of Benjamin Franklin another of George Washington and the third seems reserved for Lafayette A peaceful woodland landscape below him symbolized American tranquility and prosperity as it approached the age of fifty The developing friendship between Morse and Lafayette and their discussions of the Revolutionary War affected the artist after his return to New York City In 1826 he helped found the National Academy of Design in New York City He served as the academy s president from 1826 to 1845 and again from 1861 to 1862 From 1830 to 1832 Morse traveled and studied in Europe to improve his painting skills visiting Italy Switzerland and France During his time in Paris he developed a friendship with the writer James Fenimore Cooper 7 As a project he painted miniature copies of 38 of the Louvre s famous paintings on a single canvas 6 ft x 9 ft which he entitled The Gallery of the Louvre He completed the work upon his return to the United States In 1832 after his return to the United States Morse was appointed professor of painting and sculpture at the University of the City of New York now New York University 8 On a subsequent visit to Paris in 1839 Morse met Louis Daguerre He became interested in the latter s daguerreotype the first practical means of photography 9 Morse wrote a letter to the New York Observer describing the invention which was published widely in the American press and provided broad awareness of the new technology 10 Mathew Brady one of the earliest photographers in American history famous for his depictions of the Civil War initially studied under Morse and later took photographs of him Some of Morse s paintings and sculptures are on display at his Locust Grove estate in Poughkeepsie New York 11 Morse artworks Dying Hercules Morse s early masterpiece Captain Demaresque of Gloucester Massachusetts Princeton University Art Museum Portrait of John Adams The Gallery of the Louvre 1831 33 Portrait of James Monroe 5th President of the United States c 1819 Eli Whitney inventor 1822 Yale University Art Gallery Chart of Colors drawn to illustrate his palette of colors Portrait of Marquis de Lafayette Portrait of LafayetteAttributed artworksYear Title Image Collection Comments1820 Latham Avery c 1820 oil on canvas attributed to Samuel F B Morse view Subject lived 1775 1845 husband of Betsey Wood Lester m 1816 IAP 8E1100051820 Mrs Latham Avery c 1820 oil on canvas attributed to Samuel F B Morse Subject Betsey Wood Lester 1787 1837 IAP 8E110006Telegraph Original Samuel Morse telegraph While returning by ship from Europe in 1832 Morse encountered Charles Thomas Jackson of Boston a man who was well schooled in electromagnetism Witnessing various experiments with Jackson s electromagnet Morse developed the concept of a single wire telegraph He set aside his painting The Gallery of the Louvre 12 The original Morse telegraph submitted with his patent application is part of the collections of the National Museum of American History at the Smithsonian Institution 13 In time the Morse code that he developed would become the primary language of telegraphy in the world It is still the standard for rhythmic transmission of data Meanwhile William Cooke and Professor Charles Wheatstone had learned of the Wilhelm Weber and Carl Gauss electromagnetic telegraph in 1833 They had reached the stage of launching a commercial telegraph prior to Morse despite starting later In England Cooke became fascinated by electrical telegraphy in 1836 four years after Morse Aided by his greater financial resources Cooke abandoned his primary subject of anatomy and built a small electrical telegraph within three weeks Wheatstone also was experimenting with telegraphy and most importantly understood that a single large battery would not carry a telegraphic signal over long distances He theorized that numerous small batteries were far more successful and efficient in this task Wheatstone was building on the primary research of Joseph Henry an American physicist Cooke and Wheatstone formed a partnership and patented the electrical telegraph in May 1837 and within a short time had provided the Great Western Railway with a 13 mile 21 km stretch of telegraph However within a few years Cooke and Wheatstone s multiple wire signaling method would be overtaken by Morse s cheaper method In an 1848 letter to a friend Morse describes how vigorously he fought to be called the sole inventor of the electromagnetic telegraph despite the previous inventions 14 I have been so constantly under the necessity of watching the movements of the most unprincipled set of pirates I have ever known that all my time has been occupied in defense in putting evidence into something like legal shape that I am the inventor of the Electro Magnetic Telegraph Would you have believed it ten years ago that a question could be raised on that subject S Morse 15 Relays Leonard Gale who helped Morse achieve the technological breakthrough of getting the telegraphic signal to travel long distances over wire Morse encountered the problem of getting a telegraphic signal to carry over more than a few hundred yards of wire His breakthrough came from the insights of Professor Leonard Gale who taught chemistry at New York University he was a personal friend of Joseph Henry With Gale s help Morse introduced extra circuits or relays at frequent intervals and was soon able to send a message through ten miles 16 km of wire This was the great breakthrough he had been seeking 16 Morse and Gale were soon joined by Alfred Vail an enthusiastic young man with excellent skills insights and money At the Speedwell Ironworks in Morristown New Jersey on January 11 1838 Morse and Vail made the first public demonstration of the electric telegraph Although Morse and Alfred Vail had done most of the research and development in the ironworks facilities they chose a nearby factory house as the demonstration site Without the repeater Morse devised a system of electromagnetic relays This was the key innovation as it freed the technology from being limited by distance in sending messages 17 The range of the telegraph was limited to two miles 3 2 km and the inventors had pulled two miles 3 2 km of wires inside the factory house through an elaborate scheme The first public transmission with the message A patient waiter is no loser was witnessed by a mostly local crowd 17 Morse traveled to Washington D C in 1838 seeking federal sponsorship for a telegraph line but was not successful He went to Europe seeking both sponsorship and patents but in London discovered that Cooke and Wheatstone had already established priority After his return to the US Morse finally gained financial backing by Maine congressman Francis Ormand Jonathan Smith This funding may be the first instance of government support to a private researcher especially funding for applied as opposed to basic or theoretical research 18 Federal support Plaque at the first telegraph office Morse made his last trip to Washington D C in December 1842 stringing wires between two committee rooms in the Capitol and sent messages back and forth to demonstrate his telegraph system 19 Congress appropriated 30 000 equivalent to 872 000 in 2021 in 1843 for construction of an experimental 38 mile 61 km telegraph line between Washington D C and Baltimore along the right of way of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad 20 An impressive demonstration occurred on May 1 1844 when news of the Whig Party s nomination of Henry Clay for U S president was telegraphed from the party s convention in Baltimore to the Capitol Building in Washington 20 On May 24 1844 the line was officially opened as Morse sent the now famous words What hath God wrought from the Supreme Court chamber in the basement of the U S Capitol building in Washington D C to the B amp O s Mount Clare Station in Baltimore 21 Annie Ellsworth chose these words from the Bible Numbers 23 23 her father U S Patent Commissioner Henry Leavitt Ellsworth had championed Morse s invention and secured early funding for it His telegraph could transmit thirty characters per minute 22 In May 1845 the Magnetic Telegraph Company was formed in order to build telegraph lines from New York City toward Philadelphia Boston Buffalo New York and the Mississippi 23 Telegraphic lines rapidly spread throughout the United States in the next few years with 12 000 miles of wire laid by 1850 Morse at one time adopted Wheatstone and Carl August von Steinheil s idea of broadcasting an electrical telegraph signal through a body of water or down steel railroad tracks or anything conductive He went to great lengths to win a lawsuit for the right to be called inventor of the telegraph and promoted himself as being an inventor But Alfred Vail also played an important role in the development of the Morse code which was based on earlier codes for the electromagnetic telegraph Patent Morse with his recorder Photograph taken by Mathew Brady in 1857 Morse received a patent for the telegraph in 1847 at the old Beylerbeyi Palace the present Beylerbeyi Palace was built in 1861 1865 on the same location in Istanbul which was issued by Sultan Abdulmecid who personally tested the new invention 24 He was elected an Associate Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1849 25 The original patent went to the Breese side of the family after the death of Samuel Morse In 1856 Morse went to Copenhagen and visited the Thorvaldsens Museum where the sculptor s grave is in the inner courtyard He was received by King Frederick VII who decorated him with the Order of the Dannebrog for the telegraph 26 Morse expressed his wish to donate his Thorvaldsen portrait from 1831 in Rome to the king 27 The Thorvaldsen portrait today belongs to Margrethe II of Denmark 28 The Morse telegraphic apparatus was officially adopted as the standard for European telegraphy in 1851 Only the United Kingdom with its extensive overseas empire kept the needle telegraph of Cooke and Wheatstone a In 1858 Morse introduced wired communication to Latin America when he established a telegraph system in Puerto Rico then a Spanish Colony Morse s oldest daughter Susan Walker Morse 1819 1885 would often visit her uncle Charles Pickering Walker who owned the Hacienda Concordia in the town of Guayama During one of her visits she met Edward Lind a Danish merchant who worked in his brother in law s Hacienda La Henriqueta in the town of Arroyo They later married 30 Lind purchased the Hacienda from his sister when she became a widow Morse who often spent his winters at the Hacienda with his daughter and son in law set a two mile telegraph line connecting his son in law s Hacienda to their house in Arroyo The line was inaugurated on March 1 1859 in a ceremony flanked by the Spanish and American flags 31 32 The first words transmitted by Samuel Morse that day in Puerto Rico were Puerto Rico beautiful jewel When you are linked with the other jewels of the Antilles in the necklace of the world s telegraph yours will not shine less brilliantly in the crown of your Queen 30 Political views Cover of Foreign Conspiracy Against the Liberties of the United States by Samuel F B Morse 1835 edition Anti Catholic Morse was a leader in the anti Catholic and anti immigration movement of the mid 19th century In 1836 he ran unsuccessfully for mayor of New York under the anti immigrant Nativist Party s banner receiving only 1 496 votes When Morse visited Rome he allegedly refused to take his hat off in the presence of the Pope Morse worked to unite Protestants against Catholic institutions including schools wanted to forbid Catholics from holding public office and promoted changing immigration laws to limit immigration from Catholic countries On this topic he wrote We must first stop the leak in the ship through which muddy waters from without threaten to sink us 33 He wrote numerous letters to the New York Observer his brother Sidney was the editor at the time urging people to fight the perceived Catholic menace These were widely reprinted in other newspapers Among other claims he believed that the Austrian government and Catholic aid organizations were subsidizing Catholic immigration to the United States in order to gain control of the country 34 In his Foreign Conspiracy Against the Liberties of the United States 35 Morse wrote Surely American Protestants freemen have discernment enough to discover beneath them the cloven foot of this subtle foreign heresy They will see that Popery is now what it has ever been a system of the darkest political intrigue and despotism cloaking itself to avoid attack under the sacred name of religion They will be deeply impressed with the truth that Popery is a political as well as a religious system that in this respect it differs totally from all other sects from all other forms of religion in the country 36 In the same book published in 1835 under the name of Brutus in speaking of the foreign Emissaries of Popery re warded in their own country said Where is Bishop Kelly of Richmond Va He also sojourns with us until his duties to foreign masters are performed and then is rewarded by promotion 37 Patrick Kelly was a native of Ireland and the first bishop of Richmond Virginia When after a couple of years differences regarding questions of jurisdiction arose between him and Ambrose Marechal Archbishop of Baltimore Kelly was offered the recently vacant See of Waterford and Lismore in his homeland Pro slavery In the 1850s Morse became well known as a defender of slavery considering it to be sanctioned by God In his treatise An Argument on the Ethical Position of Slavery he wrote My creed on the subject of slavery is short Slavery per se is not sin It is a social condition ordained from the beginning of the world for the wisest purposes benevolent and disciplinary by Divine Wisdom The mere holding of slaves therefore is a condition having per se nothing of moral character in it any more than the being a parent or employer or ruler 38 Later yearsLitigation over telegraph patent In the United States Morse held his telegraph patent for many years but it was both ignored and contested In 1853 The Telegraph Patent case O Reilly v Morse came before the U S Supreme Court where after very lengthy investigation Chief Justice Roger B Taney ruled that Morse had been the first to combine the battery electromagnetism the electromagnet and the correct battery configuration into a workable practical telegraph 39 However in spite of this clear ruling Morse still received no official recognition from the United States government The Supreme Court did not accept all of Morse s claims The O Reilly v Morse case has become widely known among patent lawyers because the Supreme Court explicitly denied Morse s claim 8 40 for any and all use of the electromagnetic force for purposes of transmitting intelligible signals to any distance 41 The Supreme Court sustained however Morse s claim to such telecommunication when effectuated by means of Morse s inventive repeater apparatus This was an electrical circuit in which a cascade of many sets comprising a relay and a battery were connected in series so that when each relay closed it closed a circuit to cause the next battery to power the succeeding relay as suggested in the accompanying figure This caused Morse s signal to pass along the cascade without degrading into noise as its amplitude decreased with the distance traveled Each time the amplitude of the signal approaches the noise level the repeater in effect a nonlinear amplifier boosts the signal amplitude well above the noise level This use of repeaters permitted a message to be sent to great distances which was previously not feasible The Supreme Court thus held that Morse could properly claim a patent monopoly on the system or process of transmitting signals at any distance by means of the repeater circuitry indicated above but he could not properly claim a monopoly over any and all uses of electromagnetic force to transmit signals The apparatus limitation in the former type of claim limited the patent monopoly to what Morse taught and gave the world The lack of that limitation in the latter type of claim i e claim 8 both gave Morse more than was commensurate with what he had contributed to society and discouraged the inventive efforts of others who might come up with different and or better ways to send signals at a distance using the electromagnetic force 42 The problem that Morse faced the deterioration of the signal with distance 43 and how he solved it is discussed in more detail in the article O Reilly v Morse In summary the solution as the Supreme Court stated was the repeater apparatus described in the preceding paragraphs The importance of this legal precedent in patent law cannot be overstated as it became the foundation of the law governing the eligibility of computer program implemented inventions as well as inventions implementing natural laws to be granted patents 44 Morse s repeater circuit for telegraphy was the basis for the Supreme Court s holding some claims of Morse s patent valid Effect of repeatersForeign recognition Portrait of Samuel F B Morse taken by Mathew Brady in 1866 Medals worn from wearer s right to left top row Nichan Iftikhar Ottoman Order of the Tower and Sword Portugal Order of the Dannebrog Denmark cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic Spain Legion of Honour France Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus Italy Bottom row Grand cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic Spain Assisted by the American ambassador in Paris the governments of Europe were approached about their long neglect of Morse while their countries were using his invention There was a widespread recognition that something must be done and in 1858 Morse was awarded the sum of 400 000 French francs equivalent to about 80 000 at the time by the governments of France Austria Belgium the Netherlands Piedmont Russia Sweden Tuscany and the Ottoman Empire each of which contributed a share according to the number of Morse instruments in use in each country 45 In 1858 he was also elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Transatlantic cable Morse lent his support to Cyrus West Field s ambitious plan to construct the first transoceanic telegraph line Morse had experimented with underwater telegraph circuits since 1842 He invested 10 000 in Field s Atlantic Telegraph Company took a seat on its board of directors and was appointed honorary Electrician 46 In 1856 Morse traveled to London to help Charles Tilston Bright and Edward Whitehouse test a 2 000 mile length of spooled cable 47 After the first two cable laying attempts failed Field reorganized the project removing Morse from direct involvement 48 Though the cable broke three times during the third attempt it was successfully repaired and the first transatlantic telegraph messages were sent in 1858 The cable failed after just three months of use Though Field had to wait out the Civil War the cable laid in 1866 proved more durable and the era of reliable transatlantic telegraph service had begun In addition to the telegraph Morse invented a marble cutting machine that could carve three dimensional sculptures in marble or stone He could not patent it however because of an existing 1820 Thomas Blanchard design Last years and death Samuel Morse gave large sums to charity He also became interested in the relationship of science and religion and provided the funds to establish a lectureship on the relation of the Bible to the Sciences 49 Though he was rarely awarded any royalties for the later uses and implementations of his inventions he was able to live comfortably Morsemere in Ridgefield New Jersey takes its name from Morse who had bought property there to build a home but died before its completion 50 He died in New York City on April 2 1872 51 and was interred at Green Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn New York By the time of his death his estate was valued at some 500 000 11 3 million today 52 Honors and awardsMorse was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1815 53 Despite honors and financial awards received from foreign countries there was no such recognition in the U S until he neared the end of his life when on June 10 1871 a bronze statue of Samuel Morse was unveiled in Central Park New York City An engraved portrait of Morse appeared on the reverse side of the United States two dollar bill silver certificate series of 1896 He was depicted along with Robert Fulton An example can be seen on the website of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco s website in their American Currency Exhibit 54 A blue plaque was erected to commemorate him at 141 Cleveland Street London where he lived from 1812 to 1815 In 1848 Morse was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society 55 According to his The New York Times obituary published on April 3 1872 Morse received respectively the decoration of the Atiq Nishan i Iftikhar English Order of Glory first medal on wearer s right depicted in photo of Morse with medals set in diamonds from Sultan Abdulmecid of Turkey c 1847 56 a golden snuff box containing the Prussian gold medal for scientific merit from the King of Prussia 1851 the Great Gold Medal of Arts and Sciences from the King of Wurttemberg 1852 and the Great Golden Medal of Science and Arts from Emperor of Austria 1855 a cross of Chevalier in the Legion d honneur from the Emperor of France the Cross of a Knight of the Order of the Dannebrog from the King of Denmark 1856 the Cross of Knight Commander of the Order of Isabella the Catholic from the Queen of Spain besides being elected member of innumerable scientific and art societies in this United States and other countries Other awards include Order of the Tower and Sword from the kingdom of Portugal 1860 and Italy conferred on him the insignia of chevalier of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus in 1864 Morse s telegraph was recognized as an IEEE Milestone in 1988 57 In 1975 Morse was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame On April 1 2012 Google announced the release of Gmail Tap an April Fools Day joke that allowed users to use Morse Code to send text from their mobile phones Morse s great great grandnephew Reed Morse a Google engineer was instrumental in the prank which became a real product 58 Statue of Samuel F B Morse by Byron M Picket New York s Central Park dedicated 1871 Morse was honored on the US Famous Americans Series postal issue of 1940 Coat of Arms of Samuel MorsePatentsUS Patent 1 647 Improvement in the mode of communicating information by signals by the application of electro magnetism June 20 1840 US Patent 1 647 Reissue 79 Improvement in the mode of communicating information by signals by the application of electro magnetism January 15 1846 US Patent 1 647 Reissue 117 Improvement in electro magnetic telegraphs June 13 1848 US Patent 3 316 Method of introducing wire into metallic pipes October 5 1843 US Patent 4 453 Improvement in Electro magnetic telegraphs April 11 1846 US Patent 4 453 Reissue 118 Improvement in Electro magnetic telegraphs June 13 1848 US Patent 6 420 Improvement in electric telegraphs May 1 1849See alsoDaniel Davis Jr Seconds pendulum Telegraph in United States historyNotes It was in the month of J a century ago that Franklin made his celebrated experiment with the Electric Kite by means of which he demonstrated the identity of electricity and lightning 29 Citations In Lightning Man listed below under References Kenneth Silverman spells the name Jedediah Mabee 2004 Munro John 1891 Heroes of the Telegraph London Religious Tract Society p 45 via Wikisource The Heartbreak That May Have Inspired the Telegraph National Geographic News April 26 2016 Archived from the original on May 25 2020 Retrieved January 24 2020 Morse Edward Morse Samuel 1912 Letters of Samuel Morse 1812 I The North American Review 195 679 773 787 JSTOR 25119774 Bellion 2011 pp 289 291 McCullough 2011 pp 61 62 JacksonKellerFlood2010 Natale Simone November 1 2012 Photography and Communication Media in the Nineteenth Century History of Photography 36 4 451 456 doi 10 1080 03087298 2012 680306 ISSN 0308 7298 Morse 2006 Letter The Collection at Locust Grove Archived from the original on December 6 2010 Retrieved February 23 2011 Standage 1998 pp 28 29 Morse s Original Telegraph National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on January 22 2009 Retrieved June 4 2008 McEwen 1997 Morse 2013 Standage 1998 p 40 a b McCullough 2011 pp 80 88 Audretsch et al 2002 The Economics of Science and Technology The Journal of Technology Transfer 27 2 159 doi 10 1023 A 1014382532639 S2CID 143820412 Standage 1998 p 47 a b Stover 1987 pp 59 60 Wilson 2003 p 11 Gleick 2011 p 144 Standage 1998 p 54 Istanbul City Guide Beylerbeyi Palace Archived from the original on October 10 2007 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter M PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Archived PDF from the original on November 9 2013 Retrieved April 22 2011 Silverman 2004 Morse 2013 pp 347 348 370 374 Letter The portrait of Thorvaldsen became the property of Philip Hone and John Taylor Johnston Samuel Morse Thorvaldsens Museum July 3 2016 Archived from the original on August 6 2020 Retrieved March 17 2019 NYT staff 1852 a b NY Rafael Merino Cortes Taking the PE Out of PRT NY Latino Journal 20 July 2006 Archived 3 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine 150th Anniversary of the Foundation of Arroyo Puerto Rico Elboricua com Archived from the original on December 8 2011 Retrieved May 14 2012 Welcome to Puerto Rico Topuertorico org Archived from the original on October 12 2011 Retrieved May 14 2012 Jstor org Billington Ray A Anti Catholic Propaganda and the Home Missionary Movement 1800 1860 Archived October 1 2018 at the Wayback Machine The Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol 22 No 3 December 1935 pp 361 384 Curran Thomas J International Migration Digest Vol 3 No 1 Spring 1966 pp 15 25 Published by The Center for Migration Studies of New York Inc Jstor org Archived October 1 2018 at the Wayback Machine Foreign conspiracy against the liberties of the United States 1835 Retrieved May 14 2012 Terry Golway February 9 2007 America The National Catholic Weekly Return of the Know Nothings America Archived from the original on June 26 2007 Retrieved August 24 2010 Magennis Michael I J Bishop Patrick Kelly of Richmond Va The American Catholic Historical Researches New Series Vol 6 No 4 October 1910 pp 347 349 American Catholic Historical Society This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Morse Samuel 1863 An Argument on the Ethical Position of Slavery in the Social System and its Relation to the Politics of the Day New York Papers from the Society for the Diffusion of Political Knowledge 12 in Slavery Pamphlets 60 Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript library Yale University Quoted in Yale Slavery amp Abolition archived from the original on September 21 2019 retrieved October 17 2009 an online report about Yale honorees and their relation to slavery Standage 1998 pp 172 173 Morse s actual language in his claim 8 was Eighth I do not propose to limit myself to the specific machinery or parts of machinery described in the foregoing specification and claims the essence of my invention being the use of the motive power of the electric or galvanic current which I call electro magnetism however developed for marking or printing intelligible characters signs or letters at any distances being a new application of that power of which I claim to be the first inventor or discoverer The Supreme Court said Professor Morse has not discovered that the electric or galvanic current will always print at a distance no matter what may be the form of the machinery or mechanical contrivances through which it passes You may use electro magnetism as a motive power and yet not produce the described effect that is print at a distance intelligible marks or signs To produce that effect it must be combined with and passed through and operate upon certain complicated and delicate machinery adjusted and arranged upon philosophical principles and prepared by the highest mechanical skill And it is the high praise of Professor Morse that he has been able by a new combination of known powers of which electro magnetism is one to discover a method by which intelligible marks or signs may be printed at a distance And for the method or process thus discovered he is entitled to a patent But he has not discovered that the electro magnetic current used as motive power in any other method and with any other combination will do as well See O Reilly v Morse 56 U S 62 113 120 1853 The Supreme Court said The great difficulty in their way was the fact that the galvanic current however strong in the beginning became gradually weaker as it advanced on the wire and was not strong enough to produce a mechanical effect after a certain distance had been traversed 56 U S at 107 See for example Alice Corporation Pty Ltd v CLS Bank International 573 U S 134 S Ct 2347 2014 Mayo Collaborative Services v Prometheus Labs Inc 566 U S 132 S Ct 1289 2012 Bilski v Kappos 561 U S 593 130 S Ct 3218 2010 Gottschalk v Benson 409 U S 63 1972 all building on the Morse case as the seminal case in the field Standage 1998 p 174 Carter 1968 p 104 Carter 1968 p 123 Carter 1968 p 149 Standage 1998 p 189 History of Ridgefield Ridgefield New Jersey www ridgefieldnj gov Archived from the original on August 6 2020 Retrieved November 29 2019 Among the noted people who owned property in the new borough was Samuel F B Morse He owned property running from Morse Avenue east to Dallytown Road Bergen Boulevard Morse bought the property with the intention of building a home here A barn was the only structure completed when the inventor died in 1872 Invent Now staff 2007 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 MemberListM American Antiquarian Society Archived from the original on June 24 2016 Retrieved August 26 2015 American Currency Exhibit Silver Certificate 2 1896 Frbsf org Archived from the original on April 30 2009 Retrieved August 24 2010 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Archived from the original on June 3 2021 Retrieved April 14 2021 According to Turkish PTT e telegraph page history section Archived 2009 09 11 at the Wayback Machine the Ottoman ruler was the first head of state to award a medal to Morse and it was issued after the demonstration in Istanbul Milestones Demonstration of Practical Telegraphy 1838 IEEE Global History Network IEEE Archived from the original on March 6 2012 Retrieved July 26 2011 Introducing Gmail Tap Archived September 8 2012 at the Wayback Machine Mail google com Retrieved on 2013 10 06 ReferencesBellion Wendy 2011 Citizen Spectator Art Illusion and Visual Perception in Early National America Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 3388 9 Bellis Mary 2009 Biography of Samuel F B Morse Inventor of the Telegraph retrieved April 27 2020 Bellis Mary 2009a Samuel Morse and the Invention of the Telegraph retrieved April 27 2020 Carter Samuel III 1968 Cyrus Field Man of Two Worlds New York G P Putnam s Sons Gleick J 2011 The Information a History a Theory a Flood London Fourth Estate Invent Now staff February 19 2007 Inventor profile Samuel F B Morse National Inventors Hall of Fame Foundation archived from the original on October 27 2013 retrieved October 20 2013 Jackson Kenneth T Keller Lisa Flood Nancy eds 2010 The Encyclopedia of New York City 2nd ed Yale University Press p 855 ISBN 978 0 300 11465 2 Mabee Carleton 2004 Samuel F B Morse archived from the original on December 12 2006 retrieved February 14 2007 McCullough David 2011 The Greater Journey Americans in Paris Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4165 7176 6 McCullough David September 2011 Reversal of Fortune Smithsonian 42 5 80 88 McEwen Neal 1997 Morse Code or Vail Code Did Samuel F B Morse Invent the Code as We Know it Today The Telegraph Office retrieved October 17 2009 Morse Samuel December 26 2006 1839 Letter to the New York Observer Vol 17 No 16 April 20 1839 p 62 The Daguerrotipe The Daguerreian Society archived from the original on November 15 2008 retrieved September 25 2008 Morse Samuel F B May 2 2013 19 Samuel F B Morse His Letters and Journals Part 5 of 9 FullTextArchive com Produced by Carlo Traverso Richard Prairie and PG Distributed Proofreaders This file was produced from images generously made available by the Bibliotheque nationale de France BnF Gallica Morse Samuel F B June 20 1840 U S Patent No 1647 Telegraph Signs NYT staff November 11 1852 Franklin and his Electric Kite Prosecution and Progress of Electrical researches Historical Sketch of the Electric Telegraph Claims of Morse and others Uses of Electricity Telegraphic Statistics The New York Times Silverman Kenneth 2004 Lightning Man The Accursed Life of Samuel F B Morse Hachette Books ISBN 978 0 306 81394 8 Stover John F 1987 History of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press pp 59 60 ISBN 978 0 911198 81 2 Standage Tom 1998 The Victorian Internet London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Wilson Courtney B 2003 The Baltimore amp Ohio Railroad Museum The Birthplace of American Railroading Baltimore Maryland Traub Company p 11 ISBN 978 1 932387 59 9Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Morse Samuel Finley Breese Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint postscript link Further readingExternal video Booknotes interview with Kenneth Silverman on Lightning Man The Accursed Life of Samuel F B Morse February 22 2004 C SPANReinhardt Joachim Samuel F B Morse 1791 1872 Congo 1988 Mabee Carleton The American Leonardo A Life of Samuel F B Morse 1943 reissued 1969 William Kloss Samuel F B Morse 1988 Paul J Staiti Samuel F B Morse 1989 Knopf 1944 Pulitzer Prize winner for biography for 1944 Samuel F B Morse Foreign Conspiracy Against the Liberties of the United States The Numbers Under the Signature Harvard University Press 1835 1855 Paul J Staiti Samuel F B Morse Cambridge 1989 Lauretta Dimmick Mythic Proportion Bertel Thorvaldsen s Influence in America Thorvaldsen l ambiente l influsso il mito ed P Kragelund and M Nykjaer Rome 1991 Analecta Romana Instituti Danici Supplementum 18 pp 169 191 Samuel I Prime Life of S F B Morse New York 1875 E L Morse editor his son Samuel Finley Breese Morse his Letters and Journals two volumes Boston 1914 Iles George 1912 Leading American Inventors New York Henry Holt and Company 119 157 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Andrew Wheen DOT DASH TO DOT COM How Modern Telecommunications Evolved from the Telegraph to the Internet Springer 2011 pp 3 29 James D Reid The Telegraph in America Its Founders Promoters and Noted Men New York Arno Press 1974 Swayne Josephine Latham 1906 The Story of Concord Told by Concord Writers Boston E F Worcester Press Robert Luther Thompson Wiring A Continent The History of the Telegraph Industry in the United States 1832 1866 Princeton University Press 1947 Vail J Cummings 1914 Early History of the Electro Magnetic Telegraph from Letters and Journals of Alfred Vail Arranged by his Son J Cummings Vail New York Hine Brothers Wolfe Richard J Patterson Richard 2007 Charles Thomas Jackson Head Behind The Hands Applying Science to Implement Discovery and Invention in Early Nineteenth Century America Novato California Historyofscience com a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Samuel Finley Breese Morse Wikisource has original works by or about Samuel Morse Wikiquote has quotations related to Samuel F B Morse Art and the empire city New York 1825 1861 an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art fully available online as PDF which contains material on Morse see index Samuel Morse at Find a Grave Speech of Morse given at the National Academy of Design 1840 regarding the daguerreotype Reminiscence by Morse regarding the early days of the daguerreotype Samuel Finley Brown Morse Papers 1911 1969 call number JL016 42 5 linear ft are housed in the Department of Special Collections and University Archives at Stanford University Libraries Locust Grove official site Works by Samuel Finley Breese Morse at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Samuel Morse at Internet Archive Samuel Finley Breese Morse papers at the Stuart A Rose Manuscript Archives and Rare Book Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samuel Morse amp oldid 1150769490, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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