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In the summer of 1871; the Telegraphic Brotherhood of the World erected a statue to his honour in the Central Park; New York。  Delegates from different parts of America were present at the unveiling; and in the evening there was a reception at the Academy of Music; where the first recording telegraph used on the Washington to Baltimore line was exhibited。  The inventor himself appeared; and sent a message at a small table; which was flashed by the connected wires to the remotest parts of the Union; It ran:  'Greeting and thanks to the telegraph fraternity throughout the world。  Glory to God in the highest; on earth peace; goodwill towards men。'

It was deemed fitting that Morse should unveil the statue of Benjamin Franklin; which had been erected in Printing House Square; New York。 When his venerable figure appeared on the platform; and the long white hair was blown about his handsome face by the winter wind; a great cheer went up from the assembled multitude。  But the day was bitterly cold; and the exposure cost him his life。  Some months later; as he lay on his sick bed; he observed to the doctor; 'The best is yet to come。' In tapping his chest one day; the physician said;' This is the way we doctors telegraph; professor;' and Morse replied with a smile; 'Very goodvery good。' These were his last words。  He died at New York on April 2; 1872; at the age of eighty…one years; and was buried in the Greenwood Cemetery。



CHAPTER IV。

SIR WILLIAM THOMSON。

Sir William Thomson; the greatest physicist of the age; and the highest authority on electrical science; theoretical and applied; was born at Belfast on June 25; 1824。  His father; Dr。 James Thomson; the son of a Scots…Irish farmer; showed a bent for scholarship when a boy; and became a pupil teacher in a small school near Ballynahinch; in County Down。 With his summer earnings he educated himself at Glasgow University during winter。  Appointed head master of a school in connection with the Royal Academical Institute; he subsequently obtained the professorship of mathematics in that academy。  In 1832 he was called to the chair of mathematics in the University of Glasgow; where he achieved a reputation by his text…books on arithmetic and mathematics。

William began his course at the same college in his eleventh year; and was petted by the older students for his extraordinary quickness in solving the problems of his father's class。  It was quite plain that his genius lay in the direction of mathematics; and on finishing at Glasgow he was sent to the higher mathematical school of St。 Peter's College; Cambridge。  In 1845 he graduated as second wrangler; but won the Smith prize。  This 'consolation stakes' is regarded as a better test of originality than the tripos。  The first; or senior; wrangler probably beat him by a facility in applying well…known rules; and a readiness in writing。   One of the examiners is said to have declared that he was unworthy to cut Thomson's pencils。  It is certain that while the victor has been forgotten; the vanquished has created a world…wide renown。

While at Cambridge he took an active part in the field sports and athletics of the University。  He won the Silver Sculls; and rowed in the winning boat of the Oxford and Cambridge race。  He also took a lively interest in the classics; in music; and in general literature; but the real love; the central passion of his intellectual life; was the pursuit of science。  The study of mathematics; physics; and in particular; of electricity; had captivated his imagination; and soon engrossed all the teeming faculties of his mind。  At the age of seventeen; when ordinary lads are fond of games; and the cleverer sort are content to learn without attempting to originate; young Thomson had begun to make investigations。  The CAMBRIDGE MATHEMATICAL JOURNAL of 1842 contains a paper by him'On the uniform motion of heat in  homogeneous solid bodies; and its connection with the mathematical theory of electricity。' In this he  demonstrated the identity of the laws governing the distribution of electric or magnetic force in general; with the laws governing the distribution of the lines of the motion of heat in certain special cases。  The paper was followed by others on the mathematical theory of electricity; and in 1845 he gave the first mathematical development of Faraday's notion; that electric induction takes place through an intervening medium; or 'dielectric;' and not by some incomprehensible 'action at a distance。' He also devised an hypothesis of electrical images; which became a powerful agent in solving problems of electrostatics; or the science which deals with the forces of electricity at rest。

On gaining a fellowship at his college; he spent some time in the laboratory of the celebrated Regnault; at Paris; but in 1846 he was appointed to the chair of natural philosophy in the University of Glasgow。  It was due to the brilliant promise he displayed; as much as to the influence of his father; that at the age of twenty…two he found himself wearing the gown of a learned professor in one of the oldest Universities in the country; and lecturing to the class of which he was a freshman but a few years before。

Thomson became a man of public note in connection  with the laying of the first Atlantic cable。  After Cooke and Wheatstone had introduced their working telegraph in 1839; the idea of a submarine line across the Atlantic Ocean began to dawn on the minds of men as a possible triumph of the future。  Morse proclaimed his faith in it as early as the year 1840; and in 1842 he submerged a wire; insulated with tarred hemp and india…rubber; in the water of New York harbour; and telegraphed through it。  The following autumn Wheatstone performed a similar experiment in the Bay of Swansea。  A good insulator to cover the wire and prevent the electricity from leaking into the water was requisite for the success of a long submarine line。  India…rubber had been tried by Jacobi; the Russian electrician; as far back as 1811。  He laid a wire insulated with rubber across the Neva at St。 Petersburg; and succeeded in firing a mine by an electric spark sent through it; but india…rubber; although it is now used to a considerable extent; was not easy to manipulate in those days。  Luckily another gum which could be melted by heat; and readily applied to the wire; made its appearance。  Gutta…percha; the adhesive juice of the ISONANDRA GUTTA tree; was introduced to Europe in 1842 by Dr。 Montgomerie; a Scotch surveyor in the service of the East India Company。  Twenty years before he had seen whips made of it in Singapore; and believed that it would be useful in the fabrication of surgical apparatus。  Faraday and Wheatstone soon discovered its merits as an insulator; and in 1845 the latter suggested that it should be employed to cover the wire which it was proposed to lay from Dover to Calais。  It was tried on a wire laid across the Rhine between Deutz and Cologne。  In 1849 Mr。 C。 V。 Walker; electrician to the South Eastern Railway Company; submerged a wire coated with it; or; as it is technically called; a gutta…percha core; along the coast off Dover。

The following year Mr。 John Watkins Brett laid the first line across the Channel。  It was simply a copper wire coated with gutta…percha; without any other protection。  The core was payed out from a reel mounted behind the funnel of a steam tug; the Goliath; and sunk by means of lead weights attached to it every sixteenth of a mile。  She left Dover about ten o'clock on the morning of August 28; 1850; with some thirty men on board and a day's provisions。  The route she was to follow was marked by a line of buoys and flags。  By eight o'clock in the evening she arrived at Cape Grisnez; and came to anchor near the shore。  Mr。 Brett watched the operations through a glass at Dover。  'The declining sun;' he says; 'enabled me to discern the moving shadow of the steamer's smoke on the white cliff; thus indicating her progress。  At length the shadow ceased to move。  The vessel had evidently come to an anchor。  We gave them half an hour to convey the end of the wire to shore and attach the  type… printing instrument; and then I sent the first electrical message across the Channel。  This was reserved for Louis Napoleon。' According to Mr。 F。 C。 Webb; however; the first of the signals were a mere jumble of letters; which were torn up。  He saved a specimen of the slip on which they were printed; and it was afterwards presented to the Duke of Wellington。

Next morning this pioneer line was broken down at a point about 200 Yards from Cape Grisnez; and it turned out that a Boulogne fisherman had raised it on his trawl and cut a piece away; thinking he had found a rare species of tangle with gold in its heart。  This misfortune suggested the propriety of arming the core against mechanical injury by sheathing it in a cable of hemp and iron wires。  The experiment served to keep alive the concession; and the next year; on November 13; 1851; a protected core or true cable was laid from a Government hulk; the Blazer; which was towed across the Channel。

Next year Great Britain and Ireland were linked together。  In May; 1853; England was joined to Holland by a cable across the North Sea; from Orfordness to the 

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