В америке придумали телефон дата

The invention of the telephone was the culmination of work done by more than one individual, and led to an array of lawsuits relating to the patent claims of several individuals and numerous companies.

Early development[edit]

The concept of the telephone dates back to the string telephone or lover’s telephone that has been known for centuries, comprising two diaphragms connected by a taut string or wire. Sound waves are carried as mechanical vibrations along the string or wire from one diaphragm to the other. The classic example is the tin can telephone, a children’s toy made by connecting the two ends of a string to the bottoms of two metal cans, paper cups or similar items. The essential idea of this toy was that a diaphragm can collect voice sounds from the voice sounds for reproduction at a distance. One precursor to the development of the electromagnetic telephone originated in 1833 when Carl Friedrich Gauss and Wilhelm Eduard Weber invented an electromagnetic device for the transmission of telegraphic signals at the University of Göttingen, in Lower Saxony, helping to create the fundamental basis for the technology that was later used in similar telecommunication devices. Gauss’s and Weber’s invention is purported to be the world’s first electromagnetic telegraph.[1]

Charles Grafton Page[edit]

In 1840, American Charles Grafton Page passed an electric current through a coil of wire placed between the poles of a horseshoe magnet. He observed that connecting and disconnecting the current caused a ringing sound in the magnet. He called this effect «galvanic music».[2]

Innocenzo Manzetti[edit]

Innocenzo Manzetti considered the idea of a telephone as early as 1844, and may have made one in 1864, as an enhancement to an automaton built by him in 1849.

Charles Bourseul was a French telegraph engineer who proposed (but did not build) the first design of a «make-and-break» telephone in 1854. That is about the same time that Meucci later claimed to have created his first attempt at the telephone in Italy.

Bourseul explained: «Suppose that a man speaks near a movable disc sufficiently flexible to lose none of the vibrations of the voice; that this disc alternately makes and breaks the currents from a battery: you may have at a distance another disc which will simultaneously execute the same vibrations…. It is certain that, in a more or less distant future, a speech will be transmitted by electricity. I have made experiments in this direction; they are delicate and demand time and patience, but the approximations obtained promise a favorable result».

Antonio Meucci[edit]

An early communicating device was invented around 1854 by Antonio Meucci, who called it a telettrofono (lit.«electrophone»). In 1871 Meucci filed a patent caveat at the US Patent Office. His caveat describes his invention, but does not mention a diaphragm, electromagnet, conversion of sound into electrical waves, conversion of electrical waves into sound, or other essential features of an electromagnetic telephone.

The first American demonstration of Meucci’s invention took place in Staten Island, New York in 1854.[3] In 1861, a description of it was reportedly published in an Italian-language New York newspaper, although no known copy of that newspaper issue or article has survived to the present day. Meucci claimed to have invented a paired electromagnetic transmitter and receiver, where the motion of a diaphragm modulated a signal in a coil by moving an electromagnet, although this was not mentioned in his 1871 U.S. patent caveat. A further discrepancy observed was that the device described in the 1871 caveat employed only a single conduction wire, with the telephone’s transmitter-receivers being insulated from a ‘ground return’ path.

Meucci studied the principles of electromagnetic voice transmission for many years and was able to realise his dream of transmitting his voice through wires in 1856. He installed a telephone-like device within his house in order to communicate with his wife who was ill at the time. Some of Meucci’s notes purportedly written in 1857 describe the basic principle of electromagnetic voice transmission — or in other words, the telephone.[citation needed]

In the 1880s Meucci was credited with the early invention of inductive loading of telephone wires to increase long-distance signals. Unfortunately, serious burns from an accident, a lack of English, and poor business abilities resulted in Meucci’s failing to develop his inventions commercially in America. Meucci demonstrated some sort of instrument in 1849 in Havana, Cuba, however, this may have been a variant of a string telephone that used wire. Meucci has been further credited with the invention of an anti-sidetone circuit. However, examination showed that his solution to sidetone was to maintain two separate telephone circuits and thus use twice as many transmission wires. The anti-sidetone circuit later introduced by Bell Telephone instead canceled sidetone through a feedback process.

An American District Telegraph (ADT) laboratory reportedly lost some of Meucci’s working models, his wife reportedly disposed of others and Meucci, who sometimes lived on public assistance, chose not to renew his 1871 teletrofono patent caveat after 1874.

A resolution was passed by the United States House of Representatives in 2002 that said Meucci did pioneering work on the development of the telephone.[4][5][6][7] The resolution said that «if Meucci had been able to pay the $10 fee to maintain the caveat after 1874, no patent could have been issued to Bell».

The Meucci resolution by the US Congress was promptly followed by a Canada legislative motion by Canada’s 37th Parliament, declaring Alexander Graham Bell as the inventor of the telephone. Others in Canada disagreed with the Congressional resolution, some of whom provided criticisms of both its accuracy and intent.

Chronology of Meucci’s invention[edit]

A retired director general of the Telecom Italia central telecommunications research institute (CSELT), Basilio Catania,[8] and the Italian Society of Electrotechnics, «Federazione Italiana di Elettrotecnica«, have devoted a Museum to Antonio Meucci, constructing a chronology of his invention of the telephone and tracing the history of the two legal trials involving Meucci and Alexander Graham Bell.[9][10][11]

They claim that Meucci was the actual inventor of the telephone, and base their argument on reconstructed evidence. What follows, if not otherwise stated, is a summary of their historic reconstruction.[12]

  • In 1834 Meucci constructed a kind of acoustic telephone as a way to communicate between the stage and control room at the theatre «Teatro della Pergola» in Florence. This telephone is constructed on the model of pipe-telephones on ships and is still working.[13]
  • In 1848 Meucci developed a popular method of using electric shocks to treat rheumatism. He used to give his patients two conductors linked to 60 Bunsen batteries and ending with a cork. He also kept two conductors linked to the same Bunsen batteries. He used to sit in his laboratory, while the Bunsen batteries were placed in a second room and his patients in a third room. In 1849 while providing a treatment to a patient with a 114 V electrical discharge, in his laboratory Meucci heard his patient’s scream through the piece of copper wire that was between them, from the conductors he was keeping near his ear. His intuition was that the «tongue» of copper wire was vibrating just like a leaf of an electroscope; which means that there was an electrostatic effect. In order to continue the experiment without hurting his patient, Meucci covered the copper wire with a piece of paper. Through this device he heard inarticulated human voice. He called this device «telegrafo parlante» (litt. «talking telegraph»).[14]
  • On the basis of this prototype, Meucci worked on more than 30 kinds of sound transmitting devices inspired by the telegraph model as did other pioneers of the telephone, such as Charles Bourseul, Philipp Reis, Innocenzo Manzetti and others. Meucci later claimed that he did not think about transmitting voice by using the principle of the telegraph «make-and-break» method, but he looked for a «continuous» solution that did not interrupt the electric current.
  • Meucci later claimed that he constructed the first electromagnetic telephone, made of an electromagnet with a nucleus in the shape of a horseshoe bat, a diaphragm of animal skin, stiffened with potassium dichromate and keeping a metal disk stuck in the middle. The instrument was hosted in a cylindrical carton box.[15] He said he constructed this as a way to connect his second-floor bedroom to his basement laboratory, and thus communicate with his wife who was an invalid.
  • Meucci separated the two directions of transmission in order to eliminate the so-called «local effect», adopting what we would call today a 4-wire-circuit. He constructed a simple calling system with a telegraphic manipulator which short-circuited the instrument of the calling person, producing in the instrument of the called person a succession of impulses (clicks), much more intense than those of normal conversation. As he was aware that his device required a bigger band than a telegraph, he found some means to avoid the so-called «skin effect» through superficial treatment of the conductor or by acting on the material (copper instead of iron). He successfully used an insulated copper plait, thus anticipating the litz wire used by Nikola Tesla in RF coils.
  • In 1864 Meucci later claimed that he realized his «best device», using an iron diaphragm with optimized thickness and tightly clamped along its rim. The instrument was housed in a shaving-soap box, whose cover clamped the diaphragm.
  • In August 1870, Meucci later claimed that he obtained transmission of articulate human voice at a mile distance by using as a conductor a copper plait insulated by cotton. He called his device «teletrofono«. Drawings and notes by Antonio Meucci dated September 27, 1870, show coils of wire on long-distance telephone lines.[16] The painting made by Nestore Corradi in 1858 mentions the sentence «Electric current from the inductor pipe».

The above information was published in the Scientific American Supplement No. 520 of December 19, 1885,[17] based on reconstructions produced in 1885, for which there was no contemporary pre-1875 evidence. Meucci’s 1871 caveat did not mention any of the telephone features later credited to him by his lawyer, and which were published in that Scientific American Supplement, a major reason for the loss of the ‘Bell v. Globe and Meucci’ patent infringement court case, which was decided against Globe and Meucci.[18]

Johann Philipp Reis[edit]

A German stamp dedicated to Johann Philipp Reis

The Reis telephone was developed from 1857 onwards. Allegedly, the transmitter was difficult to operate, since the relative position of the needle and the contact were critical to the device’s operation. Thus, it can be called a «telephone», since it did transmit voice sounds electrically over distance, but was hardly a commercially practical telephone in the modern sense.

In 1874, the Reis device was tested by the British company Standard Telephones and Cables (STC). The results also confirmed it could transmit and receive speech with good quality (fidelity), but relatively low intensity.[citation needed]

Reis’ new invention was articulated in a lecture before the Physical Society of Frankfurt on 26 October 1861, and a description, written by himself for Jahresbericht a month or two later. It created a good deal of scientific excitement in Germany; models of it were sent abroad, to London, Dublin, Tiflis, and other places. It became a subject for popular lectures, and an article for scientific cabinets.

Thomas Edison tested the Reis equipment and found that «single words, uttered as in reading, speaking and the like, were perceptible indistinctly, notwithstanding here also the inflections of the voice, the modulations of interrogation, wonder, command, etc., attained distinct expression.»[19] He used Reis´s work for the successful development of the carbon microphone. Edison acknowledged his debt to Reis thus:

The first inventor of a telephone was Phillip Reis of Germany only musical not articulating. The first person to publicly exhibit a telephone for transmission of articulate speech was A. G. Bell. The first practical commercial telephone for transmission of articulate speech was invented by myself. Telephones used throughout the world are mine and Bell’s. Mine is used for transmitting. Bell’s is used for receiving.[20]

Cyrille Duquet[edit]

Cyrille Duquet invents the handset.[21]

Duquet obtained a patent on 1 Feb. 1878 for a number of modifications “giving more facility for the transmission of sound and adding to its acoustic properties,” and in particular for the design of a new apparatus combining the speaker and receiver in a single unit.[21]

Electro-magnetic transmitters and receivers[edit]

Elisha Gray[edit]

Elisha Gray, of Highland Park, Illinois, also devised a tone telegraph of this kind about the same time as La Cour. In Gray’s tone telegraph, several vibrating steel reeds tuned to different frequencies interrupted the current, which at the other end of the line passed through electromagnets and vibrated matching tuned steel reeds near the electromagnet poles. Gray’s «harmonic telegraph», with vibrating reeds, was used by the Western Union Telegraph Company. Since more than one set of vibration frequencies – that is to say, more than one musical tone – can be sent over the same wire simultaneously, the harmonic telegraph can be utilized as a ‘multiplex’ or many-ply telegraph, conveying several messages through the same wire at the same time. Each message can either be read by an operator by the sound, or from different tones read by different operators, or a permanent record can be made by the marks drawn on a ribbon of traveling paper by a Morse recorder. On July 27, 1875, Gray was granted U.S. patent 166,096 for «Electric Telegraph for Transmitting Musical Tones» (the harmonic).

On February 14, 1876, at the US Patent Office, Gray’s lawyer filed a patent caveat for a telephone on the very same day that Bell’s lawyer filed Bell’s patent application for a telephone. The water transmitter described in Gray’s caveat was strikingly similar to the experimental telephone transmitter tested by Bell on March 10, 1876, a fact which raised questions about whether Bell (who knew of Gray) was inspired by Gray’s design or vice versa. Although Bell did not use Gray’s water transmitter in later telephones, evidence suggests that Bell’s lawyers may have obtained an unfair advantage over Gray.[22]

Alexander Graham Bell[edit]

Bell’s March 10, 1876, laboratory notebook entry describing his first successful experiment with the telephone

Alexander Graham Bell had pioneered a system called visible speech, developed by his father, to teach deaf children. In 1872 Bell founded a school in Boston, Massachusetts, to train teachers of the deaf. The school subsequently became part of Boston University, where Bell was appointed professor of vocal physiology in 1873.

As Professor of Vocal Physiology at Boston University, Bell was engaged in training teachers in the art of instructing the deaf how to speak and experimented with the Leon Scott phonautograph in recording the vibrations of speech. This apparatus consists essentially of a thin membrane vibrated by the voice and carrying a light-weight stylus, which traces an undulatory line on a plate of smoked glass. The line is a graphic representation of the vibrations of the membrane and the waves of sound in the air.[23]

This background prepared Bell for work with spoken sound waves and electricity. He began his experiments in 1873–1874 with a harmonic telegraph, following the examples of Bourseul, Reis, and Gray. Bell’s designs employed various on-off-on-off make-break current-interrupters driven by vibrating steel reeds which sent interrupted current to a distant receiver electro-magnet that caused a second steel reed or tuning fork to vibrate.[24]

During a June 2, 1875, experiment by Bell and his assistant Thomas Watson, a receiver reed failed to respond to the intermittent current supplied by an electric battery. Bell told Watson, who was at the other end of the line, to pluck the reed, thinking it had stuck to the pole of the magnet. Watson complied, and to his astonishment Bell heard a reed at his end of the line vibrate and emit the same timbre of a plucked reed, although there were no interrupted on-off-on-off currents from a transmitter to make it vibrate.[25] A few more experiments soon showed that his receiver reed had been set in vibration by the magneto-electric currents induced in the line by the motion of the distant receiver reed in the neighborhood of its magnet. The battery current was not causing the vibration but was needed only to supply the magnetic field in which the reeds vibrated. Moreover, when Bell heard the rich overtones of the plucked reed, it occurred to him that since the circuit was never broken, all the complex vibrations of speech might be converted into undulating (modulated) currents, which in turn would reproduce the complex timbre, amplitude, and frequencies of speech at a distance.

After Bell and Watson discovered on June 2, 1875, that movements of the reed alone in a magnetic field could reproduce the frequencies and timbre of spoken sound waves, Bell reasoned by analogy with the mechanical phonautograph that a skin diaphragm would reproduce sounds like the human ear when connected to a steel or iron reed or hinged armature. On July 1, 1875, he instructed Watson to build a receiver consisting of a stretched diaphragm or drum of goldbeater’s skin with an armature of magnetized iron attached to its middle, and free to vibrate in front of the pole of an electromagnet in circuit with the line. A second membrane-device was built for use as a transmitter.[26] This was the «gallows» phone. A few days later they were tried together, one at each end of the line, which ran from a room in the inventor’s house, located at 5 Exeter Place in Boston, to the cellar underneath.[27] Bell, in the work room, held one instrument in his hands, while Watson in the cellar listened at the other. Bell spoke into his instrument, «Do you understand what I say?» and Watson answered «Yes». However, the voice sounds were not distinct and the armature tended to stick to the electromagnet pole and tear the membrane.

In a March 10, 1876, test, between two rooms in a single building in Boston[28] showed that the telephone worked, but so far, only at a short range.[29][30]

In 1876, Bell became the first to obtain a patent for an «apparatus for transmitting vocal or other sounds telegraphically», after experimenting with many primitive sound transmitters and receivers. Because of illness and other commitments, Bell made little or no telephone improvements or experiments for eight months until after his U.S. patent 174,465 was published.,[26] but within a year the first telephone exchange was built in Connecticut and the Bell Telephone Company was created in 1877, with Bell the owner of a third of the shares, quickly making him a wealthy man. Organ builder Ernest Skinner reported in his autobiography that Bell offered Boston-area organ builder Hutchings a 50% interest in the company but Hutchings declined.[31]

The master telephone patent, 174465, granted to Bell, March 7, 1876

In 1880, Bell was awarded the French Volta Prize for his invention and with the money, founded the Volta Laboratory in Washington,[which?] where he continued experiments in communication, in medical research, and in techniques for teaching speech to the deaf, working with Helen Keller among others. In 1885 he acquired land in Nova Scotia and established a summer home there where he continued experiments, particularly in the field of aviation.

Bell himself claimed that the telephone was invented in Canada but made in the United States.[32]

Bell’s success[edit]

Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone patent[33] drawing, March 7, 1876

Bell’s Prototype Telephone Centennial Issue of 1976

The first successful bi-directional transmission of clear speech by Bell and Watson was made on March 10, 1876, when Bell spoke into the device, «Mr. Watson, come here, I want to see you.» and Watson complied with the request. Bell tested Gray’s liquid transmitter design[34] in this experiment, but only after Bell’s patent was granted and only as a proof of concept scientific experiment[35] to prove to his own satisfaction that intelligible «articulate speech» (Bell’s words) could be electrically transmitted.[36] Because a liquid transmitter was not practical for commercial products, Bell focused on improving the electromagnetic telephone after March 1876 and never used Gray’s liquid transmitter in public demonstrations or commercial use.[37]

Bell’s telephone transmitter (microphone) consisted of a double electromagnet, in front of which a membrane, stretched on a ring, carried an oblong piece of soft iron cemented to its middle. A funnel-shaped mouthpiece directed the voice sounds upon the membrane, and as it vibrated, the soft iron «armature» induced corresponding currents in the coils of the electromagnet. These currents, after traversing the wire, passed through the receiver which consisted of an electromagnet in a tubular metal can having one end partially closed by a thin circular disc of soft iron. When the undulatory current passed through the coil of this electromagnet, the disc vibrated, thereby creating sound waves in the air.

This primitive telephone was rapidly improved. The double electromagnet was replaced by a single permanently magnetized bar magnet having a small coil or bobbin of fine wire surrounding one pole, in front of which a thin disc of iron was fixed in a circular mouthpiece. The disc served as a combined diaphragm and armature. On speaking into the mouthpiece, the iron diaphragm vibrated with the voice in the magnetic field of the bar-magnet pole, and thereby caused undulatory currents in the coil. These currents, after traveling through the wire to the distant receiver, were received in an identical apparatus. This design was patented by Bell on January 30, 1877. The sounds were weak and could only be heard when the ear was close to the earphone/mouthpiece, but they were distinct.

In the third of his tests in Southern Ontario, on August 10, 1876, Bell made a call via the telegraph line from the family homestead in Brantford, Ontario, to his assistant located in Paris, Ontario, some 13 kilometers away. This test was claimed by many sources as the world’s first long-distance call.[38][39] The final test certainly proved that the telephone could work over long distances.

Public demonstrations[edit]

Early public demonstrations of Bell’s telephone[edit]

Bell exhibited a working telephone at the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia in June 1876, where it attracted the attention of Brazilian emperor Pedro II plus the physicist and engineer Sir William Thomson (who would later be ennobled as the 1st Baron Kelvin). In August 1876 at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Thomson revealed the telephone to the European public. In describing his visit to the Philadelphia Exhibition, Thomson said, «I heard [through the telephone] passages taken at random from the New York newspapers: ‘S.S. Cox Has Arrived’ (I failed to make out the S.S. Cox); ‘The City of New York’, ‘Senator Morton’, ‘The Senate Has Resolved To Print A Thousand Extra Copies’, ‘The Americans In London Have Resolved To Celebrate The Coming Fourth Of July!’ All this my own ears heard spoken to me with unmistakable distinctness by the then circular disc armature of just such another little electro-magnet as this I hold in my hand.»

Three great tests of the telephone[edit]

Only a few months after receiving U.S. Patent No. 174465 at the beginning of March 1876, Bell conducted three important tests of his new invention and the telephone technology after returning to his parents’ home at Melville House (now the Bell Homestead National Historic Site) for the summer.

On March 10, 1876 Bell had used «the instrument» in Boston to call Thomas Watson who was in another room but out of earshot. He said, «Mr. Watson, come here – I want to see you» and Watson soon appeared at his side.[40]

In the first test call at a longer distance in Southern Ontario, on August 3, 1876, Alexander Graham’s uncle, Professor David Charles Bell, spoke to him from the Brantford telegraph office, reciting lines from Shakespeare’s HamletTo be or not to be….«).[41][42] The young inventor, positioned at the A. Wallis Ellis store in the neighboring community of Mount Pleasant,[41][43] received and may possibly have transferred his uncle’s voice onto a phonautogram, a drawing made on a pen-like recording device that could produce the shapes of sound waves as waveforms onto smoked glass or other media by tracing their vibrations.

The next day on August 4 another call was made between Brantford’s telegraph office and Melville House, where a large dinner party exchanged «….speech, recitations, songs and instrumental music».[41] To bring telephone signals to Melville House, Alexander Graham audaciously «bought up» and «cleaned up» the complete supply of stovepipe wire in Brantford.[44][45] With the help of two of his parents’ neighbours,[46] he tacked the stovepipe wire some 400 metres (a quarter mile) along the top of fence posts from his parents’ home to a junction point on the telegraph line to the neighbouring community of Mount Pleasant, which joined it to the Dominion Telegraph office in Brantford, Ontario.[47][48]

The third and most important test was the world’s first true long-distance telephone call, placed between Brantford and Paris, Ontario on August 10, 1876.[49][50] For that long-distance call Alexander Graham Bell set up a telephone using telegraph lines at Robert White’s Boot and Shoe Store at 90 Grand River Street North in Paris via its Dominion Telegraph Co. office on Colborne Street. The normal telegraph line between Paris and Brantford was not quite 13 km (8 miles) long, but the connection was extended a further 93 km (58 miles) to Toronto to allow the use of a battery in its telegraph office.[41][51] Granted, this was a one-way long-distance call. The first two-way (reciprocal) conversation over a line occurred between Cambridge and Boston (roughly 2.5 miles) on October 9, 1876.[52] During that conversation, Bell was on Kilby Street in Boston and Watson was at the offices of the Walworth Manufacturing Company.[53]

Scientific American described the three test calls in their September 9, 1876, article, «The Human Voice Transmitted by Telegraph».[51] Historian Thomas Costain referred to the calls as «the three great tests of the telephone».[54] One Bell Homestead reviewer wrote of them, «No one involved in these early calls could possibly have understood the future impact of these communication firsts».[55]

Later public demonstrations[edit]

A later telephone design was publicly exhibited on May 4, 1877, at a lecture given by Professor Bell in the Boston Music Hall. According to a report quoted by John Munro in Heroes of the Telegraph:

Going to the small telephone box with its slender wire attachments, Mr. Bell coolly asked, as though addressing someone in an adjoining room, «Mr. Watson, are you ready!» Mr. Watson, five miles away in Somerville, promptly answered in the affirmative, and soon was heard a voice singing «America». […] Going to another instrument, connected by wire with Providence, forty-three miles distant, Mr. Bell listened a moment, and said, «Signor Brignolli, who is assisting at a concert in Providence Music Hall, will now sing for us.» In a moment the cadence of the tenor’s voice rose and fell, the sound being faint, sometimes lost, and then again audible. Later, a cornet solo played in Somerville was very distinctly heard. Still later, a three-part song came over the wire from Somerville, and Mr. Bell told his audience «I will switch off the song from one part of the room to another so that all can hear.» At a subsequent lecture in Salem, Massachusetts, communication was established with Boston, eighteen miles distant, and Mr. Watson at the latter place sang «Auld Lang Syne», the National Anthem, and «Hail Columbia», while the audience at Salem joined in the chorus.[56]

On January 14, 1878, at Osborne House, on the Isle of Wight, Bell demonstrated the device to Queen Victoria,[57] placing calls to Cowes, Southampton and London. These were the first publicly witnessed long-distance telephone calls in the UK. The queen considered the process to be «quite extraordinary» although the sound was «quite faint».[58] She later asked to buy the equipment that was used, but Bell offered to make a model specifically for her.[59][60]

Summary of Bell’s achievements[edit]

Bell did for the telephone what Henry Ford did for the automobile. Although not the first to experiment with telephonic devices, Bell and the companies founded in his name were the first to develop commercially practical telephones around which a successful business could be built and grow. Bell adopted carbon transmitters similar to Edison’s transmitters and adapted telephone exchanges and switching plug boards developed for telegraphy. Watson and other Bell engineers invented numerous other improvements to telephony. Bell succeeded where others failed to assemble a commercially viable telephone system. It can be argued that Bell invented the telephone industry. Bell’s first intelligible voice transmission over an electric wire was named an IEEE Milestone.[61]

Variable resistance transmitters[edit]

Water microphone – Elisha Gray[edit]

Elisha Gray recognized the lack of fidelity of the make-break transmitter of Reis and Bourseul and reasoned by analogy with the lover’s telegraph, that if the current could be made to more closely model the movements of the diaphragm, rather than simply opening and closing the circuit, greater fidelity might be achieved. Gray filed a patent caveat with the US patent office on February 14, 1876, for a liquid microphone. The device used a metal needle or rod that was placed – just barely – into a liquid conductor, such as a water/acid mixture. In response to the diaphragm’s vibrations, the needle dipped more or less into the liquid, varying the electrical resistance and thus the current passing through the device and on to the receiver. Gray did not convert his caveat into a patent application until after the caveat had expired and hence left the field open to Bell.

When Gray applied for a patent for the variable resistance telephone transmitter, the Patent Office determined «while Gray was undoubtedly the first to conceive of and disclose the (variable resistance) invention, as in his caveat of 14 February 1876, his failure to take any action amounting to completion until others had demonstrated the utility of the invention deprives him of the right to have it considered.»[62]

Carbon microphone – Thomas Edison, Edward Hughes, Emile Berliner[edit]

The carbon microphone was independently developed around 1878 by David Edward Hughes in England and Emile Berliner and Thomas Edison in the US. Although Edison was awarded the first patent in mid-1877, Hughes had demonstrated his working device in front of many witnesses some years earlier, and most historians credit him with its invention.

Thomas Alva Edison took the next step in improving the telephone with his invention in 1878 of the carbon grain «transmitter» (microphone) that provided a strong voice signal on the transmitting circuit that made long-distance calls practical. Edison discovered that carbon grains, squeezed between two metal plates, had a variable electrical resistance that was related to the pressure. Thus, the grains could vary their resistance as the plates moved in response to sound waves, and reproduce sound with good fidelity, without the weak signals associated with electromagnetic transmitters.

The carbon microphone was further improved by Emile Berliner, Francis Blake, David E. Hughes, Henry Hunnings, and Anthony White. The carbon microphone remained standard in telephony until the 1980s, and is still being produced.

Improvements to the early telephone[edit]

Additional inventions such as the call bell, central telephone exchange, common battery, ring tone, amplification, trunk lines, and wireless phones – at first cordless and then fully mobile – made the telephone the useful and widespread apparatus as it is now.

Telephone exchanges[edit]

The telephone exchange was an idea of the Hungarian engineer Tivadar Puskás (1844–1893) in 1876, while he was working for Thomas Edison on a telegraph exchange.[63][64][65][66] Puskás was working on his idea for an electrical telegraph exchange when Alexander Graham Bell received the first patent for the telephone. This caused Puskás to take a fresh look at his own work and he refocused on perfecting a design for a telephone exchange. He then got in touch with the U.S. inventor Thomas Edison who liked the design. According to Edison, «Tivadar Puskas was the first person to suggest the idea of a telephone exchange».[67]

Controversies[edit]

Bell has been widely recognized as the «inventor» of the telephone outside of Italy, where Meucci was championed as its inventor, and outside of Germany, where Reis was recognized as the «inventor». In the United States, there are numerous reflections of Bell as a North American icon for inventing the telephone, and the matter was for a long time non-controversial. In June 2002, however, the United States House of Representatives passed a symbolic bill recognizing the contributions of Antonio Meucci «in the invention of the telephone» (not «for the invention of the telephone»), throwing the matter into some controversy. Ten days later the Canadian parliament countered with a symbolic motion attributing the invention of the telephone to Bell.

Champions of Meucci, Manzetti, and Gray have each offered fairly precise tales of a contrivance whereby Bell actively stole the invention of the telephone from their specific inventor. In the 2002 congressional resolution, it was inaccurately noted that Bell worked in a laboratory in which Meucci’s materials had been stored, and claimed that Bell must thus have had access to those materials. Manzetti claimed that Bell visited him and examined his device in 1865. In 1886 it was publicly alleged by Zenas Wilber, a patent examiner, that Bell paid him one hundred dollars, when he allowed Bell to look at Gray’s confidential patent filing.[68]

One of the valuable claims in Bell’s 1876 U.S. Patent 174,465 was claim 4, a method of producing variable electric current in a circuit by varying the resistance in the circuit. That feature was not shown in any of Bell’s patent drawings, but was shown in Elisha Gray’s drawings in his caveat filed the same day, February 14, 1876. A description of the variable resistance feature, consisting of seven sentences, was inserted into Bell’s application. That it was inserted is not disputed. But when it was inserted is a controversial issue. Bell testified that he wrote the sentences containing the variable resistance feature before January 18, 1876, «almost at the last moment» before sending his draft application to his lawyers. A book by Evenson[69] argues that the seven sentences and claim 4 were inserted, without Bell’s knowledge, just before Bell’s application was hand carried to the Patent Office by one of Bell’s lawyers on February 14, 1876.

Contrary to the popular story, Gray’s caveat was taken to the US Patent Office a few hours before Bell’s application. Gray’s caveat was taken to the Patent Office in the morning of February 14, 1876, shortly after the Patent Office opened and remained near the bottom of the in-basket until that afternoon. Bell’s application was filed shortly before noon on February 14 by Bell’s lawyer who requested that the filing fee be entered immediately onto the cash receipts blotter and Bell’s application was taken to the Examiner immediately. Late in the afternoon, Gray’s caveat was entered on the cash blotter and was not taken to the Examiner until the following day. The fact that Bell’s filing fee was recorded earlier than Gray’s led to the myth that Bell had arrived at the Patent Office earlier.[70] Bell was in Boston on February 14 and did not know this happened until later. Gray later abandoned his caveat and did not contest Bell’s priority. That opened the door to Bell being granted US patent 174465 for the telephone on March 7, 1876.

Memorial to the invention[edit]

In 1906 the citizens of the City of Brantford, Ontario, Canada and its surrounding area formed the Bell Memorial Association to commemorate the invention of the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell in July 1874 at his parents’ home, Melville House, near Brantford.[71][72] Walter Allward’s design was the unanimous choice from among 10 submitted models, winning the competition. The memorial was originally to be completed by 1912 but Allward did not finish it until five years later. The Governor General of Canada, Victor Cavendish, 9th Duke of Devonshire, ceremoniously unveiled the memorial on October 24, 1917.[71][72]

Allward designed the monument to symbolize the telephone’s ability to overcome distances.[72] A series of steps lead to the main section where the floating allegorical figure of Inspiration appears over a reclining male figure representing Man, discovering his power to transmit sound through space, and also pointing to three floating figures, the messengers of Knowledge, Joy, and Sorrow positioned at the other end of the tableau. Additionally, there are two female figures mounted on granite pedestals representing Humanity positioned to the left and right of the memorial, one sending and the other receiving a message.[71]

The Bell Telephone Memorial’s grandeur has been described as the finest example of Allward’s early work, propelling the sculptor to fame. The memorial itself has been used as a central fixture for many civic events and remains an important part of Brantford’s history, helping the city style itself as ‘The Telephone City’.

A majestic, broad monument with figures mounted on pedestals to its left and right sides. Along the main portion of the monument are five figures mounted on a broad casting, including a man reclining, plus four floating female figures representing Inspiration, Knowledge, Joy, and Sorrow.

The Bell Telephone Memorial, commemorating the invention of the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell. The monument, paid by public subscription and sculpted by W.S. Allward, was dedicated by the Governor General of Canada, Victor Cavendish, 9th Duke of Devonshire with Dr. Bell in The Telephone City’s Alexander Graham Bell Gardens in 1917. Included on the main tableau are figures representing Man, discovering his power to transmit sound through space, Inspiration whispering to Man, his power to transmit sound through space, as well as Knowledge, Joy, Sorrow. (Courtesy: Brantford Heritage Inventory, City of Brantford, Ontario, Canada)

See also[edit]

  • History of the telephone
  • The Telephone Cases, U.S. patent dispute and infringement court cases
  • Timeline of the telephone

References[edit]

  1. ^

    Erster elektromagnetischer Telegraph der Welt über den Dächern von Göttingen (First electromagnetic telegraph in the world over the roofs of Göttingen), Georg-August-Universität Göttingen website. Retrieved January 22, 2013. (in German)

  2. ^ [1][permanent dead link]
  3. ^ «Home». garibaldimeuccimuseum.com.
  4. ^ «House Resolution 269». Archived from the original on December 29, 2015. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  5. ^ Wheen, Andrew. Dot-Dash to Dot.com: How Modern Telecommunications Evolved from the Telegraph to the Internet. Springer, 2010. p. 45. Web. 23 Sep. 2011.
  6. ^ Cleveland, Cutler (Lead Author) ; Saundry, Peter (Topic Editor). Meucci, Antonio. Encyclopedia of Earth, 2006. Web. 22 Jul. 2012.
  7. ^ (in Italian) Caretto, Ennio. Gli Usa ammettono: Meucci è l’ inventore del telefono. Corriere della Sera. Web. 21 Jul. 2012.
  8. ^ Basilio Catania Homepage
  9. ^ aei.it; L’invenzione del telefono da parte di Meucci e la sua sventurata e ingiusta conclusione
  10. ^ Meucci, ChezBasilio.org website
  11. ^ aei.it website
  12. ^ Basilio Catania’s reconstruction, in English
  13. ^ Picture of the acoustic telephone, page maintained by the Italian Society of Electrotechnics
  14. ^ Meucci’s original drawings. Page maintained by the Italian Society of Electrotechnics
  15. ^ Meucci’s original drawings. Page maintained by the Italian Society of Electrotechnics Archived July 28, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ aei.it; Affidavit of lawyer Michael Lemmi
  17. ^ Scientific American Supplement No. 520, December 19, 1885
  18. ^ Meucci’s 1871 patent caveat, pages 16-18
  19. ^ Coe, page 23
  20. ^ Edison, Thomas A. The Edison Papers, Digital Edition Rutgers University, accessed 26 March 2006. LB020312 TAEM 83:170
  21. ^ a b DUQUET, Cyrille
  22. ^ Inventors Digest, July/August 1998, pp. 26–28
  23. ^ Robert Bruce (1990), pages 102–103, 110–113, 120–121
  24. ^ Robert Bruce (1990), pages 104–109
  25. ^ Robert Bruce (1990), pages 146–148
  26. ^ a b Robert Bruce (1990), page 149
  27. ^ Puleo, Stephen (2011). A City So Grand: The Rise of an American Metropolis, Boston 1850-1900. Beacon Press. p. 195. ISBN 978-0807001493.
  28. ^ Evenson, A Edward (November 10, 2000). The Telephone Patent Conspiracy of 1876: The Elisha Gray-Alexander Bell Controversy and Its Many Players. McFarland. p. 99. ISBN 0786408839.
  29. ^ American Treasures of the Library of Congress … Bell — Lab notebook
  30. ^ Puleo, Stephen (2011). A City So Grand: The Rise of an American Metropolis, Boston 1850-1900. Beacon Press. p. 195. ISBN 978-0807001493.
  31. ^ Skinner, Ernest M. (January 1, 1956). «Ernest M. Skinner Will Be 90 Years Old» (PDF). The Diapason. 47 (2): 1–2.
  32. ^ «Archived copy». Archived from the original on November 26, 2019. Retrieved April 16, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  33. ^ US 174465 Alexander Graham Bell: «Improvement in Telegraphy» filed on February 14, 1876, granted on March 7, 1876.
  34. ^ Shulman, pages 36-37. Bell’s lab notes dated March 9, 1876 show a drawing of a person speaking face down into a liquid transmitter very similar to the liquid transmitter depicted as Fig. 3 in Gray’s caveat.
  35. ^ Evenson, page 99.
  36. ^ Evenson, page 98.
  37. ^ Evenson, page 100.
  38. ^ «Alexander Graham Bell 1847-1922 Inventor of the Bell System». Telecommunications Canada. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  39. ^ «Invention of the Telephone National Historic Event». Parks Canada. Retrieved January 14, 2020. Bell made public demonstrations of his now patented invention, culminating in the world’s first long distance call, to Paris, 13 kilometres away, on 10 August
  40. ^ Evenson, A Edward (November 10, 2000). The Telephone Patent Conspiracy of 1876: The Elisha Gray-Alexander Bell Controversy and Its Many Players. McFarland. p. 99. ISBN 0786408839.
  41. ^ a b c d «First Telephone Office», CWB, November 17, 1971, pp. 4–5.
  42. ^ «You Can Tour The House in Brantford Where Bell Worked on His Telephone», Toronto Daily Star, December 26, 1970.
  43. ^ MacLeod, Elizabeth. Alexander Graham Bell: An Inventive Life, Toronto, Ontario, Canada: Kids Can Press, 1999, ISBN 1-55074-456-9, p. 14.
  44. ^ «Bell Emphatic in Declaring That Telephone Was Invented Here», Brantford Expositor, August 10, 1936, p. 15.
  45. ^ «Use of Stove Pipe Wire Is Related at Banquet: Graham Tells Of Some Early Experiments», Brantford Expositor, August 10, 1936, p. 17.
  46. ^ Patten, William; Bell, Alexander Melville. Pioneering The Telephone In Canada, Montreal: Herald Press, 1926. N.B.: Patten’s full name was William Patten, not Gulielmus Patten as credited elsewhere.
  47. ^ Patten & Bell, 1926, p. 15–16, 19.
  48. ^ «The Bell Homestead», Montreal, Canada: Telephone Historical Collection, The Bell Telephone Co. of Canada, December 29, 1954, pp. 1–2.
  49. ^ Harrington, Stephanie. «Bell Homestead: Home Offers In-depth Look At Inventor», Brantford and Brant County Community Guide, 2002–2003″, Brantford Expositor, 2002.
  50. ^ Korfmann, Margret. «Homestead’s History Highlighted», Brantford Expositor, February 22, 1985.
  51. ^ a b «A .G. Bell’s Brantford House Is Museum of the Telephone», Toronto Star, April 25, 1987, p. H-23.
  52. ^ Popular Mechanics Aug 1912. New York: Popular Mechanics. August 1912. p. 186.
  53. ^ First Phone Call 685 Main Street
  54. ^ «First Long Distance Telephone Call Recalled», Brantford Expositor, August 11, 1976.
  55. ^ Butorac, Yvonne (June 29, 1995). «Bell’s Brantford Homestead Celebrates Phone Invention». Toronto Star. p. G10. ProQuest document ID 437257031.
  56. ^ Munro, John. Heroes of the Telegraph, London: The Religious tract society, 1891. Note: public domain text
  57. ^ «140 YEARS SINCE FIRST TELEPHONE CALL TO QUEEN VICTORIA ON THE ISLE OF WIGHT». Island Echo. January 14, 2018. Retrieved January 14, 2020. He made the UK’s first publicly-witnessed long distance calls, calling Cowes, Southampton and London. Queen Victoria liked the telephone so much she wanted to buy it.
  58. ^ «Alexander Graham Bell demonstrates the newly invented telephone». The Telegraph. January 13, 2017. Retrieved January 14, 2020. one of the Queen’s staff wrote to Professor Bell to inform him «how much gratified and surprised the Queen was at the exhibition of the Telephone»
  59. ^ «pdf, Letter from Alexander Graham Bell to Sir Thomas Biddulph, February 1, 1878». Library of Congress. Retrieved January 14, 2020. The instruments at present in Osborne are merely those supplied for ordinary commercial purposes, and it will afford me much pleasure to be permitted to offer to the Queen a set of Telephones to be made expressly for her Majesty’s use.
  60. ^ Ross, Stewart (2001). Alexander Graham Bell. (Scientists who Made History). New York: Raintree Steck-Vaughn. pp. 21–22. ISBN 978-0-7398-4415-1.
  61. ^

    «Milestones:First Intelligible Voice Transmission over Electric Wire, 1876». IEEE Global History Network. IEEE. Retrieved July 27, 2011.

  62. ^ Burton Baker, pages 90–91
  63. ^

    Puskás Tivadar (1844–1893) (short biography), Hungarian History website. Retrieved from Archive.org, February 2013.

  64. ^ «Puskás Tivadar (1844–1893)». Mszh.hu. Archived from the original on October 8, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  65. ^ «Puskás, Tivadar». Omikk.bme.hu. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  66. ^ «Puskás Tivadar». Hunreal.com. Archived from the original on March 16, 2012. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  67. ^ Frank Lewis Dyer and Thomas Commerford Martin. Edison, His Life And Inventions, Harper & Brothers, 1910, p. 71. Retrieved from Gutenberg.org.
  68. ^ The Washington Post, May 22, 1886
  69. ^ Evenson, pp 64–69, 86–87, 110, 194–196
  70. ^ Evenson, pages 68–69
  71. ^ a b c

    Whitaker, A.J. Bell Telephone Memorial, City of Brantford/Hurley Printing, Brantford, Ontario, 1944.

  72. ^ a b c

    Osborne, Harold S. (1943) Biographical Memoir of Alexander Graham Bell, National Academy of Sciences: Biographical Memoirs, Vol. XXIII, 1847–1922. Presented to the Academy at its 1943 annual meeting.

Further reading[edit]

  • Baker, Burton H. (2000), The Gray Matter: The Forgotten Story of the Telephone, St. Joseph, MI, 2000. ISBN 0-615-11329-X
  • Bell, Alexander Graham. (1911), Speech by Alexander Graham Bell, November 2, 1911: Historical address delivered by Alexander Graham Bell, November 2, 1911, at the first meeting of the Telephone Pioneers’ Association, Beinn Bhreagh Recorder, November 1911, pp. 15–19;
  • Bethune, Brian, (2008) Did Bell Steal the Idea for the Phone? (Book Review), Maclean’s Magazine, February 4, 2008;
  • Bourseul, Charles, Transmission électrique de la parole, L’Illustration (Paris), August 26, 1854 (in French)
  • Bruce, Robert V. (1990), Bell: Alexander Bell and the Conquest of Solitude, Cornell University Press, 1990. ISBN 0-8014-9691-8
  • Coe, Lewis (1995), The Telephone and Its Several Inventors: A History, McFarland, North Carolina, 1995. ISBN 0-7864-0138-9
  • Evenson, A. Edward (2000), The Telephone Patent Conspiracy of 1876: The Elisha Gray – Alexander Bell Controversy, McFarland, North Carolina, 2000. ISBN 0-7864-0883-9
  • Gray, Charlotte, (2006) «Reluctant Genius: The Passionate Life and Inventive Mind of Alexander Graham Bell», HarperCollins, Toronto, 2006, ISBN 0-00-200676-6, ISBN 978-0-00-200676-7 IBO: 621.385092;
  • Josephson, Matthew (1992), Edison: A Biography, Wiley, ISBN 0-471-54806-5
  • Shulman, Seth, (2007) Telephone Gambit: Chasing Alexander Graham Bell’s Secret, W.W. Norton & Comp.; 1st Edition, December 25, 2007, ISBN 978-0-393-06206-9
  • Thompson, Sylvanus P. (1883), Philipp Reis, Inventor of the Telephone, London: E. & F. N. Spon, 1883.

External links[edit]

  • Heroes of the Telegraph by John Munro at Project Gutenberg
  • American Treasures of the Library of Congress, Alexander Graham Bell – Lab notebook I, pages 40–41 (image 22)
  • Scientific American Supplement No. 520, December 19, 1885
  • Telephone Patents

Patents[edit]

  • US 161739 Transmitter and Receiver for Electric Telegraphs (tuned steel reeds) by Alexander Graham Bell (April 6, 1875)
  • US 174465 Telegraphy (Bell’s first telephone patent) by Alexander Graham Bell (March 7, 1876)
  • US 178399 Telephonic Telegraphic Receiver (vibrating reed) by Alexander Graham Bell (June 6, 1876)
  • US 181553 Generating Electric Currents (magneto) by Alexander Graham Bell (August 29, 1876)
  • US 186787 Electric Telegraphy (permanent magnet receiver) by Alexander Graham Bell (January 15, 1877)
  • US 201488 Speaking Telephone (receiver designs) by Alexander Graham Bell (March 19, 1878)
  • US 213090 Electric Speaking Telephone (frictional transmitter) by Alexander Graham Bell (March 11, 1879)
  • US 220791 Telephone Circuit (twisted pairs of wire) by Alexander Graham Bell (October 21, 1879)
  • US 228507 Electric Telephone Transmitter (hollow ball transmitter) by Alexander Graham Bell (June 8, 1880)
  • US 230168 Circuit for Telephone by Alexander Graham Bell (July 20, 1880)
  • US 238833 Electric Call-Bell by Alexander Graham Bell (March 15, 1881)
  • US 241184 Telephonic Receiver (local battery circuit with coil) by Alexander Graham Bell (May 10, 1881)
  • US 244426 Telephone Circuit (cable of twisted pairs) by Alexander Graham Bell (July 19, 1881)
  • US 250126 Speaking Telephone by Francis Blake (November 29, 1881)
  • US 252576 Multiple Switch Board for Telephone Exchanges by Leroy Firman (Western Electric) (January 17, 1882)
  • US 474230 Speaking Telegraph (graphite transmitter) by Thomas Edison (Western Union) May 3, 1892
  • US 203016 Speaking Telephone (carbon button transmitter) by Thomas Edison
  • US 222390 Carbon Telephone (carbon granules transmitter) by Thomas Edison
  • US 485311 Telephone (solid back carbon transmitter) by Anthony C. White (Bell engineer) November 1, 1892
  • US 597062 Calling Device for Telephone Exchange (dial) by A. E. Keith (January 11, 1898)
  • US 687499 Telephone Transmitter (carbon granules «candlestick» microphone) by W.W. Dean (Kellogg Co.) November 26, 1901
  • US 815176 Automatic Telephone Connector Switch (for rotary dial phones) by A E Keith and C J Erickson March 13, 1906

The invention of the telephone was the culmination of work done by more than one individual, and led to an array of lawsuits relating to the patent claims of several individuals and numerous companies.

Early development[edit]

The concept of the telephone dates back to the string telephone or lover’s telephone that has been known for centuries, comprising two diaphragms connected by a taut string or wire. Sound waves are carried as mechanical vibrations along the string or wire from one diaphragm to the other. The classic example is the tin can telephone, a children’s toy made by connecting the two ends of a string to the bottoms of two metal cans, paper cups or similar items. The essential idea of this toy was that a diaphragm can collect voice sounds from the voice sounds for reproduction at a distance. One precursor to the development of the electromagnetic telephone originated in 1833 when Carl Friedrich Gauss and Wilhelm Eduard Weber invented an electromagnetic device for the transmission of telegraphic signals at the University of Göttingen, in Lower Saxony, helping to create the fundamental basis for the technology that was later used in similar telecommunication devices. Gauss’s and Weber’s invention is purported to be the world’s first electromagnetic telegraph.[1]

Charles Grafton Page[edit]

In 1840, American Charles Grafton Page passed an electric current through a coil of wire placed between the poles of a horseshoe magnet. He observed that connecting and disconnecting the current caused a ringing sound in the magnet. He called this effect «galvanic music».[2]

Innocenzo Manzetti[edit]

Innocenzo Manzetti considered the idea of a telephone as early as 1844, and may have made one in 1864, as an enhancement to an automaton built by him in 1849.

Charles Bourseul was a French telegraph engineer who proposed (but did not build) the first design of a «make-and-break» telephone in 1854. That is about the same time that Meucci later claimed to have created his first attempt at the telephone in Italy.

Bourseul explained: «Suppose that a man speaks near a movable disc sufficiently flexible to lose none of the vibrations of the voice; that this disc alternately makes and breaks the currents from a battery: you may have at a distance another disc which will simultaneously execute the same vibrations…. It is certain that, in a more or less distant future, a speech will be transmitted by electricity. I have made experiments in this direction; they are delicate and demand time and patience, but the approximations obtained promise a favorable result».

Antonio Meucci[edit]

An early communicating device was invented around 1854 by Antonio Meucci, who called it a telettrofono (lit.«electrophone»). In 1871 Meucci filed a patent caveat at the US Patent Office. His caveat describes his invention, but does not mention a diaphragm, electromagnet, conversion of sound into electrical waves, conversion of electrical waves into sound, or other essential features of an electromagnetic telephone.

The first American demonstration of Meucci’s invention took place in Staten Island, New York in 1854.[3] In 1861, a description of it was reportedly published in an Italian-language New York newspaper, although no known copy of that newspaper issue or article has survived to the present day. Meucci claimed to have invented a paired electromagnetic transmitter and receiver, where the motion of a diaphragm modulated a signal in a coil by moving an electromagnet, although this was not mentioned in his 1871 U.S. patent caveat. A further discrepancy observed was that the device described in the 1871 caveat employed only a single conduction wire, with the telephone’s transmitter-receivers being insulated from a ‘ground return’ path.

Meucci studied the principles of electromagnetic voice transmission for many years and was able to realise his dream of transmitting his voice through wires in 1856. He installed a telephone-like device within his house in order to communicate with his wife who was ill at the time. Some of Meucci’s notes purportedly written in 1857 describe the basic principle of electromagnetic voice transmission — or in other words, the telephone.[citation needed]

In the 1880s Meucci was credited with the early invention of inductive loading of telephone wires to increase long-distance signals. Unfortunately, serious burns from an accident, a lack of English, and poor business abilities resulted in Meucci’s failing to develop his inventions commercially in America. Meucci demonstrated some sort of instrument in 1849 in Havana, Cuba, however, this may have been a variant of a string telephone that used wire. Meucci has been further credited with the invention of an anti-sidetone circuit. However, examination showed that his solution to sidetone was to maintain two separate telephone circuits and thus use twice as many transmission wires. The anti-sidetone circuit later introduced by Bell Telephone instead canceled sidetone through a feedback process.

An American District Telegraph (ADT) laboratory reportedly lost some of Meucci’s working models, his wife reportedly disposed of others and Meucci, who sometimes lived on public assistance, chose not to renew his 1871 teletrofono patent caveat after 1874.

A resolution was passed by the United States House of Representatives in 2002 that said Meucci did pioneering work on the development of the telephone.[4][5][6][7] The resolution said that «if Meucci had been able to pay the $10 fee to maintain the caveat after 1874, no patent could have been issued to Bell».

The Meucci resolution by the US Congress was promptly followed by a Canada legislative motion by Canada’s 37th Parliament, declaring Alexander Graham Bell as the inventor of the telephone. Others in Canada disagreed with the Congressional resolution, some of whom provided criticisms of both its accuracy and intent.

Chronology of Meucci’s invention[edit]

A retired director general of the Telecom Italia central telecommunications research institute (CSELT), Basilio Catania,[8] and the Italian Society of Electrotechnics, «Federazione Italiana di Elettrotecnica«, have devoted a Museum to Antonio Meucci, constructing a chronology of his invention of the telephone and tracing the history of the two legal trials involving Meucci and Alexander Graham Bell.[9][10][11]

They claim that Meucci was the actual inventor of the telephone, and base their argument on reconstructed evidence. What follows, if not otherwise stated, is a summary of their historic reconstruction.[12]

  • In 1834 Meucci constructed a kind of acoustic telephone as a way to communicate between the stage and control room at the theatre «Teatro della Pergola» in Florence. This telephone is constructed on the model of pipe-telephones on ships and is still working.[13]
  • In 1848 Meucci developed a popular method of using electric shocks to treat rheumatism. He used to give his patients two conductors linked to 60 Bunsen batteries and ending with a cork. He also kept two conductors linked to the same Bunsen batteries. He used to sit in his laboratory, while the Bunsen batteries were placed in a second room and his patients in a third room. In 1849 while providing a treatment to a patient with a 114 V electrical discharge, in his laboratory Meucci heard his patient’s scream through the piece of copper wire that was between them, from the conductors he was keeping near his ear. His intuition was that the «tongue» of copper wire was vibrating just like a leaf of an electroscope; which means that there was an electrostatic effect. In order to continue the experiment without hurting his patient, Meucci covered the copper wire with a piece of paper. Through this device he heard inarticulated human voice. He called this device «telegrafo parlante» (litt. «talking telegraph»).[14]
  • On the basis of this prototype, Meucci worked on more than 30 kinds of sound transmitting devices inspired by the telegraph model as did other pioneers of the telephone, such as Charles Bourseul, Philipp Reis, Innocenzo Manzetti and others. Meucci later claimed that he did not think about transmitting voice by using the principle of the telegraph «make-and-break» method, but he looked for a «continuous» solution that did not interrupt the electric current.
  • Meucci later claimed that he constructed the first electromagnetic telephone, made of an electromagnet with a nucleus in the shape of a horseshoe bat, a diaphragm of animal skin, stiffened with potassium dichromate and keeping a metal disk stuck in the middle. The instrument was hosted in a cylindrical carton box.[15] He said he constructed this as a way to connect his second-floor bedroom to his basement laboratory, and thus communicate with his wife who was an invalid.
  • Meucci separated the two directions of transmission in order to eliminate the so-called «local effect», adopting what we would call today a 4-wire-circuit. He constructed a simple calling system with a telegraphic manipulator which short-circuited the instrument of the calling person, producing in the instrument of the called person a succession of impulses (clicks), much more intense than those of normal conversation. As he was aware that his device required a bigger band than a telegraph, he found some means to avoid the so-called «skin effect» through superficial treatment of the conductor or by acting on the material (copper instead of iron). He successfully used an insulated copper plait, thus anticipating the litz wire used by Nikola Tesla in RF coils.
  • In 1864 Meucci later claimed that he realized his «best device», using an iron diaphragm with optimized thickness and tightly clamped along its rim. The instrument was housed in a shaving-soap box, whose cover clamped the diaphragm.
  • In August 1870, Meucci later claimed that he obtained transmission of articulate human voice at a mile distance by using as a conductor a copper plait insulated by cotton. He called his device «teletrofono«. Drawings and notes by Antonio Meucci dated September 27, 1870, show coils of wire on long-distance telephone lines.[16] The painting made by Nestore Corradi in 1858 mentions the sentence «Electric current from the inductor pipe».

The above information was published in the Scientific American Supplement No. 520 of December 19, 1885,[17] based on reconstructions produced in 1885, for which there was no contemporary pre-1875 evidence. Meucci’s 1871 caveat did not mention any of the telephone features later credited to him by his lawyer, and which were published in that Scientific American Supplement, a major reason for the loss of the ‘Bell v. Globe and Meucci’ patent infringement court case, which was decided against Globe and Meucci.[18]

Johann Philipp Reis[edit]

A German stamp dedicated to Johann Philipp Reis

The Reis telephone was developed from 1857 onwards. Allegedly, the transmitter was difficult to operate, since the relative position of the needle and the contact were critical to the device’s operation. Thus, it can be called a «telephone», since it did transmit voice sounds electrically over distance, but was hardly a commercially practical telephone in the modern sense.

In 1874, the Reis device was tested by the British company Standard Telephones and Cables (STC). The results also confirmed it could transmit and receive speech with good quality (fidelity), but relatively low intensity.[citation needed]

Reis’ new invention was articulated in a lecture before the Physical Society of Frankfurt on 26 October 1861, and a description, written by himself for Jahresbericht a month or two later. It created a good deal of scientific excitement in Germany; models of it were sent abroad, to London, Dublin, Tiflis, and other places. It became a subject for popular lectures, and an article for scientific cabinets.

Thomas Edison tested the Reis equipment and found that «single words, uttered as in reading, speaking and the like, were perceptible indistinctly, notwithstanding here also the inflections of the voice, the modulations of interrogation, wonder, command, etc., attained distinct expression.»[19] He used Reis´s work for the successful development of the carbon microphone. Edison acknowledged his debt to Reis thus:

The first inventor of a telephone was Phillip Reis of Germany only musical not articulating. The first person to publicly exhibit a telephone for transmission of articulate speech was A. G. Bell. The first practical commercial telephone for transmission of articulate speech was invented by myself. Telephones used throughout the world are mine and Bell’s. Mine is used for transmitting. Bell’s is used for receiving.[20]

Cyrille Duquet[edit]

Cyrille Duquet invents the handset.[21]

Duquet obtained a patent on 1 Feb. 1878 for a number of modifications “giving more facility for the transmission of sound and adding to its acoustic properties,” and in particular for the design of a new apparatus combining the speaker and receiver in a single unit.[21]

Electro-magnetic transmitters and receivers[edit]

Elisha Gray[edit]

Elisha Gray, of Highland Park, Illinois, also devised a tone telegraph of this kind about the same time as La Cour. In Gray’s tone telegraph, several vibrating steel reeds tuned to different frequencies interrupted the current, which at the other end of the line passed through electromagnets and vibrated matching tuned steel reeds near the electromagnet poles. Gray’s «harmonic telegraph», with vibrating reeds, was used by the Western Union Telegraph Company. Since more than one set of vibration frequencies – that is to say, more than one musical tone – can be sent over the same wire simultaneously, the harmonic telegraph can be utilized as a ‘multiplex’ or many-ply telegraph, conveying several messages through the same wire at the same time. Each message can either be read by an operator by the sound, or from different tones read by different operators, or a permanent record can be made by the marks drawn on a ribbon of traveling paper by a Morse recorder. On July 27, 1875, Gray was granted U.S. patent 166,096 for «Electric Telegraph for Transmitting Musical Tones» (the harmonic).

On February 14, 1876, at the US Patent Office, Gray’s lawyer filed a patent caveat for a telephone on the very same day that Bell’s lawyer filed Bell’s patent application for a telephone. The water transmitter described in Gray’s caveat was strikingly similar to the experimental telephone transmitter tested by Bell on March 10, 1876, a fact which raised questions about whether Bell (who knew of Gray) was inspired by Gray’s design or vice versa. Although Bell did not use Gray’s water transmitter in later telephones, evidence suggests that Bell’s lawyers may have obtained an unfair advantage over Gray.[22]

Alexander Graham Bell[edit]

Bell’s March 10, 1876, laboratory notebook entry describing his first successful experiment with the telephone

Alexander Graham Bell had pioneered a system called visible speech, developed by his father, to teach deaf children. In 1872 Bell founded a school in Boston, Massachusetts, to train teachers of the deaf. The school subsequently became part of Boston University, where Bell was appointed professor of vocal physiology in 1873.

As Professor of Vocal Physiology at Boston University, Bell was engaged in training teachers in the art of instructing the deaf how to speak and experimented with the Leon Scott phonautograph in recording the vibrations of speech. This apparatus consists essentially of a thin membrane vibrated by the voice and carrying a light-weight stylus, which traces an undulatory line on a plate of smoked glass. The line is a graphic representation of the vibrations of the membrane and the waves of sound in the air.[23]

This background prepared Bell for work with spoken sound waves and electricity. He began his experiments in 1873–1874 with a harmonic telegraph, following the examples of Bourseul, Reis, and Gray. Bell’s designs employed various on-off-on-off make-break current-interrupters driven by vibrating steel reeds which sent interrupted current to a distant receiver electro-magnet that caused a second steel reed or tuning fork to vibrate.[24]

During a June 2, 1875, experiment by Bell and his assistant Thomas Watson, a receiver reed failed to respond to the intermittent current supplied by an electric battery. Bell told Watson, who was at the other end of the line, to pluck the reed, thinking it had stuck to the pole of the magnet. Watson complied, and to his astonishment Bell heard a reed at his end of the line vibrate and emit the same timbre of a plucked reed, although there were no interrupted on-off-on-off currents from a transmitter to make it vibrate.[25] A few more experiments soon showed that his receiver reed had been set in vibration by the magneto-electric currents induced in the line by the motion of the distant receiver reed in the neighborhood of its magnet. The battery current was not causing the vibration but was needed only to supply the magnetic field in which the reeds vibrated. Moreover, when Bell heard the rich overtones of the plucked reed, it occurred to him that since the circuit was never broken, all the complex vibrations of speech might be converted into undulating (modulated) currents, which in turn would reproduce the complex timbre, amplitude, and frequencies of speech at a distance.

After Bell and Watson discovered on June 2, 1875, that movements of the reed alone in a magnetic field could reproduce the frequencies and timbre of spoken sound waves, Bell reasoned by analogy with the mechanical phonautograph that a skin diaphragm would reproduce sounds like the human ear when connected to a steel or iron reed or hinged armature. On July 1, 1875, he instructed Watson to build a receiver consisting of a stretched diaphragm or drum of goldbeater’s skin with an armature of magnetized iron attached to its middle, and free to vibrate in front of the pole of an electromagnet in circuit with the line. A second membrane-device was built for use as a transmitter.[26] This was the «gallows» phone. A few days later they were tried together, one at each end of the line, which ran from a room in the inventor’s house, located at 5 Exeter Place in Boston, to the cellar underneath.[27] Bell, in the work room, held one instrument in his hands, while Watson in the cellar listened at the other. Bell spoke into his instrument, «Do you understand what I say?» and Watson answered «Yes». However, the voice sounds were not distinct and the armature tended to stick to the electromagnet pole and tear the membrane.

In a March 10, 1876, test, between two rooms in a single building in Boston[28] showed that the telephone worked, but so far, only at a short range.[29][30]

In 1876, Bell became the first to obtain a patent for an «apparatus for transmitting vocal or other sounds telegraphically», after experimenting with many primitive sound transmitters and receivers. Because of illness and other commitments, Bell made little or no telephone improvements or experiments for eight months until after his U.S. patent 174,465 was published.,[26] but within a year the first telephone exchange was built in Connecticut and the Bell Telephone Company was created in 1877, with Bell the owner of a third of the shares, quickly making him a wealthy man. Organ builder Ernest Skinner reported in his autobiography that Bell offered Boston-area organ builder Hutchings a 50% interest in the company but Hutchings declined.[31]

The master telephone patent, 174465, granted to Bell, March 7, 1876

In 1880, Bell was awarded the French Volta Prize for his invention and with the money, founded the Volta Laboratory in Washington,[which?] where he continued experiments in communication, in medical research, and in techniques for teaching speech to the deaf, working with Helen Keller among others. In 1885 he acquired land in Nova Scotia and established a summer home there where he continued experiments, particularly in the field of aviation.

Bell himself claimed that the telephone was invented in Canada but made in the United States.[32]

Bell’s success[edit]

Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone patent[33] drawing, March 7, 1876

Bell’s Prototype Telephone Centennial Issue of 1976

The first successful bi-directional transmission of clear speech by Bell and Watson was made on March 10, 1876, when Bell spoke into the device, «Mr. Watson, come here, I want to see you.» and Watson complied with the request. Bell tested Gray’s liquid transmitter design[34] in this experiment, but only after Bell’s patent was granted and only as a proof of concept scientific experiment[35] to prove to his own satisfaction that intelligible «articulate speech» (Bell’s words) could be electrically transmitted.[36] Because a liquid transmitter was not practical for commercial products, Bell focused on improving the electromagnetic telephone after March 1876 and never used Gray’s liquid transmitter in public demonstrations or commercial use.[37]

Bell’s telephone transmitter (microphone) consisted of a double electromagnet, in front of which a membrane, stretched on a ring, carried an oblong piece of soft iron cemented to its middle. A funnel-shaped mouthpiece directed the voice sounds upon the membrane, and as it vibrated, the soft iron «armature» induced corresponding currents in the coils of the electromagnet. These currents, after traversing the wire, passed through the receiver which consisted of an electromagnet in a tubular metal can having one end partially closed by a thin circular disc of soft iron. When the undulatory current passed through the coil of this electromagnet, the disc vibrated, thereby creating sound waves in the air.

This primitive telephone was rapidly improved. The double electromagnet was replaced by a single permanently magnetized bar magnet having a small coil or bobbin of fine wire surrounding one pole, in front of which a thin disc of iron was fixed in a circular mouthpiece. The disc served as a combined diaphragm and armature. On speaking into the mouthpiece, the iron diaphragm vibrated with the voice in the magnetic field of the bar-magnet pole, and thereby caused undulatory currents in the coil. These currents, after traveling through the wire to the distant receiver, were received in an identical apparatus. This design was patented by Bell on January 30, 1877. The sounds were weak and could only be heard when the ear was close to the earphone/mouthpiece, but they were distinct.

In the third of his tests in Southern Ontario, on August 10, 1876, Bell made a call via the telegraph line from the family homestead in Brantford, Ontario, to his assistant located in Paris, Ontario, some 13 kilometers away. This test was claimed by many sources as the world’s first long-distance call.[38][39] The final test certainly proved that the telephone could work over long distances.

Public demonstrations[edit]

Early public demonstrations of Bell’s telephone[edit]

Bell exhibited a working telephone at the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia in June 1876, where it attracted the attention of Brazilian emperor Pedro II plus the physicist and engineer Sir William Thomson (who would later be ennobled as the 1st Baron Kelvin). In August 1876 at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Thomson revealed the telephone to the European public. In describing his visit to the Philadelphia Exhibition, Thomson said, «I heard [through the telephone] passages taken at random from the New York newspapers: ‘S.S. Cox Has Arrived’ (I failed to make out the S.S. Cox); ‘The City of New York’, ‘Senator Morton’, ‘The Senate Has Resolved To Print A Thousand Extra Copies’, ‘The Americans In London Have Resolved To Celebrate The Coming Fourth Of July!’ All this my own ears heard spoken to me with unmistakable distinctness by the then circular disc armature of just such another little electro-magnet as this I hold in my hand.»

Three great tests of the telephone[edit]

Only a few months after receiving U.S. Patent No. 174465 at the beginning of March 1876, Bell conducted three important tests of his new invention and the telephone technology after returning to his parents’ home at Melville House (now the Bell Homestead National Historic Site) for the summer.

On March 10, 1876 Bell had used «the instrument» in Boston to call Thomas Watson who was in another room but out of earshot. He said, «Mr. Watson, come here – I want to see you» and Watson soon appeared at his side.[40]

In the first test call at a longer distance in Southern Ontario, on August 3, 1876, Alexander Graham’s uncle, Professor David Charles Bell, spoke to him from the Brantford telegraph office, reciting lines from Shakespeare’s HamletTo be or not to be….«).[41][42] The young inventor, positioned at the A. Wallis Ellis store in the neighboring community of Mount Pleasant,[41][43] received and may possibly have transferred his uncle’s voice onto a phonautogram, a drawing made on a pen-like recording device that could produce the shapes of sound waves as waveforms onto smoked glass or other media by tracing their vibrations.

The next day on August 4 another call was made between Brantford’s telegraph office and Melville House, where a large dinner party exchanged «….speech, recitations, songs and instrumental music».[41] To bring telephone signals to Melville House, Alexander Graham audaciously «bought up» and «cleaned up» the complete supply of stovepipe wire in Brantford.[44][45] With the help of two of his parents’ neighbours,[46] he tacked the stovepipe wire some 400 metres (a quarter mile) along the top of fence posts from his parents’ home to a junction point on the telegraph line to the neighbouring community of Mount Pleasant, which joined it to the Dominion Telegraph office in Brantford, Ontario.[47][48]

The third and most important test was the world’s first true long-distance telephone call, placed between Brantford and Paris, Ontario on August 10, 1876.[49][50] For that long-distance call Alexander Graham Bell set up a telephone using telegraph lines at Robert White’s Boot and Shoe Store at 90 Grand River Street North in Paris via its Dominion Telegraph Co. office on Colborne Street. The normal telegraph line between Paris and Brantford was not quite 13 km (8 miles) long, but the connection was extended a further 93 km (58 miles) to Toronto to allow the use of a battery in its telegraph office.[41][51] Granted, this was a one-way long-distance call. The first two-way (reciprocal) conversation over a line occurred between Cambridge and Boston (roughly 2.5 miles) on October 9, 1876.[52] During that conversation, Bell was on Kilby Street in Boston and Watson was at the offices of the Walworth Manufacturing Company.[53]

Scientific American described the three test calls in their September 9, 1876, article, «The Human Voice Transmitted by Telegraph».[51] Historian Thomas Costain referred to the calls as «the three great tests of the telephone».[54] One Bell Homestead reviewer wrote of them, «No one involved in these early calls could possibly have understood the future impact of these communication firsts».[55]

Later public demonstrations[edit]

A later telephone design was publicly exhibited on May 4, 1877, at a lecture given by Professor Bell in the Boston Music Hall. According to a report quoted by John Munro in Heroes of the Telegraph:

Going to the small telephone box with its slender wire attachments, Mr. Bell coolly asked, as though addressing someone in an adjoining room, «Mr. Watson, are you ready!» Mr. Watson, five miles away in Somerville, promptly answered in the affirmative, and soon was heard a voice singing «America». […] Going to another instrument, connected by wire with Providence, forty-three miles distant, Mr. Bell listened a moment, and said, «Signor Brignolli, who is assisting at a concert in Providence Music Hall, will now sing for us.» In a moment the cadence of the tenor’s voice rose and fell, the sound being faint, sometimes lost, and then again audible. Later, a cornet solo played in Somerville was very distinctly heard. Still later, a three-part song came over the wire from Somerville, and Mr. Bell told his audience «I will switch off the song from one part of the room to another so that all can hear.» At a subsequent lecture in Salem, Massachusetts, communication was established with Boston, eighteen miles distant, and Mr. Watson at the latter place sang «Auld Lang Syne», the National Anthem, and «Hail Columbia», while the audience at Salem joined in the chorus.[56]

On January 14, 1878, at Osborne House, on the Isle of Wight, Bell demonstrated the device to Queen Victoria,[57] placing calls to Cowes, Southampton and London. These were the first publicly witnessed long-distance telephone calls in the UK. The queen considered the process to be «quite extraordinary» although the sound was «quite faint».[58] She later asked to buy the equipment that was used, but Bell offered to make a model specifically for her.[59][60]

Summary of Bell’s achievements[edit]

Bell did for the telephone what Henry Ford did for the automobile. Although not the first to experiment with telephonic devices, Bell and the companies founded in his name were the first to develop commercially practical telephones around which a successful business could be built and grow. Bell adopted carbon transmitters similar to Edison’s transmitters and adapted telephone exchanges and switching plug boards developed for telegraphy. Watson and other Bell engineers invented numerous other improvements to telephony. Bell succeeded where others failed to assemble a commercially viable telephone system. It can be argued that Bell invented the telephone industry. Bell’s first intelligible voice transmission over an electric wire was named an IEEE Milestone.[61]

Variable resistance transmitters[edit]

Water microphone – Elisha Gray[edit]

Elisha Gray recognized the lack of fidelity of the make-break transmitter of Reis and Bourseul and reasoned by analogy with the lover’s telegraph, that if the current could be made to more closely model the movements of the diaphragm, rather than simply opening and closing the circuit, greater fidelity might be achieved. Gray filed a patent caveat with the US patent office on February 14, 1876, for a liquid microphone. The device used a metal needle or rod that was placed – just barely – into a liquid conductor, such as a water/acid mixture. In response to the diaphragm’s vibrations, the needle dipped more or less into the liquid, varying the electrical resistance and thus the current passing through the device and on to the receiver. Gray did not convert his caveat into a patent application until after the caveat had expired and hence left the field open to Bell.

When Gray applied for a patent for the variable resistance telephone transmitter, the Patent Office determined «while Gray was undoubtedly the first to conceive of and disclose the (variable resistance) invention, as in his caveat of 14 February 1876, his failure to take any action amounting to completion until others had demonstrated the utility of the invention deprives him of the right to have it considered.»[62]

Carbon microphone – Thomas Edison, Edward Hughes, Emile Berliner[edit]

The carbon microphone was independently developed around 1878 by David Edward Hughes in England and Emile Berliner and Thomas Edison in the US. Although Edison was awarded the first patent in mid-1877, Hughes had demonstrated his working device in front of many witnesses some years earlier, and most historians credit him with its invention.

Thomas Alva Edison took the next step in improving the telephone with his invention in 1878 of the carbon grain «transmitter» (microphone) that provided a strong voice signal on the transmitting circuit that made long-distance calls practical. Edison discovered that carbon grains, squeezed between two metal plates, had a variable electrical resistance that was related to the pressure. Thus, the grains could vary their resistance as the plates moved in response to sound waves, and reproduce sound with good fidelity, without the weak signals associated with electromagnetic transmitters.

The carbon microphone was further improved by Emile Berliner, Francis Blake, David E. Hughes, Henry Hunnings, and Anthony White. The carbon microphone remained standard in telephony until the 1980s, and is still being produced.

Improvements to the early telephone[edit]

Additional inventions such as the call bell, central telephone exchange, common battery, ring tone, amplification, trunk lines, and wireless phones – at first cordless and then fully mobile – made the telephone the useful and widespread apparatus as it is now.

Telephone exchanges[edit]

The telephone exchange was an idea of the Hungarian engineer Tivadar Puskás (1844–1893) in 1876, while he was working for Thomas Edison on a telegraph exchange.[63][64][65][66] Puskás was working on his idea for an electrical telegraph exchange when Alexander Graham Bell received the first patent for the telephone. This caused Puskás to take a fresh look at his own work and he refocused on perfecting a design for a telephone exchange. He then got in touch with the U.S. inventor Thomas Edison who liked the design. According to Edison, «Tivadar Puskas was the first person to suggest the idea of a telephone exchange».[67]

Controversies[edit]

Bell has been widely recognized as the «inventor» of the telephone outside of Italy, where Meucci was championed as its inventor, and outside of Germany, where Reis was recognized as the «inventor». In the United States, there are numerous reflections of Bell as a North American icon for inventing the telephone, and the matter was for a long time non-controversial. In June 2002, however, the United States House of Representatives passed a symbolic bill recognizing the contributions of Antonio Meucci «in the invention of the telephone» (not «for the invention of the telephone»), throwing the matter into some controversy. Ten days later the Canadian parliament countered with a symbolic motion attributing the invention of the telephone to Bell.

Champions of Meucci, Manzetti, and Gray have each offered fairly precise tales of a contrivance whereby Bell actively stole the invention of the telephone from their specific inventor. In the 2002 congressional resolution, it was inaccurately noted that Bell worked in a laboratory in which Meucci’s materials had been stored, and claimed that Bell must thus have had access to those materials. Manzetti claimed that Bell visited him and examined his device in 1865. In 1886 it was publicly alleged by Zenas Wilber, a patent examiner, that Bell paid him one hundred dollars, when he allowed Bell to look at Gray’s confidential patent filing.[68]

One of the valuable claims in Bell’s 1876 U.S. Patent 174,465 was claim 4, a method of producing variable electric current in a circuit by varying the resistance in the circuit. That feature was not shown in any of Bell’s patent drawings, but was shown in Elisha Gray’s drawings in his caveat filed the same day, February 14, 1876. A description of the variable resistance feature, consisting of seven sentences, was inserted into Bell’s application. That it was inserted is not disputed. But when it was inserted is a controversial issue. Bell testified that he wrote the sentences containing the variable resistance feature before January 18, 1876, «almost at the last moment» before sending his draft application to his lawyers. A book by Evenson[69] argues that the seven sentences and claim 4 were inserted, without Bell’s knowledge, just before Bell’s application was hand carried to the Patent Office by one of Bell’s lawyers on February 14, 1876.

Contrary to the popular story, Gray’s caveat was taken to the US Patent Office a few hours before Bell’s application. Gray’s caveat was taken to the Patent Office in the morning of February 14, 1876, shortly after the Patent Office opened and remained near the bottom of the in-basket until that afternoon. Bell’s application was filed shortly before noon on February 14 by Bell’s lawyer who requested that the filing fee be entered immediately onto the cash receipts blotter and Bell’s application was taken to the Examiner immediately. Late in the afternoon, Gray’s caveat was entered on the cash blotter and was not taken to the Examiner until the following day. The fact that Bell’s filing fee was recorded earlier than Gray’s led to the myth that Bell had arrived at the Patent Office earlier.[70] Bell was in Boston on February 14 and did not know this happened until later. Gray later abandoned his caveat and did not contest Bell’s priority. That opened the door to Bell being granted US patent 174465 for the telephone on March 7, 1876.

Memorial to the invention[edit]

In 1906 the citizens of the City of Brantford, Ontario, Canada and its surrounding area formed the Bell Memorial Association to commemorate the invention of the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell in July 1874 at his parents’ home, Melville House, near Brantford.[71][72] Walter Allward’s design was the unanimous choice from among 10 submitted models, winning the competition. The memorial was originally to be completed by 1912 but Allward did not finish it until five years later. The Governor General of Canada, Victor Cavendish, 9th Duke of Devonshire, ceremoniously unveiled the memorial on October 24, 1917.[71][72]

Allward designed the monument to symbolize the telephone’s ability to overcome distances.[72] A series of steps lead to the main section where the floating allegorical figure of Inspiration appears over a reclining male figure representing Man, discovering his power to transmit sound through space, and also pointing to three floating figures, the messengers of Knowledge, Joy, and Sorrow positioned at the other end of the tableau. Additionally, there are two female figures mounted on granite pedestals representing Humanity positioned to the left and right of the memorial, one sending and the other receiving a message.[71]

The Bell Telephone Memorial’s grandeur has been described as the finest example of Allward’s early work, propelling the sculptor to fame. The memorial itself has been used as a central fixture for many civic events and remains an important part of Brantford’s history, helping the city style itself as ‘The Telephone City’.

A majestic, broad monument with figures mounted on pedestals to its left and right sides. Along the main portion of the monument are five figures mounted on a broad casting, including a man reclining, plus four floating female figures representing Inspiration, Knowledge, Joy, and Sorrow.

The Bell Telephone Memorial, commemorating the invention of the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell. The monument, paid by public subscription and sculpted by W.S. Allward, was dedicated by the Governor General of Canada, Victor Cavendish, 9th Duke of Devonshire with Dr. Bell in The Telephone City’s Alexander Graham Bell Gardens in 1917. Included on the main tableau are figures representing Man, discovering his power to transmit sound through space, Inspiration whispering to Man, his power to transmit sound through space, as well as Knowledge, Joy, Sorrow. (Courtesy: Brantford Heritage Inventory, City of Brantford, Ontario, Canada)

See also[edit]

  • History of the telephone
  • The Telephone Cases, U.S. patent dispute and infringement court cases
  • Timeline of the telephone

References[edit]

  1. ^

    Erster elektromagnetischer Telegraph der Welt über den Dächern von Göttingen (First electromagnetic telegraph in the world over the roofs of Göttingen), Georg-August-Universität Göttingen website. Retrieved January 22, 2013. (in German)

  2. ^ [1][permanent dead link]
  3. ^ «Home». garibaldimeuccimuseum.com.
  4. ^ «House Resolution 269». Archived from the original on December 29, 2015. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  5. ^ Wheen, Andrew. Dot-Dash to Dot.com: How Modern Telecommunications Evolved from the Telegraph to the Internet. Springer, 2010. p. 45. Web. 23 Sep. 2011.
  6. ^ Cleveland, Cutler (Lead Author) ; Saundry, Peter (Topic Editor). Meucci, Antonio. Encyclopedia of Earth, 2006. Web. 22 Jul. 2012.
  7. ^ (in Italian) Caretto, Ennio. Gli Usa ammettono: Meucci è l’ inventore del telefono. Corriere della Sera. Web. 21 Jul. 2012.
  8. ^ Basilio Catania Homepage
  9. ^ aei.it; L’invenzione del telefono da parte di Meucci e la sua sventurata e ingiusta conclusione
  10. ^ Meucci, ChezBasilio.org website
  11. ^ aei.it website
  12. ^ Basilio Catania’s reconstruction, in English
  13. ^ Picture of the acoustic telephone, page maintained by the Italian Society of Electrotechnics
  14. ^ Meucci’s original drawings. Page maintained by the Italian Society of Electrotechnics
  15. ^ Meucci’s original drawings. Page maintained by the Italian Society of Electrotechnics Archived July 28, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ aei.it; Affidavit of lawyer Michael Lemmi
  17. ^ Scientific American Supplement No. 520, December 19, 1885
  18. ^ Meucci’s 1871 patent caveat, pages 16-18
  19. ^ Coe, page 23
  20. ^ Edison, Thomas A. The Edison Papers, Digital Edition Rutgers University, accessed 26 March 2006. LB020312 TAEM 83:170
  21. ^ a b DUQUET, Cyrille
  22. ^ Inventors Digest, July/August 1998, pp. 26–28
  23. ^ Robert Bruce (1990), pages 102–103, 110–113, 120–121
  24. ^ Robert Bruce (1990), pages 104–109
  25. ^ Robert Bruce (1990), pages 146–148
  26. ^ a b Robert Bruce (1990), page 149
  27. ^ Puleo, Stephen (2011). A City So Grand: The Rise of an American Metropolis, Boston 1850-1900. Beacon Press. p. 195. ISBN 978-0807001493.
  28. ^ Evenson, A Edward (November 10, 2000). The Telephone Patent Conspiracy of 1876: The Elisha Gray-Alexander Bell Controversy and Its Many Players. McFarland. p. 99. ISBN 0786408839.
  29. ^ American Treasures of the Library of Congress … Bell — Lab notebook
  30. ^ Puleo, Stephen (2011). A City So Grand: The Rise of an American Metropolis, Boston 1850-1900. Beacon Press. p. 195. ISBN 978-0807001493.
  31. ^ Skinner, Ernest M. (January 1, 1956). «Ernest M. Skinner Will Be 90 Years Old» (PDF). The Diapason. 47 (2): 1–2.
  32. ^ «Archived copy». Archived from the original on November 26, 2019. Retrieved April 16, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  33. ^ US 174465 Alexander Graham Bell: «Improvement in Telegraphy» filed on February 14, 1876, granted on March 7, 1876.
  34. ^ Shulman, pages 36-37. Bell’s lab notes dated March 9, 1876 show a drawing of a person speaking face down into a liquid transmitter very similar to the liquid transmitter depicted as Fig. 3 in Gray’s caveat.
  35. ^ Evenson, page 99.
  36. ^ Evenson, page 98.
  37. ^ Evenson, page 100.
  38. ^ «Alexander Graham Bell 1847-1922 Inventor of the Bell System». Telecommunications Canada. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  39. ^ «Invention of the Telephone National Historic Event». Parks Canada. Retrieved January 14, 2020. Bell made public demonstrations of his now patented invention, culminating in the world’s first long distance call, to Paris, 13 kilometres away, on 10 August
  40. ^ Evenson, A Edward (November 10, 2000). The Telephone Patent Conspiracy of 1876: The Elisha Gray-Alexander Bell Controversy and Its Many Players. McFarland. p. 99. ISBN 0786408839.
  41. ^ a b c d «First Telephone Office», CWB, November 17, 1971, pp. 4–5.
  42. ^ «You Can Tour The House in Brantford Where Bell Worked on His Telephone», Toronto Daily Star, December 26, 1970.
  43. ^ MacLeod, Elizabeth. Alexander Graham Bell: An Inventive Life, Toronto, Ontario, Canada: Kids Can Press, 1999, ISBN 1-55074-456-9, p. 14.
  44. ^ «Bell Emphatic in Declaring That Telephone Was Invented Here», Brantford Expositor, August 10, 1936, p. 15.
  45. ^ «Use of Stove Pipe Wire Is Related at Banquet: Graham Tells Of Some Early Experiments», Brantford Expositor, August 10, 1936, p. 17.
  46. ^ Patten, William; Bell, Alexander Melville. Pioneering The Telephone In Canada, Montreal: Herald Press, 1926. N.B.: Patten’s full name was William Patten, not Gulielmus Patten as credited elsewhere.
  47. ^ Patten & Bell, 1926, p. 15–16, 19.
  48. ^ «The Bell Homestead», Montreal, Canada: Telephone Historical Collection, The Bell Telephone Co. of Canada, December 29, 1954, pp. 1–2.
  49. ^ Harrington, Stephanie. «Bell Homestead: Home Offers In-depth Look At Inventor», Brantford and Brant County Community Guide, 2002–2003″, Brantford Expositor, 2002.
  50. ^ Korfmann, Margret. «Homestead’s History Highlighted», Brantford Expositor, February 22, 1985.
  51. ^ a b «A .G. Bell’s Brantford House Is Museum of the Telephone», Toronto Star, April 25, 1987, p. H-23.
  52. ^ Popular Mechanics Aug 1912. New York: Popular Mechanics. August 1912. p. 186.
  53. ^ First Phone Call 685 Main Street
  54. ^ «First Long Distance Telephone Call Recalled», Brantford Expositor, August 11, 1976.
  55. ^ Butorac, Yvonne (June 29, 1995). «Bell’s Brantford Homestead Celebrates Phone Invention». Toronto Star. p. G10. ProQuest document ID 437257031.
  56. ^ Munro, John. Heroes of the Telegraph, London: The Religious tract society, 1891. Note: public domain text
  57. ^ «140 YEARS SINCE FIRST TELEPHONE CALL TO QUEEN VICTORIA ON THE ISLE OF WIGHT». Island Echo. January 14, 2018. Retrieved January 14, 2020. He made the UK’s first publicly-witnessed long distance calls, calling Cowes, Southampton and London. Queen Victoria liked the telephone so much she wanted to buy it.
  58. ^ «Alexander Graham Bell demonstrates the newly invented telephone». The Telegraph. January 13, 2017. Retrieved January 14, 2020. one of the Queen’s staff wrote to Professor Bell to inform him «how much gratified and surprised the Queen was at the exhibition of the Telephone»
  59. ^ «pdf, Letter from Alexander Graham Bell to Sir Thomas Biddulph, February 1, 1878». Library of Congress. Retrieved January 14, 2020. The instruments at present in Osborne are merely those supplied for ordinary commercial purposes, and it will afford me much pleasure to be permitted to offer to the Queen a set of Telephones to be made expressly for her Majesty’s use.
  60. ^ Ross, Stewart (2001). Alexander Graham Bell. (Scientists who Made History). New York: Raintree Steck-Vaughn. pp. 21–22. ISBN 978-0-7398-4415-1.
  61. ^

    «Milestones:First Intelligible Voice Transmission over Electric Wire, 1876». IEEE Global History Network. IEEE. Retrieved July 27, 2011.

  62. ^ Burton Baker, pages 90–91
  63. ^

    Puskás Tivadar (1844–1893) (short biography), Hungarian History website. Retrieved from Archive.org, February 2013.

  64. ^ «Puskás Tivadar (1844–1893)». Mszh.hu. Archived from the original on October 8, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  65. ^ «Puskás, Tivadar». Omikk.bme.hu. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  66. ^ «Puskás Tivadar». Hunreal.com. Archived from the original on March 16, 2012. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  67. ^ Frank Lewis Dyer and Thomas Commerford Martin. Edison, His Life And Inventions, Harper & Brothers, 1910, p. 71. Retrieved from Gutenberg.org.
  68. ^ The Washington Post, May 22, 1886
  69. ^ Evenson, pp 64–69, 86–87, 110, 194–196
  70. ^ Evenson, pages 68–69
  71. ^ a b c

    Whitaker, A.J. Bell Telephone Memorial, City of Brantford/Hurley Printing, Brantford, Ontario, 1944.

  72. ^ a b c

    Osborne, Harold S. (1943) Biographical Memoir of Alexander Graham Bell, National Academy of Sciences: Biographical Memoirs, Vol. XXIII, 1847–1922. Presented to the Academy at its 1943 annual meeting.

Further reading[edit]

  • Baker, Burton H. (2000), The Gray Matter: The Forgotten Story of the Telephone, St. Joseph, MI, 2000. ISBN 0-615-11329-X
  • Bell, Alexander Graham. (1911), Speech by Alexander Graham Bell, November 2, 1911: Historical address delivered by Alexander Graham Bell, November 2, 1911, at the first meeting of the Telephone Pioneers’ Association, Beinn Bhreagh Recorder, November 1911, pp. 15–19;
  • Bethune, Brian, (2008) Did Bell Steal the Idea for the Phone? (Book Review), Maclean’s Magazine, February 4, 2008;
  • Bourseul, Charles, Transmission électrique de la parole, L’Illustration (Paris), August 26, 1854 (in French)
  • Bruce, Robert V. (1990), Bell: Alexander Bell and the Conquest of Solitude, Cornell University Press, 1990. ISBN 0-8014-9691-8
  • Coe, Lewis (1995), The Telephone and Its Several Inventors: A History, McFarland, North Carolina, 1995. ISBN 0-7864-0138-9
  • Evenson, A. Edward (2000), The Telephone Patent Conspiracy of 1876: The Elisha Gray – Alexander Bell Controversy, McFarland, North Carolina, 2000. ISBN 0-7864-0883-9
  • Gray, Charlotte, (2006) «Reluctant Genius: The Passionate Life and Inventive Mind of Alexander Graham Bell», HarperCollins, Toronto, 2006, ISBN 0-00-200676-6, ISBN 978-0-00-200676-7 IBO: 621.385092;
  • Josephson, Matthew (1992), Edison: A Biography, Wiley, ISBN 0-471-54806-5
  • Shulman, Seth, (2007) Telephone Gambit: Chasing Alexander Graham Bell’s Secret, W.W. Norton & Comp.; 1st Edition, December 25, 2007, ISBN 978-0-393-06206-9
  • Thompson, Sylvanus P. (1883), Philipp Reis, Inventor of the Telephone, London: E. & F. N. Spon, 1883.

External links[edit]

  • Heroes of the Telegraph by John Munro at Project Gutenberg
  • American Treasures of the Library of Congress, Alexander Graham Bell – Lab notebook I, pages 40–41 (image 22)
  • Scientific American Supplement No. 520, December 19, 1885
  • Telephone Patents

Patents[edit]

  • US 161739 Transmitter and Receiver for Electric Telegraphs (tuned steel reeds) by Alexander Graham Bell (April 6, 1875)
  • US 174465 Telegraphy (Bell’s first telephone patent) by Alexander Graham Bell (March 7, 1876)
  • US 178399 Telephonic Telegraphic Receiver (vibrating reed) by Alexander Graham Bell (June 6, 1876)
  • US 181553 Generating Electric Currents (magneto) by Alexander Graham Bell (August 29, 1876)
  • US 186787 Electric Telegraphy (permanent magnet receiver) by Alexander Graham Bell (January 15, 1877)
  • US 201488 Speaking Telephone (receiver designs) by Alexander Graham Bell (March 19, 1878)
  • US 213090 Electric Speaking Telephone (frictional transmitter) by Alexander Graham Bell (March 11, 1879)
  • US 220791 Telephone Circuit (twisted pairs of wire) by Alexander Graham Bell (October 21, 1879)
  • US 228507 Electric Telephone Transmitter (hollow ball transmitter) by Alexander Graham Bell (June 8, 1880)
  • US 230168 Circuit for Telephone by Alexander Graham Bell (July 20, 1880)
  • US 238833 Electric Call-Bell by Alexander Graham Bell (March 15, 1881)
  • US 241184 Telephonic Receiver (local battery circuit with coil) by Alexander Graham Bell (May 10, 1881)
  • US 244426 Telephone Circuit (cable of twisted pairs) by Alexander Graham Bell (July 19, 1881)
  • US 250126 Speaking Telephone by Francis Blake (November 29, 1881)
  • US 252576 Multiple Switch Board for Telephone Exchanges by Leroy Firman (Western Electric) (January 17, 1882)
  • US 474230 Speaking Telegraph (graphite transmitter) by Thomas Edison (Western Union) May 3, 1892
  • US 203016 Speaking Telephone (carbon button transmitter) by Thomas Edison
  • US 222390 Carbon Telephone (carbon granules transmitter) by Thomas Edison
  • US 485311 Telephone (solid back carbon transmitter) by Anthony C. White (Bell engineer) November 1, 1892
  • US 597062 Calling Device for Telephone Exchange (dial) by A. E. Keith (January 11, 1898)
  • US 687499 Telephone Transmitter (carbon granules «candlestick» microphone) by W.W. Dean (Kellogg Co.) November 26, 1901
  • US 815176 Automatic Telephone Connector Switch (for rotary dial phones) by A E Keith and C J Erickson March 13, 1906

Телефон создан в период, который считался эрой телеграфа. Это устройство было востребовано повсеместно и значилось самым совершенным средством связи. Возможность передачи звука на расстояния стало настоящей сенсацией. В данной статье вспомним, кто изобрел первый телефон, в каком году это произошло, и как создавалось гениальное устройство.

Прорыв в области развития связи

Изобретение электричества стало важным этапом на пути создания телефонии. Именно это открытие позволило осуществить передачу информации на расстояния. В 1837 году, после того как Морзе представил широкой публике свою телеграфную азбуку и транслирующий аппарат, электронный телеграф стал использоваться повсеместно. Однако в конце XIX века на смену ему приходит более совершенное устройство.

В каком году изобрели телефон?

Телефон обязан своим появлением, в первую очередь, немецкому ученому Филиппу Райсу. Именно этот человек смог сконструировать устройство, позволяющее переносить голос человека на большие расстояния, используя гальванический ток. Это событие произошло в 1861 году, однако до создания первого телефонного аппарата оставалось еще 15 лет.

Создателем телефона считается Александр Грехем Белл, а год изобретения телефона – 1876. Именно тогда шотландский ученый представил на Всемирной выставке свой первый аппарат, а также подал заявку на получение патента на изобретение. Телефон Белла работал на расстояние не более 200 метров и имел сильные искажения звука, но уже через год ученый настолько усовершенствовал устройство, что оно использовалось в неизменном виде следующие сто лет.

История изобретения телефона

Открытие Александра Белла было сделано случайным образом в процессе опытов по усовершенствованию телеграфа. Целью ученого было получение устройства, позволяющего одновременно передавать более 5 телеграмм. Для этого он создал несколько пар пластинок, настроенных на разную частоту. Во время проведения очередного опыта произошла небольшая авария, в результате которой одна из пластин застряла. Напарник ученого, увидев, что произошло, стал ругаться. В это время сам Белл работал над приемным устройством. В какой-то момент он услышал слабые звуки возмущения из передатчика. Так начинается история изобретения телефона.

После демонстрации Беллом своего устройства многие ученые начали работу в области телефонии. Были выданы тысячи патентов на изобретения, позволяющие усовершенствовать первый аппарат. Среди наиболее значимых открытий можно выделить:

  • изобретение звонка – устройство, созданное А. Беллом, не имело звонка, а оповещение абонента производилось при помощи свистка. В 1878 году
    Т. Ватсон изготовил первый звонок для телефона;
  • создание микрофона – в 1878 году российским инженером М. Махальским был сконструирован угольный микрофон;
  • создание автоматической станции – первая станция на 10000 номеров была разработана в 1894 году С.М. Апостоловым.

Полученный Беллом патент стал одним из самых доходных не только в Соединенных Штатах, но и в мире. Ученый стал чрезвычайно богатым и всемирно известным. Однако, на самом деле, первым человеком, создавшим телефон, был вовсе не Александр Белл, и в 2002 году конгресс США это признал.

Антонио Меуччи: первооткрыватель телефонной связи

Изобретатель и ученый из Италии в 1860 году создал аппарат, способный передавать звук по проводам. При ответе на вопрос о том, в каком году изобрели телефон, можно смело называть эту дату, так как истинным первооткрывателем является Антонио Меуччи. Он назвал свое «детище» телектрофоном. На момент своего открытия ученый жил в Соединенных Штатах Америки, он был уже в возрасте и находился в весьма плачевном материальном положении. Вскоре разработкой никому неизвестного ученого заинтересовалась крупная американская компания – «Вестерн Юнион».

Представители компании предложили ученому солидную сумму за все чертежи и разработки, а также обещали оказать содействие при оформлении патента. Тяжелое финансовое положение вынудило талантливого изобретателя продать весь материал своих исследований. Ученый долгое время ждал помощи от компании, однако, потеряв терпение, сам подал заявку на получение патента. Его просьба не была удовлетворена, а настоящим ударом для него стало сообщение о великом изобретении Александра Белла.

Меуччи попытался отстоять свои права в судебном порядке, однако для борьбы с крупной компанией ему не хватало средств. Право на патент итальянскому изобретателю удалось отсудить лишь в 1887 году, к моменту окончания срока его действия. Меуччи так и не смог воспользоваться правами на свое изобретение и умер в безвестности и нищете. Признание к итальянскому изобретателю пришло только в 2002 году. По резолюции Конгресса США, именно он был тем человеком, кто изобрел первый телефон. 

Читайте также:

Кто изобрел компас: история открытия

Кто придумал граненый стакан: история и факты

Как изобрели телефон — вещь, которая была «никому не нужна»

Патенту на телефон исполнилось 145 лет.

Любовь, деньги, мировая слава, 600 судов и несколько трупов — в летописи изобретения телефона уместились все оттенки мелодрамы. Говоря современным языком, Александр Белл вошел в историю благодаря своим «промоутерам» и «спонсорам», а возможно, и умелому плагиату.

Кто изобрел телефон раньше Белла?

В этот день, 7 марта 1876 года, был зарегистрирован патент на жидкостный передатчик Александра Белла, с которого началась телефония. Он до сих пор считается самым дорогим патентом во всей истории. Но мало кто знает, что за пять лет до Белла патент на изобретение телефона уже выдавался, а если уйти еще глубже в историю, то она начинается 160 лет назад.

Строго говоря, изобретателем телефона был итальянец Антонио Меуччи: его первенство Конгресс США официально признал в 2002 году. Впервые Меуччи сообщил о своем teletrofono в итальянской газете Нью-Йорка в 1860 году. Аппарат, похожий на трубку Белла, стоял в его доме и связывал подвал со вторым этажом, где лежала его жена Эстера, больная ревматоидным артритом. Способ передачи звука по электрическим проводам он обнаружил случайно еще в 1858 году, когда пытался лечить в Гаване человека от головной боли электрошоком. Пациент приложил контакт к языку и закричал, а Меуччи услышал его голос, передавшийся по проводу, в другой комнате. Переехав в США, итальянец попытался запатентовать свой «звуковой телеграф» и даже подал заявку в 1871 году в патентное бюро, но у него банально не хватило денег для продвижения своего изобретения и продление патента. Спонсоры, которых он пытался привлечь в США, посчитали идею телефона несостоятельной и, дав сначала надежду, вскоре открестились от него, сказав, что потеряли чертежи. В чужой стране Меуччи быстро обеднел, потерял здоровье в аварии на пароме, и в конце концов его жена продала телетрофон старьевщику, чтобы заработать на еду. Патент так и остался заявкой на изобретение, которое не было оформлено должным образом.

Еще одним первым изобретателем телефона мог бы считаться немецкий физик Филипп Рейс. Он начал опыты в 1858 году, сконструировал первый прототип телефона в 1860 году и даже устраивал демонстрации — одним из зрителей был инспектор Королевского корпуса Прусского телеграфа. Первый телефон Рейса передавал человеческую речь по проводам на 100 м — у этого аппарата был микрофон, гальваническая батарея в качестве источника питания и динамик. Но изобретение простого школьного учителя не заинтересовало ученых мужей: престарелый профессор Иоганн Поггендорф дважды отклонил его рукопись к публикации в научном журнале. Передача голоса на расстоянии считалась тогда невозможной и ненужной функцией.

«Хорошо информированные люди знают, что невозможно передавать голос по проводам, и если бы это было возможно, то не имело бы никакой практической ценности», — писала газета The Boston Post в 1865 году.

Филипп Рейс разработал три различные модели телефона. Известно, что они демонстрировались и в Америке в 1872 году. Свидетелями опыта были Томас Эдисон, представители компании Western Union и Александра Белла, то есть те самые люди, которые положили начало телефонизации и запатентовали первые устройства для передачи человеческого голоса по электропроводам.

Но в начале 1870-х пессимисты не давали шанс родиться телефону. Даже жадная до инноваций Western Union считала идею неинтересной по сравнению с возможностью улучшить телеграф: «У «телефона» слишком много недостатков, чтобы его можно было серьезно рассматривать как средство общения. Устройство, по существу, не представляет для нас никакой ценности». В Европе были похожие настроения. «У американцев есть потребность в телефоне, но нам это не нужно. У нас достаточно мальчиков-посыльных», — заявлял главный инженер британской «Королевской почты» сэр Уильям Прис в 1876 году.

Почему в историю вошел Белл?

В 1870-х годах молодой сурдопедагог Александр Белл, недавно перебравшийся в США из Лондона, преподавал в школе для глухих детей по методике «Видимая речь», которую разработал его отец, и влюбился в одну из учениц — Мэйбел Хаббард, потерявшую слух в пять лет после перенесенной скарлатины. Когда ей исполнилось 17 лет, Александр признался в чувствах и намерении жениться, но получил отказ от ее обеспеченных родителей. Отцом Мэйбел был Гардинер Хаббард — влиятельный юрист, бизнесмен и первый президент Национального географического общества. Он-то и взялся за карьеру мечтательного и непрактичного жениха и стал спонсором его экспериментов, думая про себя: пусть сначала докажет, что он достоин руки моей дочери.

Белл с детства имел большой интерес к акустике, так как рос в семье логопедов и учителей красноречия из Шотландии. Его мать была почти глухой, и Александр давно мечтал изобрести аппарат, чтобы помочь ей лучше слышать. Большой опыт занятий с глухими детьми заставили его быть внимательнее к технике извлечения человеческой речи. И когда он получил предложение от Хаббарда усовершенствовать телеграф, то взялся за работу с энтузиазмом. Правда, ему не хватало знаний об электричестве. «Если бы Белл был чуть-чуть более сведущ в электричестве, он никогда бы не изобрел телефона», — отзывался об этих опытах инженер-электрик Мозес Г. Фармер.

Беллу пришлось учиться на ходу и экспериментировать. К счастью, у него появился образованный помощник — механик Томас Ватсон, и вдвоем они смогли воплотить странные задумки изобретателя-самоучки. Открытие телефона Белла произошло из-за технической неисправности. Летом 1875 года напарники искали способ передачи по одному телеграфному проводу семи телеграмм одновременно, используя для этого семь пар гибких металлических пластинок. Каждая пара настраивалась на определенную частоту. Но однажды свободный конец одной из пластин приклеился к сердечнику электромагнита, используемого для передачи сигнала. Ватсон, заметив это, выругался. А Белл услышал из приемника голос своего помощника и прибежал на эти звуки. Взволнованный ученый закричал с порога: «Что вы сейчас делали?! Ничего не меняйте!» — и они стали искать причину такой удачи.

Принцип работы телефона Белла основан на электромагнитной индукции. Если изменяется индуктивность некоего контура, то в замкнутом контуре проволоки возникает так называемая сила самоиндукции, равная по силе и противоположная по направлению. Этот эффект известен с начала XIX века, но впервые был использован для нужд телефонии Александром Беллом, который, по всей видимости, не знал формул, но получил звук опытным путем при работе над музыкальным телеграфом. Когда один из контактов, призванный модулировать сигнал определенной частоты, случайно залип на сердечнике электромагнита, он получил в свое распоряжение самый настоящий индукционный микрофон.

Еще год изобретатели трудились над усовершенствованием этой конструкции и в марте 1876 года повторили опыт. Как гласит легенда, первой, сказанной по телефону фразой, был крик Александра Белла: «Ватсон, идите сюда, вы мне нужны!» Изобретатель случайно пролил кислоту из батареи себе на брюки и получил ожог. Но в один миг он об этом забыл, когда напарник прибежал и воскликнул: «Я слышал каждое слово!» Это случилось 10 марта, а сам патент был получен на три дня раньше.

Патентная война и успех

Полтора века назад, чтобы получить патент на изобретение в США, не нужно было предъявлять работающий прибор — достаточно было чертежей и объяснений. Александр Белл сообщил о первых опытах с передачей звука по проводам Хаббарду, тому идея не понравилась, но, как опытный предприниматель, он посоветовал ее запатентовать. И более того, пока горе-изобретатель медлил и возился со своим прибором, Хаббард уже направил юриста в патентное бюро — 14 февраля 1876 года. Это оказалось очень вовремя, потому что в тот же самый день спустя несколько часов в бюро пришел посланник другого изобретателя — Элайши Грея и оставил заявку о том, что американец Грей намерен сам изобрести жидкостный передатчик и у него уже есть чертежи телефона.

Между Беллом и Греем впоследствии возникали споры и суды о том, кто был первым. В черновиках Грея после его смерти нашли таинственную записку: «Историю телефона никогда не напишут полностью. Она скрыта за 30 000 страниц свидетельских показаний, а еще она лежит на совести людей, чьи уста навеки закрыты. Кому-то их закрыла сама смерть, кому-то — золото, что еще надежнее».

О каких смертях шла речь? Обе заявки принял патентный инспектор Зенас Фиск Уилбер, и он же первым сообщил о том, что заявка Белла копирует конструкцию мистера Грея. Вскоре он выступал на суде ответчиком в патентном споре, а еще позже был найден мертвым. Его покровитель Марион ван Хорн в 1895 году выпал с третьего этажа своего отеля и разбился насмерть. Возможно, об этих случаях и обмолвился Грей. В газете Washington Post в 1886 году выходила статья, в которой утверждалось, будто Белл подкупил Уилбера и за взятку в $100 тот выдал патент на изобретение Беллу, а не его сопернику Грею, настоящему автору аппарата.

В целом Александр Белл и юристы, предоставленные Хаббардом, выдержали около 600 судебных процессов, которые пытались оспорить его патент. Но даже такой гигант, как Western Union, не смог отсудить себе право на телефонию. В 1879 году Александр Белл был окончательно признан первым изобретателем телефона на суде, а Western Union» передала ему всю свою телефонную сеть (55 000 абонентов в 17 городах) и перешла от вражды к сотрудничеству.

Однако для Александра Белла важнее были не доходы, которые все росли, а то, что он наконец добился руки дочери Хаббарда. В 1877 году он женился на Мэйбел, сразу после основания компании Bell Telephone Company of Massachusetts. На свадьбе 30-летний изобретатель подарил жене серебряный кулон в форме телефонного аппарата, а заодно и 1500 акций компании, оставив себе лишь символические десять. Они уехали в свадебное путешествие, и с тех пор Белл не особо хотел заниматься продвижением телефона. Аппарат ему настолько надоел, что даже не хотелось ехать на важную выставку научных достижений в Филадельфии. Жена и Ватсон заманили его туда хитростью.

Телефон был лишь одним из изобретений Белла. Его увлекало многое другое: судно на подводных крыльях, пирамидальный воздушный змей, аэроплан, фотофон, металлоискатель… «Если бы Белл не испытывал материальных трудностей, он бы забросил все и занялся летательными аппаратами», — писал его соратник Томас Ватсон. Так что к изобретению телефона его подталкивали три «кита»: бедность, любопытство и любовь.

Но одно дело сконструировать, а другое — сделать устройство популярным и востребованным. Пока влиятельный Хаббард не взялся за дело основательно, Белл был почти беспомощен и готов был продать часть прав на телефон за $500 предпринимателю Джорджу Брауну, лишь бы тот помог с пробиванием патента в Лондоне. А однажды в момент неудач и судебных тяжб в 1877 году он предлагал свое изобретение руководству Western Union, но получил холодный отказ. «Г-н Белл, после тщательного рассмотрения вашего изобретения, хотя это очень интересное новшество, мы пришли к выводу, что у него нет коммерческого потенциала», — написал ему основатель компании Джон Морган. Можно представить, как он кусал локти, когда телефон начал захватывать мир и его похвалила даже английская королева Виктория.

Александр Белл демонстрировал свое детище повсюду — новые родственники Хаббарды не давали ему с головой уйти в педагогику для глухих, как ему хотелось. Патент на телефон в два счета принес компании Белла миллионы, она разрослась до мировой системы Bell System и просуществовала более ста лет. Только за 17 лет, пока действовал патент, в США появилось более 1500 компаний, предлагающих услуги связи и торговавших аппаратами.

2 августа 1922 года, в день смерти Александра Белла, все телефоны Америки, которых было уже больше 13 млн, были на минуту отключены в память об изобретателе. Пресса любит писать о том, что при жизни изобретатель телефона никогда не звонил жене или матери, и это правда, потому что при их глухоте это было бесполезно. Зато в помощь таким, как они, Белл основал Американскую ассоциацию содействия обучению глухих устной речи.

Наука о звуках

5 исследований по акустике

7 историй случайных изобретений

На сайте могут быть использованы материалы интернет-ресурсов Facebook и Instagram, владельцем которых является компания Meta Platforms Inc., запрещённая на территории Российской Федерации

Хотите быть в курсе последних событий в науке?

Оставьте ваш email и подпишитесь на нашу рассылку

Нажимая на кнопку «Подписаться», вы соглашаетесь на обработку персональных данных

Во все времена общество нуждалась в передаче и получении различного рода информации. По мере развития человечества были придуманы различные способы ее передачи. На протяжении длительного времени это были гонцы и почтовые голуби. Средство связи люди видели и в сигнальных кострах, позже появились почтовые дилижансы. Вопрос оперативности стоял настолько остро, что в шестнадцатом столетии итальянский учёный Джованни Порта высказал идею создать систему труб, предназначенных для передачи и получения информации по Аппенинскому полуострову. Несмотря на то, что идея была гениальной, ей так и не нашли практического использования. Каждый конкретный исторический этап развития общества запомнился определённым видом связи между людьми. Изобретение телефона ознаменовало новую эру в развитии техники. Оно изменило жизнь человека. Для общества данное изобретение стало настоящей сенсацией. Современный человек даже и представить не может, как раньше люди могли жить без телефона? Ведь в наши времена это средство связи стало незаменимой вещью. В телефоне теперь доступно всё: звонки родным и близким, интернет, прослушивание музыки, различные приложения, игры и многое другое.

А ведь возникновение проводных телефонных аппаратов произошло всего более ста лет назад. Читателю, конечно же, интересно узнать, кто, когда и как создал первый телефон? И как развиваются технологии в наше время?

Первые попытки 

Оптический телеграф

Именно во Франции произошёл большой прорыв, связанный с передачей информации. Французский механик Клод Шапп в 1789 году предложил уникальную идею, которая заключалась в создании сети башен с устройствами из планок, которые легко можно разглядеть. Внутри башни находился телеграфист, основная задача которого состояла в изменении расположения планок. Он ориентировался на ту башню, которая находилась в его видимости. Другой телеграфист копировал поступающую информацию. В результате, сообщение, проходя несколько инстанций, доходило до конечной точки.

Оптический телеграф

Оптический телеграф

Интересно, что скорость передачи информации была довольно высокой, однако многое, конечно, зависело от погодных условий. К примеру, за сорок пять минут информация могла поступить из Петербурга в Варшаву (при хороших погодных условиях). Таким образом, появился оптический телеграф. 

Электрический телеграф

Однако вскоре стала ощутимой потребность в более оперативной передаче информации на дальние расстояния. Необходимо было сделать передачу сообщений и более надёжной, чтобы она не зависела от погоды. Оптические телеграфы были заменены электрическими. 

Восемнадцатое столетие запомнилось первыми попытками применения статического электричества для передачи информации. Так, впервые электростатический телеграф был изобретен в 1774 году швейцарским учёным Лесажем. Прибор, созданный учёным, состоял из двадцати четырёх изолированных проволок. Именно они выступали в качестве связующего звена между двумя станциями. 

Электрический телеграф

Электрический телеграф

Впоследствии для такого телеграфирования стала применяться лишь одна проволока. Шло активное развитие электрической телеграфии. Вскоре статического электричество сменилось гальваническим током. Немецким ученым Зёммирингом в 1809 году был создан прибор, предназначенный для передачи сообщений на расстояние до трёх километров. 

Большой прорыв в области связи произошёл в 1832 году. В это время русский учёный Шиллинг создал электротелеграф, который в некоторой степени оказался подходящим для эксплуатации. Уникальное изобретение Шиллинга провели в северной столице между зданием министерства путей сообщения и Зимним дворцом. 

Вскоре был создан пишущий телеграф. В 1840 году американский изобретатель Сэмюэл Морзе запатентовал электромагнитный телеграф. Благодаря данному прибору на бумаге печатались черточки или точки. Устройство данного изобретения было сложным. Смыканию и размыканию цепи способствовал ключ. Он подавал соответствующий сигнал автоматическому приемнику, который его записывал. Под воздействием импульсов тока электромагнитное перо начинало подвергаться колебаниям. В результате, на бумажной ленте пропечатывались точки и тире. Перо могло как наносить чернилами знаки, так и просто их выдавливать на бумаге. 

Морзе прославился своим гениальным изобретением,  и в 1843 году ученому предоставили субсидию на проведение огромной телеграфной линии, длина которой составляла шестьдесят пять километров (линия Вашингтон — Балтимор). Ученому принадлежит также огромная заслуга в разработке специального шифра — Азбуки Морзе. 

В итоге, электрический телеграф начал «путешествовать» по всему земному шару. На протяжении десяти лет телеграфные линии заполняли Северную Америку и  Европу. Именно телеграф стали считать главным способом коммуникации, не считая, конечно же, почтовой связи. 

Телефон и его пра-поколение

И вот со временем телефон сменил телеграф. Известно, что самый первый телефон представлял собой механический прибор, который мог распространять звук в воздухе. 

Инженер-механик Шарл Бусель на протяжении пяти лет (1849-1854 гг.) занимался разработкой идеи телефонирования. Именно он впервые употребил знакомое нам слово «телефон». 

Учёные продолжали работать над развитием средства связи. Так, немецкому учёному Филиппу Рейсу в 1861 году удалось разработать прибор, с помощью которого можно передавать звуковые сигналы на достаточно большое расстояние с помощью проводов для электричества.

Филипп Рейс

Филипп Рейс

Многие стали это изобретение называть первым телефоном в мире. Но качество сигнала, передаваемого прибором, было очень плохим. Почти невозможно было разобрать текст в окружающем электрическом шуме. Звуковая передача сильно искажалась из-за помех.

Кто создал первый телефон? 

В мире

На самом деле, было немало споров по поводу фамилии изобретателя первого телефона.

Наибольшую известность получил американский учёный Александр Белл. Зачастую создание первого телефона связывают именно с ним. Однако вместе с Беллом следует упомянуть американского инженера Элиша Грея. Дело в том, что Белл и Грей практически одновременно и независимо друг от друга заметили, что магнит способствует превращению звука металлической мембраной, а также его передаче сквозь электросигнал. Однако мы точно знаем, в какой стране изобрели телефон — в Америке.

Александр Белл

Александр Белл

Свое изобретение Белл назвал «говорящим телеграфом». Учёному удалось изобрести  устройство, с помощью которого можно было передавать и принимать звуковые сообщения. Однако «говорящий телеграф» Белла не имел звонка (его позже изобрёл Ватсон). 

Когда изобрели телефон? В каком году? Уникальное изобретение было продемонстрировано учёным 25 июля 1876 года. Показ телефона состоялся на первой Всемирной электротехнической выставке в Филадельфии. 

Но почему же изобретение телефона связывают именно с Александром Бэллом? Этому есть свое объяснение. Александр Белл подал заявку на патент своего изобретения 14 февраля 1876 года на два часа раньше Грея. В результате, слава пришла именно к Беллу.

Многие исследователи заявляли, что первый в мире телефон был создан вовсе не Беллом и не Греем. По их мнению, этому изобретению мы обязаны итальянцу Антонио Меуччи. Учёный изобрёл прибор, с помощью которого можно передавать звуковые сигналы по проводу. Заявку на патент Меуччи подал в 1871 году. А когда учёный обратился в компанию по поводу документов, ему ответили, что их потеряли. 

Антонио Меуччи

Антонио Меуччи

Как только публика увидела первый телефон, изобретатели начали выдвигать идеи по поводу совершенствования данного средства коммуникации. Усилиями инженеров удалось изобрести электрический звонок для вызова абонента, он и заменил свисток. В 1876 году появился коммутатор. С его помощью стали объединять несколько телефонных аппаратов друг с другом. 

Большая заслуга в развитии телефонный связи принадлежит изобретателю Эдисону. Благодаря созданной им индукционной катушки было существенно увеличено расстояние передачи сигнала. Качество звука значительно увеличилось благодаря применению угольного микрофона.

Америка прославилась тем, что здесь в 1877 году возникла телефонная станция. Появилась возможность позвонить человеку с помощью телефонистки. 

В России

Не только иностранные, но и российские учёные способствовали развитию телефонной связи. Так, электротехник из России Павел Михайлович Голубицкий доказал, что в телефоне можно применять конденсатор. Таким образом, его заслуга заключается в разработке телефона, имеющего уникальную конструкцию. В телефонном аппарате Голубицкого было применено несколько постоянных магнитов. 

Павел Голубицкий

Павел Голубицкий

Известно, что в нашей стране первый разговор по телефону состоялся в 1879 году. Это была передача сообщений по линии Петербург — Малая Вишера. А спустя три года стали функционировать станции во многих городах, а именно в Риге, Одессе, Петербурге, Москве. 

Первый телефонный трансатлантический кабель появился в 1956 году. Благодаря ему была установлена связь между Канадой и Шотландией. Впоследствии был проложен и провод между Москвой и Вашингтоном. Однако с помощью него общаться имели право лишь президент Америки и глава СССР. 

Создание мобильного телефона 

Современный человек даже и представить свою жизнь не может без сотового телефона. А когда же его изобрели? 

Впервые о создании мобильного телефона «задумалась» Америка в середине двадцатого столетия. Известная лаборатория «Bell Laboratories» (названа в честь изобретателя телефона) в конце 1940-х годов высказала свою идею по поводу изобретения мобильного телефона. Однако изначально их замысел заключался в создании телефонного аппарата, вмонтированного в автомобиль. Ведь в те времена телефон был очень тяжёлым — он весил тридцать-сорок килограммов. Лишь в 1970-х годах инженеры смогли уменьшить вес телефона до четырнадцать килограмм. А блок питания все равно находился в машине. 

телефон в машине

телефон в машине

В истории создания мобильного телефона большую роль сыграла компания Motorola. Интересно, что изначально данная фирма не была связана с изобретением телефонов. Миссия компании состояла в разработке переносных радиостанций.

Однако произошла счастливая случайность. Один сотрудник компании Мартин Купер заявил, что вполне возможно создать компактный мобильный телефон. О своей идее Купер рассказал коллегам. На протяжении года велась разработка малогабаритного телефона по его проекту. 

В 1973 году был разработан аппарат Dyna-Tac. Телефонный аппарат весил 1,15 кг, но по тем временам он считался компактным и малогабаритным. На телефоне было десять кнопок с цифрами и ещё две — кнопка вызова и отбоя. У такого телефона не было дисплея. Заряда аккумулятора хватало всего лишь на 35 минут. Чтобы зарядить телефон, требовалось десять часов. 

Мартин Купер

Мартин Купер

Вскоре началась проверка данного телефона на практике. Эксперимент провел сам Мартин Купер. Он набрал директора «Bell Laboratories» и пообщался с ним по телефону. Это ознаменовало большой прорыв в развитии мобильных телефонных аппаратов. 

Более подробная история создания мобильного телефона расположена тут.

Развитие технологи 

Возникновение сенсорного телефона 

Появление сенсорных мобильных телефонов — следующая ступень в развитии телефонной связи. 

IBM Simon

IBM Simon

Довольно интересной является история создания первого мобильного устройства с сенсорным экраном. Дело в том, что сначала такой телефон не обрёл популярности среди пользователей, поэтому компания, которая его выпустила, прекратила свою работу в области сотовой связи. 

В 1993 году компания IBM выпустила первый мобильный сенсорный телефон. Его название — «IBM Simon». Его вес составлял 500 грамм. У телефона был дисплей. Очень много функций можно было выполнить, нажимая пальцами на соответствующие кнопки на дисплее. Зарядки такого телефона хватало на целый час разговора, а также восемь часов режима ожидания. 

Но, как было упомянуто выше, телефон не получил достаточного распространения. Этот факт можно объяснить двумя причинами. 

  1. Одна из них — высокая стоимость мобильного устройства (около 1100 долларов). 
  2. Помимо этого, такой телефон нельзя было назвать надёжным, ему требовался частый ремонт, который стоил недёшево. 

В результате, компания приняла решение закончить работу в сфере мобильных устройств и сосредоточиться на компьютерах.

Появление смартфонов 

Разработка смартфонов велась различными брендами. 

Nokia 9000 Communicator

Nokia 9000 Communicator

Nokia 9000 Communicator — такое мобильное устройство представила на рынке компания Nokia. Фирме удалось добиться уменьшения габаритов телефона (весил он всего 397 граммов). Телефон имел два монохромных дисплея и клавиатуру. Это устройство оказалось довольно продвинутым, ведь оно позволяло отправлять и получать электронную почту и факс с помощью GSM-модема. 

Ericsson R380

Ericsson R380

Официальное название «смартфон» впервые начал носить телефон, разработанный шведской компанией Ericsson R380. В телефонном аппарате сочетались функции телефона и персонального компьютера. Управление могло осуществляться с помощью монохромного сенсорного экрана посредством клавиатуры или стилуса. Общество впервые увидело такой телефон в 1999 году, а уже через год его выпустили на продажу. История создания смартфона началась именно с этого гаджета.

HTC Wallaby

HTC Wallaby

Большую роль в развитии сенсорных мобильных телефонов сыграла компания HTC. В 2002 году компания начала производство телефонных устройств на базе мобильной операционной системы Windows Mobile от Microsoft. Первый такой телефон, выпущенный компанией, назывался HTC Wallaby. Позднее бренд начал производить телефоны на платформах — Android и Windows Phone. 

Очень оригинальный телефон был разработан компанией Siemens Mobile в 2003 году. Им оказался Siemens SX1. Его особенность заключалась в том, что разработчики расположили клавиши с двух сторон (по бокам корпуса).

Sony Ericsson P910

Sony Ericsson P910

Ещё более оригинальный подход к созданию телефона проявила компания Sony Ericsson. Разработанный телефон Sony Ericsson P910 имел клавиатуру на задней стенке флипа. При этом, флип даже можно было снять с устройства — тогда бы получился обычный вариант смартфона с минимальным набором кнопок. 

Возникновение iPhone (корпорация Apple) 

Продукцию Apple называют самым модным брендом двадцать первого века. Многие уже даже и представить свою жизнь не могут без «яблока». 

Известно, что первый айфон назывался iPhone 2G. На рынке он появился в 2007 году. Его вес составлял всего 135 грамм. Телефонный аппарат имел алюминиевый корпус. Разработка сенсорных дисплеев вышла на новый уровень. В телефоне имелся датчик, который, реагируя на приближение к уху дисплея, блокировал сенсор. Также был встроен датчик освещённости, который регулировал контрастность дисплея. Пользователям пришелся по вкусу лаконичный дизайн устройства. Да и рекламная компания подарила пользователю целую идеологию, а не только призыв к покупке. 

Основателем Apple является Стив Джобс. Разрабатывая новую модель телефона, он ориентировался на максимальное удовлетворения запросов пользователей. Основные из них заключались в огромной мощности телефона, в стильном дизайне, а также в мини-компьютере и плеере, встроенным в устройство. 

Однако первый айфон не отвечал всем этим требованиям. В основном, из-за низкой мощности телефона быль плохое интернет-соединение. В связи с этим данная модель не получила распространения. 

iPhone 3G — новая модель телефона, выпущенная спустя год. Здесь уже практически была решена проблема со скоростью интернета. Большой модернизации также подвергся дизайн. Произошла замена операционной системы. Данная модель получила невероятный успех, ведь более семидесяти стран оказались в ней заинтересованы. Секрет прост: «своя» операционная система оказалась более устойчивой к взлому, работоспособной и функциональной. Собственно, знающие люди покупают «яблоко», потому что взломать iOS намного сложнее, чем Андроид, код которого доступен всем.

модели айфона по годам

модели айфона по годам

Высокоскоростным стал айфон модели IPhone 3G S. В данное устройство были включены новые функции, отвечающие за шифровку информации и голосовое управление. Вокруг такого телефонного аппарата начался настоящий ажиотаж. 

В настоящее время мобильная продукция Apple пользуется огромным успехом в различных странах. Айфоны являются самыми мощными мобильными устройствами, поэтому и цена у них соответствующая. 

Необычные инновации в наше время 

Известная компания Samsung в 2021 году разработала уникальную модель смартфона — Galaxy Z Flip3. Это не просто смартфон, а водонепроницаемый смартфон-раскладушка, имеющий гибкий экран. Внешний экран данной новинки увеличен в четыре раза. В результате, пользователь с лёгкостью может читать сообщения, не открывая смартфон. Помимо этого, человек может сделать селфи, когда телефон находится в сложенном состоянии. В смартфон встроена функция яркости, благодаря которой устройство подстраивается под окружающую освещённость. Этот телефон является очень удобным, ведь он занимает мало место в сумке и даже может поместиться в кармане. 

Galaxy Z Flip 4

Galaxy Z Flip 4

10 августа 2022 года южнокорейская компания Samsung представила новую модель  — Galaxy Z Flip 4. Смартфон также имеет складывающийся экран. При этом, телефон стал ещё более компактным. Данный смартфон ещё привлекает тем, что под экраном у него имеется фронтальная камера. Кроме того, в смартфон встроена широкоугольная камера, ультраширокоугольная камера и мегапиксельная камера. От остальных моделей такой смартфон отличается более прочным дисплеем. Смартфон поддерживает связь 5G. 

Xiaomi MIX Fold 2

Xiaomi MIX Fold 2

В настоящее время по пути развития складных смартфонов пошла и китайская компания Xiaomi. В августе 2022 года она анонсировала складной смартфон модели Xiaomi MIX Fold 2. Смартфон имеет три камеры сзади, прочный дисплей и маленький вес (262 грамма).

Телефон — поистине гениальное изобретение, без которого уже немыслимо существование человечества. История создания телефона насыщенна событиями, ведь все ученые участвуют в гонке инноваций и спешат явить миру новые открытия. От телеграфов и громоздких телефонных аппаратов до складных смартфонов — таков путь развития телефонной связи. А сколько ещё изобретений в сфере мобильных устройств ожидает нас в будущем…

Автор: Виктория Комарова

  • В автобусе не проходит оплата телефоном
  • В phone clone нет нового телефона
  • В itunes нет значка телефона
  • В imessage отображается почта вместо номера
  • В imessage нет номера телефона