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By: Ethan Arndt. The Telegraph. Table of Contents. How Samuel Morse came to make the telegraph Were Samuel Morse got the idea How the telegraph worked How the telegraph helped How the telegraph evolved What are some things the telegraph evolved into Conclusion Work Cited.
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By: Ethan Arndt The Telegraph
Table of Contents • How Samuel Morse came to make the telegraph • Were Samuel Morse got the idea • How the telegraph worked • How the telegraph helped • How the telegraph evolved • What are some things the telegraph evolved into • Conclusion • Work Cited
How did Samuel Morse come to make the telegraph? • The telegraph was invented by Samuel Morse a very talented writer and painter that just became fascinated with electric signaling.
Were Samuel Morse got the idea • Samuel Morse heard of this idea while aboard a ship. • He accidentally over heard other men talking about electrical signaling experiments.
How the telegraph worked • The telegraph had a very weird method of transmitting information like a series of off tones and clicks.
How the telegraph helped • The telegraph brought along new services such as filing tax orders, reporting purchases and sale of stocks for wall street, and brought new transportation networking.
How the telegraph evolved • The telegraph is what stared e-mailing and social networking. • It helped people think of new ways to communicate with others.
What are some things the telegraph evolved into? • The telegraph made ideas come easier to people when they were creating things like Facebook, E-mailing, texting, Yahoo, twitter, and instagram. • Which I know a lot of people use every day.
Conclusion • The telegraph is a very useful tool. It helps people communicate with each other wither an emergency or just to talk to a friend. • The telegraph has evolved into much better thing that we use today.
Work Cited • (2007) “Samuel Morse.’’ The World Book Encyclopedia.2007. • ‘’Samuel Morse.’’ e-how. May 9, 2012 http://www.e-how/SamuelMorse • Scarborugh, Mary Hertez. Long Distance Communication. New York: Thomson Gale, 2004.