Telephone - An instrument that converts
voice and other sound signals into a form that can be transmitted to remote locations and
that receives and reconverts waves into sound signals. Word History: The everyday word
telephone illustrates some important linguistic and etymological processes.
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First, the noun telephone is one of a class of technological and scientific words made up
of combining forms derived from classical languages, in this case tele- and -phone. Tele-
is from the Greek combining form tle- or tl-, a form of tle, meaning afar, far
off, while -phone is from Greek phn, sound, voice. Such words derived
from classical languages can be put together in French or German, for example, as well as
in English. Which language actually gave birth to them cannot always be determined. In
this case French téléphone (about 1830) seems to have priority. The word was used for an
acoustic apparatus, as it originally was in English (1844). Alexander Graham Bell
appropriated the word for his invention in 1876, and in 1877 we have the first instance of
the verb telephone meaning to speak to by telephone. The verb is an example of
a linguistic process called functional shift. This occurs when a word develops a new part
of speech: a noun is used as a verb (to date), a verb as a noun (a break), an adjective as
a noun (the rich), a noun as an adjective (a stone wall), or even an adjective as a verb
(to round). When we telephone a friend, we are changing the syntactic function of
telephone, making it a verb rather than a noun.
History
The early history of the telephone is a confusing morass of claim and counterclaim, which
was not clarified by the huge mass of lawsuits which hoped to resolve the patent claims of
individuals. There was a lot of money involved, particularly in the Bell Telephone
companies, and the aggressive defense of the Bell patents resulted in much confusion.
Additionally, the earliest investigators preferred publication in the popular press and
demonstrating to investors instead of scientific publication and demonstrating to fellow
scientists.
It is important to note that there is no "inventor of the telephone." The modern
telephone is the result of work done by many hands, all worthy of recognition of their
addition to the field.
See Timeline of the telephone for a chronological survey of the telephone's invention and
development.
See Invention of the telephone for a discussion of each of the critical technologies and
their inventors.
The text below draws heavily on Heroes of the Telegraph by John Munro, Project Gutenberg
edition [1] (http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/979).
Non-electric 'telephones'
There is a sense in which a telephone is any mechanism capable of conduction sound for a
great distance. The very earliest telephones were mechanical devices based on sound
transportation through air or other physical media rather than electrical devices
depending on electro-magnetic signals.
According to a letter in the Peking Gazette, in 968, the Chinese inventor Kung-Foo-Whing
invented the thumtsein, which probably transported the speech through pipes. Speaking
tubes remained common and can still be found today.
The lover's telephone (or string telephone) has also been known for centuries, connecting
two diaphragms with string or wire which transmits the sound from one to the other by
vibrations along the string and not through electric current. The classic example is the
children's toy made by connecting the bottoms of two paper cups with string.
Electro-magnetic transmitters
Antonio Meucci
It may be argued that telephone was invented around 1860 by Antonio Meucci who called it
teletrophone.
From [2] (http://www.italianhistorical.org/MeucciStory.htm) Despite a public statement by
the then Secretary of State that "there exists sufficient proof to give priority to
Meucci in the invention of the telephone," and despite the fact that the United
States initiated prosecution for fraud against Bell's patent, the trial was postponed from
year to year until, at the death of Meucci in 1896, the case was dropped.
The first American demonstration of Meucci's invention took place in 1860, and had a
description of it published in New York's Italian language newspaper. Meucci invented a
paired electro-magnetic transmitter and receiver, where the motion of a diaphram modulated
a signal in a coil by moving an electromagnet. This resulted in a good fidelity, but a
very weak signal. Meucci is also credited with the early invention of the anti-sidetone
circuit, and of inductive loading of telephone wires to increase long-distance signals.
Unfortunately, serious burns, lack of English and poor business abilities resulted in
Meucci failing to develop his inventions commercially in America. Meucci demonstrated some
sort of instrument in 1849 in Havana, Cuba, but the evidence is unclear if this was an
electric telephone or a variant on the string telephone using wires.
Meucci was recognised as the first inventor of the telephone by the United States
Congress, in its resolution 269 dated 11 June 2002.
Charles Bourseul
In 1854 in the magazine "L'Illustration de Paris" M. Charles Bourseul, a French
telegraphist, published a plan for conveying sounds and even speech by electricity.
Suppose,' he explained, '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,
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
favourable result.'
Johann Philipp Reis
In 1860 Johann Philipp Reis produced a device which could transmit musical notes, and even
a lisping word or two. The Reis transmitter was a make-break transmitter. That is, a
needle attached to a diaphram was alternately pressed against, and released from a contact
as the sound moved the diaphram. This make-or-break signaling was able to transmit tones,
and some vowels, but since it did not follow the analog shape of the sound wave (the
contact was pure digital, on or off) it could not transmit consonants, or complex sounds.
The Reis transmitter was very difficult to operate, since the relative position of the
needle and the contact were critical to the device's operation at all. This can be called
a "telephone", since it did transmit sounds over distance, but is hardly a
telephone in the modern sense, as it failed to transmit a good copy of any supplied sound.
Reis' invention is best known then as the "musical telephone".
Cromwell Varley
Around 1870 Mr. Cromwell Fleetwood Varley, F.R.S., a well-known English electrician,
patented a number of variations on the audio telegraph based on Reis' work. He never
claimed or produced a device capable of transmitting speech, only pure sounds.
Poul la Cour
Around 1874 Poul la Cour, a Danish inventor, experimented with audio telegraphs on a line
of telegraph between Copenhagen and Fredericia in Jutland. In this a vibrating tuning-fork
interrupted the current, which, after traversing the line, passed through an
electromagnet, and attracted the limbs of another fork, making it strike a note like the
transmitting fork. Moreover, the hums were made to record themselves on paper by turning
the electromagnetic receiver into a relay, which actuated a Morse code printer by means of
a local battery. Again, la Cour made no claims of transmitting voice, only pure tones.
Elisha Gray
Mr. Elisha Gray, of Chicago also devised a tone telegraph of this kind about the same time
as Herr La Cour. In this apparatus a vibrating steel reed interrupted the current, which
at the other end of the line passed through an electromagnet and vibrated a matching steel
reed near its poles. Gray's 'harmonic telegraph,' with the vibrating reeds, was used by
the Western Union Telegraph Company. Since more than one set of vibrations that is
to say, more than one note can be sent over the same wire simultaneously, the
harmonic telegraph can be utilised as a 'multiplex' or many-ply telegraph, conveying
several messages through the same wire at once; and these can either be read by the
operator by the sound, or a permanent record can be made by the marks drawn on a ribbon of
travelling paper by a Morse recorder.
Gray's harmonic telegraph apparatus follows in the track of Reis and Bourseul that
is to say, the interruption of the current by a vibrating contact. Gray recognized the
lack of fidelity of the make-break transmitter, and reasoned by analogy with the lovers
telegraph that if the current could be made to model more closely the movements of the
diaphram rather than simply turning the circuit on and off, a greater fidelity might be
achieved. Gray built and patented a liquid microphone, where a needle was placed just
barely in contact with a liquid conductor, and as the diaphram vibrated, the needle dipped
more-or-less into the liquid, resulting in more-or-less current passing to the receiver.
Bell used a Gray liquid transmitter for many of his early public demonstrations. The
liquid transmitter had the problem that the waves formed on the surface of the liquid
resulted in interference.
Carbon Grain transmitter
Thomas Edison
Thomas Alva Edison took the next step in developing telephonic fidelity with his invention
of the carbon grain transmitter. Edison discovered that carbon grains, squeezed between
two metal plates had a 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 problems associated with a liquid contact. This style of
transmitter remained standard in telephony until the 1980s, and is still produced.
Bell's invention and claims
Alexander Graham Bell is commonly, but incorrectly (see Antonio Meucci), credited as the
inventor of the telephone. The classic story of his crying out "Watson, come here! I
need you!" is a part of the common western mythos.
Bell's background
As Professor of Vocal Physiology in the University of Boston, Bell was engaged in training
teachers in the art of instructing deaf mutes 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 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.
This background prepared him for work with sound and electricity. He began his researches
in 1874 with a musical telegraph, in which he employed a make-break circuit driven by a
vibrating iron reed which created interrupted current to vibrate the receiver, which
consisted of an electro-magnet causing an iron reed or tongue to vibrate, exactly the same
as Bourseul, Reis and Gray. One day it was found that a reed failed to respond to the
intermittent current. Mr. Bell desired his assistant, who was at the other end of the
line, to pluck the reed, thinking it had stuck to the pole of the magnet. Mr. Watson
complied, and to his astonishment Bell observed that the corresponding reed at his end of
the line there upon began to vibrate and emit the same note, although there was no
interrupted current to make it. A few experiments soon showed that his reed had been set
in vibration by the magneto-electric currents induced in the line by the mere motion of
the distant reed in the neighbourhood of its magnet. This discovery led him to discard the
battery current altogether and rely upon the magneto-induction currents of the reeds
themselves. Moreover, it occurred to him that, since the circuit was never broken, all the
complex vibrations of speech might be converted into sympathetic currents, which in turn
would reproduce the speech at a distance.
Bell, with his assistant Watson discovered that the movements of the reed alone in a
magnetic field could transmit the modulations of the sound. Working from the analogy of
the phonautograph, Bell devised a receiver, consisting of a stretched diaphragm or drum of
goldbeater's skin with an armature of magnetised iron attached to its middle, and free to
vibrate in front of the pole of an electromagnet in circuit with the line.
Bell's success
Alexander Graham Bell's telephone patent drawing, 03/07/1876.This apparatus was completed
on June 2, 1875, and the same day he succeeded in transmitting sounds and audible signals
by magneto-electric currents and without the aid of a battery. On July 1, 1875, he
instructed his assistant to make a second membrane-receiver which could be used with the
first, and 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 at Boston to the cellar underneath. Bell, in the
room, held one instrument in his hands, while Watson in the cellar listened at the other.
The inventor spoke into his instrument, 'Do you understand what I say?' and we can imagine
his delight when Mr. Watson rushed into the room, under the influence of his excitement,
and answered, 'Yes.' However, the first successful bi-directional telephone call by Bell
wasn't made until March 10, 1876 when Bell spoke into his device, "Mr. Watson, come
here, I want to see you." and Watson answered. Thus, by 1875, Bell had re-invented
Meucci's electro-magnetic sound powered transmitter. The first long distance telephone
call was made on August 10, 1876 by Bell from the family homestead in Brantford, Ontario
to his assistant located in Paris, Ontario, some 16 km (10 mi.) distant.
A finished instrument was then made, having a transmitter formed 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 mouthpiece before the diaphragm directed the sounds
upon it, and as it vibrated with them, the soft iron 'armature' induced corresponding
currents in the cells of the electromagnet. These currents after traversing the line were
passed through the receiver, which consisted of a tubular electromagnet, having one end
partially closed by a thin circular disc of soft iron fixed at one point to the end of the
tube. This receiver bore a resemblance to a cylindrical metal box with thick sides, having
a thin iron lid fastened to its mouth by a single screw. When the undulatory current
passed through the coil of this magnet, the disc, or armature-lid, was put into vibration
and the sounds evolved from it.
The primitive telephone was rapidly improved, the double electromagnet being replaced by a
single bar magnet having a small coil or bobbin of fine wire surrounding one pole, in
front of which a thin disc of ferrotype is fixed in a circular mouthpiece, and serves as a
combined membrane and armature. On speaking into the mouthpiece, the iron diaphragm
vibrates with the voice in the magnetic field of the pole, and thereby excites the
undulatory currents in the coil, which, after travelling through the wire to the distant
place, are received in an identical apparatus. [This form was patented January 30, 1877.]
In traversing the coil of the latter they reinforce or weaken the magnetism of the pole,
and thus make the disc armature vibrate so as to give out a mimesis of the original voice.
The sounds are small and elfin, a minim of speech, and only to be heard when the ear is
close to the mouthpiece, but they are remarkably distinct, and, in spite of a disguising
twang, due to the fundamental note of the disc itself, it is easy to recognise the
speaker.
Public demonstrations
Earliest public of Bell's telephone
The apparatus was exhibited at the Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia, in 1876, where it
attracted the attention of Brazilian emperor Pedro II, and at the meeting of the British
Association in Glasgow, during the autumn of that year, Sir William Thomson revealed its
existence to the European public. In describing his visit to the Exhibition, he went on to
say: 'In the Canadian department I heard, "To be or not to be . . . there's the
rub," through an electric wire; but, scorning monosyllables, the electric
articulation rose to higher flights, and gave me 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.'
To hear the immortal words of Shakespeare uttered by the small inanimate voice which had
been given to the world must indeed have been a rare delight to the ardent soul of the
great electrician.
The surprise created among the public at large by this unexpected communication will be
readily remembered. Except one or two inventors, nobody had ever dreamed of a telegraph
that could actually speak, any more than they had ever fancied one that could see or feel;
and imagination grew busy in picturing the outcome of it. Since it was practically
equivalent to a limitless extension of the vocal powers, the ingenious journalist soon
conjured up an infinity of uses for the telephone, and hailed the approaching time when
ocean-parted friends would be able to whisper to one another under the roaring billows of
the Atlantic. Curiosity, however, was not fully satisfied until Professor Bell, the
inventor of the instrument, himself showed it to British audiences, and received the
enthusiastic applause of his admiring countrymen.
Later public demonstrations
The later form based on Gray's liquid transmitter was publicly exhibited on May 4, 1877 at
a lecture given by Professor Bell in the Boston Music Hall. 'Going to the small telephone
box with its slender wire attachments,' says a report, 'Mr. Bell coolly asked, as though
addressing some one 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 floated over the wire
from the Somerville terminus, and Mr. Bell amused his audience exceedingly by exclaiming,
"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 Star-Spangled Banner", and "Hail Columbia,"
while the audience at Salem joined in the chorus.'
Summary of Bell's achievements
Bell adopted Gray's, and later Edison's resistive transmitters and adapted switching plug
boards developed for telegraphy by Western Union. It would be inappropriate to minimize
Bell's contribution to the development of telephony. Additionally, Bell succeeded where
others failed to assemble a commercially viable telephone system. It can be argued that
Bell invented the telephone company.
Later developments
Bell had overcome the difficulty which baffled Reis, and succeeded in making the
undulations of the current fit the vibrations of the voice as a glove will fit the hand.
But the articulation, though distinct, was feeble, and it remained for Edison, by
inventing the carbon transmitter, and Hughes, by discovering the microphone, to render the
telephone the useful and widespread apparatus which we see it now.
Misc
The Ericofon was a very futuristic handset when it was introduced in 1956.The modern
handset came into existence when a Swedish lineman tied a microphone and earphone to a
stick so he could keep a hand free. The folding portable phone was an intentional copy of
the fictional futuristic communicators used in the television show Star Trek.
The history of additional inventions and improvements of the electrical telephone includes
the carbon microphone (later replaced by the electret microphone now used in almost all
telephone transmitters), the manual switchboard, the rotary dial, the automatic telephone
exchange, the computerized telephone switch, Touch Tone® dialing (DTMF), and the
digitization of sound using different coding techniques including pulse code modulation or
PCM (which is also used for .WAV files and compact discs).
Newer systems include IP telephony, ISDN, DSL, cell phone (mobile) systems, digital cell
phone systems, cordless telephones, and the third generation cell phone systems that
promise to allow high-speed packet data transfer.
The industry divided into telephone equipment manufacturers and telephone network
operators (telcos). Operating companies often hold a national monopoly. In the United
States, the Bell System was vertically integrated. It fully or partially owned the
telephone companies that provided service to about 80% of the telephones in the country
and also owned Western Electric, which manufactured or purchased virtually all the
equipment and supplies used by the local telephone companies. The Bell System divested
itself of the local telephone companies in 1984 in order to settle an antitrust suit
brought against it by the United States Department of Justice.
The first transatlantic telephone call was between New York City and London and occurred
on January 7, 1927.
Fixed Cordless telephones
Cordless handsetCordless telephones consist of a base unit that connects to the land-line
system and also communicates with remote handsets by low power radio. This permits use of
the handset from any location within range of the base. Because of the power required to
transmit to the handset, the base station is powered with an AC adapter. Thus, cordless
phones typically do not function during power outages. Initially, cordless phones used the
1.7 MHz range to communicate between base and handset. Because of quality and range
problems, these units were soon superseded by systems that used frequency modulation in
higher frequency ranges (49 MHz, 900 MHz, 2.4 GHz, and 5.8 GHz). 2.4 GHz cordless phones
can interfere with certain wireless LAN protocols (802.11b/g) due to the usage of the same
frequencies. Due to crowding on the 2.4 GHz band, several "channels" are
utilized in an attempt to guard against degradation in the quality of the voice signal.
The range of modern cordless phones is normally on the order of a few hundred yards.
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