Everything about Alfred Vail totally explained
Alfred Lewis Vail (
September 25,
1807, in
Morristown, New Jersey –
January 18,
1859) was a
machinist and
inventor. Vail was central, with
Samuel F.B. Morse, in developing and commercializing the telegraph between 1837 and 1844.
(External Link
) Vail and Morse were the first two telegraph operators on Morse's first experimental line between Washington, DC, and Baltimore, and Vail took charge of building and managing several early telegraph lines between 1845 and 1848. He was also responsible for several technical innovations of Morse's system, particularly the sending key and improved recording registers and relay magnets. Vail left the telegraph industry in 1848 because he believed that the managers of Morse's lines didn't fully value his contributions. His last assignment, superintendent of the Washington and New Orleans Telegraph Company, paid him only $900 a year, leading Vail to write to Morse, "I have made up my mind to leave the Telegraph to take care of itself, since it can't take care of me. I shall, in a few months, leave Washington for New Jersey,...and bid adieu to the subject of the Telegraph for some more profitable business."
Biography
Vail's parents were
Bethiah Youngs (1778-1847) and
Stephen Vail (1780-1864). Stephen Vail was an entrepreneur and industrialist who built the
Speedwell Ironworks into one of the most innovative iron works of its time. Their son and Alfred's brother was
George Vail, a noted politician of his time.
Alfred attended public schools before taking a job as a machinist at the iron works. He enrolled in
New York University to study theology in 1832, where he was an active and successful student and a member of the Eucleian Society, graduating in 1836.
(External Link
) Visiting his alma mater on September 2, 1837, he happened to witness one of
Samuel F. B. Morse's early telegraph experiments. He became fascinated by the technology and negotiated an arrangement with Morse to develop the technology at Speedwell at his own expense in return for 25% of the proceeds. ck Alfred split his share with his brother George. When Morse took on Francis O.J. Smith, a congressman from Maine, as a partner, he reduced the Vails' share to one-eighth. Morse retained patent rights to everything Vail developed.
After having secured his father's financial backing, Vail refined Morse's crude prototype to make it suitable for public demonstration and commercial operation. The first successful completion of a transmission with this system was at the Speedwell Iron Works on January 6, 1838, across two miles (3 km) of wiring. The message read "A patient waiter is no loser." Over the next few months Morse and Vail demonstrated the telegraph to Philadelphia's
Franklin Institute, members of Congress, and President Van Buren and his cabinet. Demonstrations such as these were crucial to Morse's obtaining a Congressional appropriation of $30,000 to build his first line in 1844 from Washington to Baltimore.
There has been a minor controversy as to whether Vail or Morse invented the "Morse Code". The argument for Vail's invention is laid out by a number of scholars.
(External Link
)
The argument offered by supporters of Morse claims that Morse originally devised a cipher code similar to that used in existing semaphore telegraphs, by which words were assigned three or four digit numbers and entered into a codebook. The sending operator converted words to these number groups and the receiving operator converted them back to words using this codebook. Morse spent several months compiling this code dictionary. It is said by Morse supporters that Vail, in public and private writings, never claimed the code for himself. According to one researcher, in a February 1838 letter to his father, Judge Stephen Vail, Alfred wrote, "Professor Morse has invented a new plan of an alphabet, and has thrown aside the Dictionaries." In an 1845 book Vail wrote describing Morse's telegraph, he also attributed the code to Morse.
Vail retired from the telegraph operations in 1848 and moved back to Morristown. He spent his last ten years conducting genealogical research. Since Vail shared a one-eighth interest in Morse's telegraph patents with his brother George, Vail realized far less financial gains from his work on the telegraph than Morse and others.
His papers and equipment were subsequently donated by his son Stephen to the
Smithsonian Institution and
New Jersey Historical Society.
Vail's cousin was
Theodore N. Vail, who became the first president of
American Telephone & Telegraph.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Alfred Vail'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://alfred_vail.totallyexplained.com">Alfred Vail Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |