The Telephone Gambit: Chasing Alexander Graham Bell's Secret (v5) (12 page)

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Authors: Seth Shulman

Tags: #History, #Biography & Autobiography, #Law, #Science, #Science & Technology, #Technology & Engineering, #Inventors, #Telecommunications, #Applied Sciences, #Telephone, #Intellectual Property, #Patent, #Inventions, #Experiments & Projects

BOOK: The Telephone Gambit: Chasing Alexander Graham Bell's Secret (v5)
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Despite the Reis telephone’s all-important failure in U.S. court, I thought I had read in Aitken’s book that the British Post Office in the 1930s had tested models of the Reis telephone and determined that they could, in fact, transmit intelligible speech. I asked Liffen about the matter over coffee in the employees’ lounge at the Science Museum’s warehouse, and the question seemed to make him uncomfortable. Eventually, he told me why.

In September 2003, he said, he was looking through a file cabinet in the museum’s archives when he stumbled upon a document discussing the results of tests on the Reis telephone that had never been made public. In 1947, on the occasion of the centenary of Bell’s birth, the Science Museum in London had worked with the British firm Standard Telephones & Cables (STC) to conduct a detailed series of experiments on the museum’s Reis telephone. The company’s engineers judged Reis’s cigar-box receiver too weak to aid in their assessment, so they tested Reis’s transmitter with a modern, loudspeaker-type receiver. The STC engineers found that Reis’s finicky old transmitter worked perfectly. Next, simply amplifying the receiver, they found that it too received articulate speech clearly. Despite their initial intent to laud Bell on his 100th birthday, the report’s authors concluded, based on their tests, that Bell could not accurately be considered the first to have invented a telephone capable of transmitting speech.

At the time, however, as Liffen explained, STC was negotiating a business deal with AT&T, the direct descendant of the original Bell Telephone Company. STC executives were evidently so afraid the study’s conclusions might upset their corporate deal that they shelved the report and prevailed upon the museum not to discuss the matter. Liffen’s predecessor at the Science Museum complained, but, presumably fearing to alienate a major corporate sponsor, he ultimately acquiesced in helping to hide the results. Despite the study’s historical and educational value, the museum made no mention of the experiment or the report. Once again, it seems, history conspired to deny Reis’s work the credit it deserved.

“It was not the museum’s finest hour, I’m afraid,” Liffen noted sheepishly.

11
TAPPING THE PHONE
 
 

T
HE LIBRARY AT
the Dibner Institute generously allowed me to borrow most books in its collection for as long as I wished during the academic year. Some books, in its “vault” collection, however, were either so rare, old, or fragile that the library allowed access to them only in the reading room. Silvanus Thompson’s
Philipp Reis: Inventor of the Telephone,
published in London in 1883, was one such book. In my many hours poring over it, I thought a lot about Thompson’s vital role in spreading word of Reis’s achievement. His rare, aging volume seemed like a remarkably thin and fragile thread connecting Reis’s day to our own. Few copies of the book remain. Without Thompson, it is unclear how much, if any, information about Reis would have survived to the present.

Yet even with Thompson’s detailed and meticulous biography, it is easy to see how Reis’s circumstances limited the public attention and acclaim the humble schoolteacher received in his life and afterward. Reis was modest and relatively poor, and connected neither to those with political power nor to those with scientific expertise. And he died before his fortieth birthday.

Still, what about Elisha Gray? If my hunch was right, Gray, with his liquid transmitter, was the first to knowingly incorporate the concept of variable resistance into his design, a vitally important development in the history of the telephone. Given such a contribution, I found it hard to understand how history might have come to slight Gray.

He was, after all, one of the nation’s premier electrical engineers, well respected and well connected to the powerbrokers of his day. He kept a close eye on developments in the field of telegraphy, and had invented everything from an improved burglar alarm to a “telautograph,” a device we now know as a fax machine. Furthermore, by 1874, Gray was affluent enough to devote all his time to independent research and invention and to protect his work with the help of legal counsel. And he lived for many years after his pathbreaking work on the telephone—certainly long enough to have tended to his legacy.

Gray’s lack of recognition was a mystery I found difficult to unravel, at least partly because a dearth of information has survived about him. I did, however, find some telling glimpses of Gray’s life and times. One came in a forty-three-page booklet—another of the Dibner’s “vault” holdings—commemorating a banquet held to honor Gray in 1878. Thrown by friends and admirers in his hometown, the affluent Chicago suburb of Highland Park, it was a lavish affair. Hundreds of guests attended, an orchestra played, and a host of flowery and long-winded speeches regaled the audience after the elegant sit-down dinner. Most notable was the banquet’s stated purpose: to laud Gray
for his invention of the telephone.
In his own day, at least, Gray seemed to have won some recognition.

One Chicago newspaper editorialized:

The citizens of Highland Park gave a banquet on last Friday evening in honor of Dr. Elisha Gray, the inventor of the telephone. …Dr. Gray has met the fate which has so often overtaken great discoverers, in the attempt made to deprive him of both the honor and profits of the achievement; but which, we are happy to say, will not be successful in this case.

 

The evening’s toasts hit many similar notes. For instance, Gray’s friend, S. R. Bingham, a prominent Highland Park lawyer who helped organize the event, told the assembled guests:

If the press and the public have been misled—either by the willingness of other men to wear borrowed laurels, or the reluctance of our modest friend to demand his own—it is high time that we give to the press and the public authenticated facts.

 

Among the facts Bingham offered was a firsthand account of having learned of Gray’s “musical telephone” (which could transmit music but not yet intelligible speech) as early as the summer of 1874. In December of that year, Bingham recalled, he attended a public exhibition of Gray’s musical telephone at the Presbyterian church in Highland Park; astonished parishioners became the first sizable audience in America to listen to music electronically “piped in” from another room. At the time, Bell had barely begun his research on the telephone.

The booklet about Gray’s banquet is also filled with excerpts from congratulatory telegrams that had arrived from all quarters to mark the occasion. Apparently, local friends like Bingham were not the only ones to credit Gray with the invention. In just one notable example, Western Union’s chief electrician, George Prescott, addressed his message to: “Elisha Gray, the inventor of the telephone and solver of the problem of the ages.”

 

ONE OF THE
pleasures I found to break the routine of working in the Dibner’s tranquil reading room was the chance for an occasional chat with the library’s research director, David McGee. A historian of science and technology with an impressive breadth of knowledge, McGee was irrepressibly cheerful and self-effacing. Hailing from Canada, he was also a self-described “Bell admirer.” Bell spent much of his time in his later years at his estate in Canada and is almost universally revered there. McGee liked to gently tease me that my research was likely to make me unpopular “back home” if I stressed the accomplishments of inventors other than Bell.

Joking aside, McGee knew so much about Bell that he could eagerly and effectively rebut any but my most carefully researched doubts about Bell’s accomplishments. At one point, he even went to the trouble, in order to challenge some of the theories I had begun to develop, of typing up a detailed listing of Bell’s and Gray’s major, known actions between 1875 and 1877. It was a lucid and helpful document that must have taken him hours to compile; but, in characteristic fashion, McGee wrapped his gift with humor, playfully calling his document the “Bell Crime Labs Timeline.”

McGee was poking light fun, of course, but his gibe also rang true. I was increasingly convinced that a crime
had
taken place—a blatant and immensely consequential one. And the actions of the victim—Elisha Gray—were particularly hard to understand. When Bell laid claim to an invention so nearly identical to Gray’s prior conception, why didn’t Gray cry foul?

Bell admirers like McGee have emphasized, rightly, that Gray was too focused on improvements to the telegraph to appreciate the commercial potential of the telephone early on. To be sure, in 1875 and 1876, Gray’s attention, like Gardiner Hubbard’s, was directed intently upon the goal of commercializing the multiple-messaging telegraph. Perhaps because of this, Bell biographer Robert Bruce goes so far as to argue that

in coming up with his telephone idea, Gray broke away more sharply from his current line of thought and research than had Bell. This fact adds probability to what was certainly possible as early as September 1875: that some general hints, if not details, of Bell’s new goal had reached Gray and vibrated in his mind like the sympathetic response of a tuned reed.

 

 

THERE IS PLENTY
of evidence that Bell and Gray kept tabs on each other’s research. But I was highly skeptical about Bruce’s inference, however poetically phrased, that Bell had led Gray to his research on the telephone. From what I had gleaned, the opposite was at least as likely to be true.

According to Gray’s own account, his path to the telephone began early in 1874, when he found his nephew playing with some electrical equipment in the bathroom. At the time, many households had so-called vibrating rheotomes hooked up to the bulky batteries of the day, designed to administer electric shocks for treating everything from muscle pain to asthma. As was later shown, the treatments had no medical value, but in the 1870s “electrotherapy” machines were popular. Using such a setup, Gray’s nephew was “taking shocks” to entertain a small group of younger children (whether they were siblings, cousins, or friends is unclear from Gray’s account). For the demonstration, Gray’s nephew had hooked a wire from the machine’s induction coil to the zinc bathtub. He held the other lead in his hand, and then completed the circuit by rubbing his free hand against the tub.

When Gray walked in on the show, he was fascinated: the vibrating induction coil emitted a sound when the boy touched the tub. Experimenting further along a line of inquiry once pioneered by Page, Gray found that he could change the tone emanating from the machine (what Page had dubbed “galvanic music”) by adjusting the rheotome’s frequency. Furthermore, he could make the sound louder by rubbing the metal tub harder and more quickly. Over the next few months, Gray experimented in earnest with the effect. Soon, he had built a strikingly modern version of a telephone receiver that could play musical tones. Gray used his discovery to transmit these sounds via a telegraph wire. In the spring of 1874, Gray showed the device to Western Union officials and to Joseph Henry and other scientists at the Smithsonian Institution.

Word of Gray’s musical telephone was widely reported in newspapers that summer. As a practical inventor and entrepreneur who specialized in improvements to the telegraph, Gray naturally began to think of applications for his device. He quickly experimented to demonstrate that his receiver could pick up audible tones produced by signals carried for hundreds of miles over a telegraph wire. Like Bell, he realized he might be able to incorporate the phenomenon into a telegraph capable of carrying multiple messages simultaneously. And, much to Bell’s consternation, as demonstrated in his comment about the “neck and neck” race between the two, Gray patented his version of a harmonic, multiple telegraph slightly before Bell did in 1875.

The idea of transmitting vocal sounds was a natural extension of Gray’s research. As I had learned from reading about Reis and others, the notion of a “speaking telephone” had been discussed for years in the scientific literature.

Gray said that the specific impetus for his moving in that direction came in 1875, when he saw two boys in Milwaukee playing with a tin-can-and-thread telephone. When the boy at one end spoke into the can, the sound waves from his voice would mechanically travel along the string to the boy listening at the other end. As soon as he noticed it, Gray said, it dawned on him that the sound vibrations might be carried electrically. In his caveat of February 1876, leaping beyond the research of Reis and others, Gray became the first to describe a groundbreaking way to accomplish this.

Gray’s idea for a liquid transmitter drew directly upon the concept of a “water rheostat” that his Western Electric Company had produced several years earlier. In this earlier invention, the resistance in an electric circuit could be decreased or increased by lowering or raising a platinum strip in a liquid solution.

Still, the opinions of many historians like Bruce—highlighting Bell’s better-known work and belittling Gray’s contributions—convinced me that I needed to learn more about Gray for myself to determine the full extent of his claim to the invention of the modern telephone. Unlike Bell’s papers, though, which are superbly cataloged at the U.S. Library of Congress, documents pertaining to Gray’s work are far fewer in number and scattered around the country. Furthermore, in contrast to the countless biographies of Bell, little published work exists about Gray’s life and work.

Piecing together available biographical information, and tracing the notes and references in several secondary texts on the telephone, I learned that Oberlin College held a number of Gray’s papers. I assumed at first that Gray must have left them to his alma mater, but then I stumbled across a different explanation. In an intriguing passage, Lewis Coe, the author of the 1995 work,
The Telephone and Its Several Inventors,
notes that

One of Gray’s staunchest supporters came forth in 1937 in the person of Dr. Lloyd W. Taylor, head of the physics department of Oberlin College. Dr. Taylor was convinced that Gray was the real inventor of the telephone, even though Bell held the legal claim.

 

According to Coe, Taylor, a careful researcher, had personally tracked down many of Gray’s original documents and brought them to Oberlin. Coe even reprints Taylor’s one published article about Gray as an appendix to his book. Entitled “The Untold Story of the Telephone,” it appeared in the December 1937 issue of the
American Physics Teacher.
As soon as I read it, I felt a rush of excitement familiar to any historical researcher hot on a promising trail.

Taylor authoritatively addressed many nagging questions about Elisha Gray. First of all, Taylor validated my hunch about the importance of Gray’s liquid transmitter. As Taylor put it, Gray’s 1876 caveat

was the first embodiment of the principle of variable resistance applied to the telephone, and as such possesses an historical importance which can scarcely be overemphasized.

 

Taylor closely evaluated the timing of Bell’s and Gray’s respective technical accomplishments, and I was impressed by his diligent scholarship. Among other things, he explains clearly that the transmitter Bell used to call Watson on March 10, 1876, was very different from the instrument described and illustrated in Bell’s patent. Furthermore, Taylor documents that the type of liquid transmitter Bell first used had previously been described by Gray

in a confidential document about the contents of which Bell subsequently acknowledged having received information.

 

Bell acknowledged having learned of Gray’s caveat? This assertion certainly piqued my interest. Even more tantalizing, according to Lewis Coe, Taylor had been at work on a book-length manuscript about Gray when he died in a mountain-climbing accident on Mount St. Helens in July 1948. As far as I could tell, Taylor’s unpublished manuscript and its source materials had collected dust at the Oberlin College Archives ever since. I couldn’t help but wonder whether Taylor’s research materials might offer the same kind of vital link to Gray that Silvanus Thompson’s had previously provided for Reis’s research. I decided on the spot to make the trip to Oberlin to examine Dr. Taylor’s unpublished manuscript and source materials in person.

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