Society Magazine

"It Seems Fitting, Doesn't It, That an Improbable Voice in the Darkness Reached out and Changed the World That Night..."

Posted on the 28 October 2013 by Brutallyhonest @Ricksteroni

Matt Archbold has a fascinating post up, one we could probably tag as yet another "did you know" piece:

It was Christmas Eve night in 1906. The ships at sea for the US Navy and the United Fruit Company received a message in Morse code to expect a special and important transmission. The telegraphers in Fessendentheir respective ships expected to hear the dits and dashes of Morse coming through.

But instead they heard something that many likely hadn't imagined possible. It was the sound of a human voice. In particular, it was the voice of Reginald Fessenden, the genius behind this first wireless voice transmission who had studied under Thomas Edison, transmitting from Brant Rock, MA, to ships on the North and South Atlantic Ocean.

And what did those people hear from Fessenden, the son of an Anglican minister, on that important night?

Check out the whole thing for yourself and find out.

Intriguing.


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