HEARING THROUGH WIRES:
The
Physiophony of ANTONIO MEUCCI
by Gerry Vassilatos
ARRIVALS
Antonio Meucci is the forgotten and humble
genius whose inventions precede every revolution in communication
arts which were achieved during this century. The time frame
during which his notable discoveries were made is a most
remarkable revelation. How Meucci developed his accidental
discoveries into full scale working systems is a true wonder in
view of this time reference.
The culturing of technology from the simple
sparks of vision is a feat of its own distinct kind. As the
earliest chronicled inventor of telephonic arts he is justly
applauded as the true father of telephony by afficionadi who know
his wonderfully touching biography. But he invented far more than
the telephone with which we are familiar. Meucci discovered two
separate telephonic systems. His first and most astounding
discovery is known as physiophony, telephoning through the
body...hearing through wires. His second development was acoustic
telephony, preceding every other legendary inventor in this art
by several decades.
Meucci powered telephones with electricity
taken from the ground through special earth batteries, and from
the sky by using large surface area diodes to draw static from
the air. Eliminating the need for employing batteries in his
telephonic systems, Meucci first conceived of a transoceanic
vocal communication system. His notion was grand and achievable.
Marconi later employed methods pioneered by the forgotten Meucci.
He developed ferrites, with which he
constructed true audio transformers and loudspeaking
transceivers. He invented marine ranging and undersea
communication systems. His numerous achievements in chemical
processing and industrial chemistry are too numerous to mention
in such a brief treatise. All of these wonders were conceived and
demonstrated well before 1857.
Sr. Meucci was a prolific inventor, engineer,
and practical chemist. Living in Florence, he worked as a stage
designer and technician in various theaters. Antonio Meucci and
his wife left Florence to flee the violence of the civil
insurrections which raged throughout Italy. Many immigrants who
wished for a peaceful life thought they might find some measure
of solace in the New Land which lay to the west.
Unhappily restricted by law from entering The
United States, persons such as Meucci and his family chose the
route into which most other Mediterraneans were forced at the
time. Being turned southward, they were literally compelled to
dock in Caribbean or South American ports. There sizable
populations of European immigrants remain to this day, legally
restricted from North American shores. Most found that their
presence there was received with an acceptance and warmth equal
to a homecoming. It should have been in these lands that their
legacies were written.
New arrivals in Cuba, the Meucci family made
Havana their home. They found the warm and friendly nation a
place for new and wonderful opportunities. Sr. Meucci pursued
numerous experimental lines of research while living in Havana,
developing a new method for electroplating metals. This new art
was applied to all sorts of Cuban military equipment, Meucci
gaining fame and recognition in Havana as a scientific researcher
and developer of new technologies.
Several special electrical control systems were
designed by him specifically for stage production in the Teatro
Tacon, the Havana Opera. Electrical rheostats served the safe and
controlled operation of enclosed carbon arclamps. Mechanical
contrivances hoisted, lowered, parted, and closed heavy curtains.
The automatic systems were a wonder to behold.
A young and dreamy romantic, Meucci found the
beauty of theater work quite entrancing and inspirational. There,
dreams became realities, if only for the short time during which
hardened pragmatism was suspended. Fantasy and wonder were
magickal liquids which perfumed the soul and opened the
minds eyes. As in childhood, one could receive the
elevating epiphanies of revelation necessary for discovering
unexpected phenomena, and for developing unequalled technologies.
The decision to move to Havana was indeed a
good one. Genuine acceptance, and loving recognition added joy
the lives of the bittersweet exiles. Meuccis wife was often
amused by his more outlandish inventive notions. But, as their
stay in Havana continued, she scolded that he had better develop
something solidly practical on which to "make a
living".
A long time fascination with physiological
conditions and their electrical responses, Meucci was prompted to
begin study of electromedicine. With just such a practical view
in mind, he established and maintained an experimental
electromedical laboratory in backrooms of the Opera House.
Investigating the art of "electro-medicine", as
popularly practiced throughout both Europe and the Americas,
Meucci investigated the curative abilities of electrical impulse.
Applying moderate electrical impulses from small induction coils
to patients in hope of alleviate illness, Meucci learned that
precise control of both the "strength and length" of
electrical impulse held the true secret of the art.
As viewed by Meucci, pain and certain physical
conditions were treatable by these electrical methods provided
that very short impulses of insignificant voltage were employed.
Impulses of specific length and power were necessary to rid
suffering patients of their pain. In addition, Meucci imagined
that tissue and bone regeneration could be stimulated by such
means.
What really intrigued Sr. Meucci was the length
of impulse time involved in body-applied electricity. To this
end, he developed special slide switches which were capable of
specifying the impulse length. It was possible to slide a zig-zag
contact surface over a fixed electrical source. By varying the
spacings between such slide contacts, Meucci could mechanically
generate very short electrical impulses.
Rheostats could also be employed to control the
current intensity. By the employment of these two control
features, he was able to apply the proper impulse "strength
and length". Meucci wished to chart a specific impulse
series which would neutralize each specific kind of pain or
illness. Developing catalogues of electrical impulse cures was
his real aim. Such a technology, if developed thoroughly, could
arm medical practitioners with new curative powers.
Sr. Meucci applied continual experimental
effort toward these medical goals. He often applied these same
impulses to theater employees and stage artists alike. These
people came to regard such electric cures as definitive.
Meuccis method was known to reverse conditions completely.
He paid special attention to the placement and size of electrodes
on the body. Tiny point-contacts were often held to the body at
specific neural points, effecting their analgesic effects. He was
especially careful with "shock strength", applying only
millivolt surges to his patients. Pain could be gradually made to
retreat by the proper impulse administration.
Meucci had already developed fine rheostatic
tuners for limiting the output power of his electrical device. He
always applied the current to his own body in order to give
completely "measured" electro-treatments. In this
manner he was able to judge the parameters more personally and
responsibly. It was his habit to administer treatments of this
kind to his ailing wife, Esther. Crippling arthritis was becoming
her personal prison, and Sr. Meucci wished to cure her completely
of the malady. Watching and praying through until the dawn,
Antonio struggled to perfect a means by which cures could be
effected with selective impulse articulation.
As with each of Meuccis developments, the
fulfillment of his advanced medical ideas are found throughout
the early twentieth century. Each researcher in this field of
medical study employed very short impulses of controlled voltage
to alleviate a wide variety of maladies. Independently
rediscovering the Meucci electro-medical method throughout the
early twentieth century were such persons as Nikola Tesla, Dr. A.
Abrams, G. Lahkovsky, Dr. T. Colson. Each developed catalogues by
which specific impulses were methodically directed to cure their
associate illness. Each researcher developed a method for
applying impulses of specifically controlled length and intensity
to suffering patients, effecting historical cures.
More recently, several medical researchers have
employed impulse generators to effect dramatic bone and tissue
regenerations. They affirm that human physiology responds with
rapidity when proper electroimpulses are applied to conditions of
illness. These were closely regarded by government officials,
eager to regulate the new science.
Most medical bureaucrats, fearing the
elimination of their own pharmaceutical monopolies, sought
opportunity to eradicate these revolutionary electromedical arts.
Upton Sinclair obtained personal experience with these curative
systems and the physicians who devised these methodologies. He
championed their cause in numerous national publications with an
aim toward exposing those who would suppress their work.
Sinclair pointed out the social revolution
which would necessarily follow such discoveries. He was quick to
mention that proliferations of new technologies would not come
without a dramatic battle. Fought in the innermost boardrooms of
intrigue, Sinclair underestimated the ability of regulators to
eradicate technologies of social benefit.
This notable literary personage wrote
extensively on the work of Dr. Abrams, who was later vilified by
both the FDA and the AMA. An outlandish national purge quickly
mounted into a fullscale assault on these methods. But this is a
story best told in several other biographies. Meuccis
electromedical methods would soon be transformed into a
revolutionary means for communicating with others at long
distances.
SHOCK
The most central episode of Meuccis life
now unfolded. It was to be a serendipity of the most remarkable
kind. Throughout his later years, Meucci recounted the following
story which occurred in 1849, when he was forty-one years of age.
A certain gentleman was suffering from an unbearable migraine
headache. Since it was known to many that Meuccis
electromedical methods possessed definite curative ability, Sr.
Meuccis medical attention was sought.
Meucci placed the weak, suffering man on a
chair in a nearby room. His weakened condition inspired an easy
pity. Antonio had already felt the thorns of his beloved
wifes pain. Her eyes, like the man before him now, begged
for the cure which lay hidden in mystery. Carefully, caringly,
Antonio now sought to ease this mans suffering.
In this severe instance, Meucci placed a small
copper electrode in the patients mouth and asked him to
hold the other (a copper rod) in his hand. The electro-impulse
device was in an adjoining room. Meucci went into this room,
placed an identical copper electrode in his own mouth, and held
the other copper electrode to find the weakest possible impulse
strength. Meucci told his patient to relax and to expect pain
relief momentarily, making small incremental adjustments on the
induction coil.
Migraines of severe intensity
characteristically produce equally severe reaction to the
slightest irritation. The man being now highly sensitive to pain,
Meuccis insignificant (though stimulating) current impulses
were felt. The patient, anticipating some horrible shock, cried
out in the other room with surprise at the very first slight
tickle.
Momentarily, Meucci forgot the hurtful sympathy
which he naturally felt in assisting this poor soul who sat
across the hall. His focussed attention was suddenly diverted as
an astounding empathy manifested itself: he had actually
"felt" the sound of the mans cry in his own
mouth! After absorbing the surprise, he burst into the adjoining
room to see why the man had so yelled. Glad the poor fellow had
not run out on him, Meucci replaced the oral electrode of his
suffering patient and went into the other room to perform the
same adjustments...through closed doors this time. He asked the
gentleman to talk louder, while he himself again held the
electrode in his mouth.
Once more, to his own great shock, Meucci
actually heard the distant voice "in his own mouth".
This vocalization was clear, distinct, and completely different
from the muffled voice heard through the doors. This was a true
discovery. Here, Antonio Meucci discovered what would later be
known as the "electrophonic" effect.
The phenomenon, later known as physiophony,
employs nerve responses to applied currents of very specific
nature. As the neural mechanism in the body employs impulses of
infinitesimal strengths, so Meucci had accidentally introduced
similar "conformant" currents. These conformant
currents contained auditory signals: sounds. The strange method
of "hearing through the body" bypassed the ears
completely and resounded throughout the delicate tissues of the
contact point. In this case, it was the delicate tissues of the
mouth.
Each expressed their thanks to the other, and
the relieved patient went home. The impulse cure had managed to
"break up" the migraine condition. Meuccis reward
was not monetary. It was found in a miraculous accident; the
transmission of the human voice along a charged wire. In these
several little experiments, Meucci had determined and defined the
future history of all telephonic arts.
VOICES
Excited and elated Antonio asked certain
friends to indulge his patience with similar experiments. He gave
individual oral electrodes to each and asked that his friends
each speak or yell. Meucci, seated behind a sealed door, touched
his electrode to the corner of his mouth. As each person spoke or
yelled, Meucci clearly heard speech again. Internal sound
reception in the very tissues of the mouth. An astounding
discovery.
Without question, Meuccis most notable
discovery in telephonics is physiophony. Meucci did not foresee
this strange and wonderful discovery. Think of it. Hearing
without the ears. Hearing through the nerves directly! The
implications are just as enormous as the possible applications.
Would it be possible for deaf persons to hear sound once again?
Meucci knew it was possible.
His first series of new experiments would seek
improvement of the electrophonic effect. To this end Meucci
designed a preliminary set of paired electrodes. The appearance
of these devices was strange to both the people of his time and
those of own. Each device was made of small cork cylinders fitted
with smooth copper discs. Designed as personalized transmitters,
each person was to place their own transmitter directly in the
mouth! The other electrode was to be hand-held.
Meucci verified the physiophonic phenomenon
repeatedly. Upon experiencing the now-famed effect, visitors were
awed. Furthermore, it was possible to greatly extend the line
length to many hundreds of feet and yet "hear" sounds.
The sounds were clearly heard "in the nerves" with a
very small applied voltage. Sounds were being deliberately
transmitted along charged wires for the first recorded time in
modern history.
The auditory organs were not in any way
involved. Meucci discovered that oral vibrations were varying the
resistance of the circuit: oral muscles were vibrating the
current supply. Spoken sounds were reproduced as a vibrating
electric current in the charged line which can be sensed and
"heard" in the nerveworks and muscular tissues.
With very great care for obvious injuries, it
is possible to reproduce these remarkable results to
satisfaction. The voltages must be infinitesimal. When properly
conducted through the tissues, sounds are heard near the contact
point the body. No doubt, the impulsed signal reproduces
identical audio contractions in sensitive tissues. This is one
source of the sounds internally "heard". Nerves
actually form the greater channel when impulses are arranged
properly, directly transmitting their auditory contents without
the inner ear.
Physiophony is Meuccis greatest
discovery, one which he should have pursued before also
developing mere acoustic telephony. Twenty-five years later in
America, an elated Elisha Gray would rediscover the physiophonic
phenomenon. He would develop physiophony into a major scientific
theme. Long after this time, these identical experimental
demonstrations conspicuously appear in Bells letters;
copying the identical experiments taken first from Meucci, then
from Gray, and Reis.
During the early twentieth century, music halls
for deaf persons were once found in certain metropolitan centers.
These recital halls enabled nerve-deaf persons to hear music
through handheld electrodes. Modifying the appliances in order to
allow considerable freedom of movement, several such places
allowed deaf people to dance. Holding the small copper rods,
wired to a network on the ceiling, musical sounds and rhythms
could be felt and heard directly. Physiophony, more recently
termed "neurophony" holds the secret of a new
technology. Physiophony, rediscovered of late, facilitates
hearing in those afflicted with nerve-deafness.
Meucci discovered two distinct forms of vocal
communication: physiophony and acoustic telephony. Meuccis
next experiments dealt with the development of a means for
separating the physiophonic action from the human body entirely.
He developed working systems to serve each of these modes, with
primary emphasis on acoustic telephony. Replacing tissues of the
mouth with a separate vibrating medium required extending the
cork-fixed electrodes.
Meucci coiled thin and flexible copper wire so
that it could freely vibrate in a heavy paper cone. Once more,
Meucci varied the experiment. This time his own oral electrode
would be enclosed in a heavy paper cone. Again each subject was
asked to talk into the first cone-encased electrode as Meucci
listened at the other terminal. Each time, speech was heard as
vibrating air. This was his first acoustic transmitter-receiver.
Meucci wrote up all these findings in
1849...when Alexander Graham Bell was just 2 years old. Living in
Havana at the time, Meucci conceived of the first telephonic
system. He imagined that American industry would allow infinite
production of his new technology. A telephonic system would
revolutionize any nation which engineered its proliferation.
CANDLES
Freedom doors were not swung open in wide and
unconditional welcome for Europeans during the latter
1800s. Strict immigration laws forbade Europeans from even
entering New York Harbor. It was more difficult, if not
impossible, to find employment. New arrivals in America faced
difficult, almost inhuman conditions. No support systems existed
in the land of free-enterprise. No catch-nets for failed attempts
in the land of the free.
True and unresisted freedom was reserved only
for the upper class, who had already begun regulating and
eliminating their possible competitors. Every means by which that
prized upper position might be usurped was destroyed. Forgotten
discoveries and inventions flowed like blood under the heavy arm
of the robber baron.
The "New World" was not anxious to
welcome these people. Discrimination against European immigrants
went unbridled, unrepresented, and unchallenged. When American
doors finally did open, there were no sureties for those who came
to work and live in the New World. There was no promise, no meal,
no housing, no job, no emergency support. To be in America meant
to be on your own in America.
Prejudice against the "foreigners"
was vicious during this time period. Immigrants who imagined a
better life to the northlands would be sadly disappointed at
first. Many of these newcomers preferred the temporary pain of
atrocious city ghettoes simply because their eyes were on the
future.
Europeans arriving in America came with trades
and skills. Master craftsmen and technicians in their Old World
guilds, these "unwelcomed" eventually won the hardened
industrial establishment with their good works, many of them
later forming the real core of American Industry. It is not
accidental that Thomas Edison hired European craftsmen
exclusively. In less than two generations the children of these
brave individuals became leaders of their professions, giving the
leukemic nation its periodically required red blood.
Established families despised the newcomers,
who were regarded first with dread, then with resentment, and
finally with a firm resolve. After ruthless campaigns by
bureaucrats and moguls to eliminate the foreign presence in North
America, wealthy puritanical antagonists sought the supposed
surety of legislation to achieve elitist isolation. Neither
cultivated nor creative, this ability to manipulate the tools of
liberty for the sake of domination became a theme which
continually stains their history. The unbridled and impassioned
expansionism of these "foreign people" was so
threatening to the impotent bureaucrats that legislation was
installed for the expressed purpose of limiting their unstoppable
movement. Sure that these were in fact the feared usurpers of a
young and recently consolidated Republic, financiers impelled
legislators to create a "middle class" economic stratum
which has remained in force to this very day.
Bound to a life of tireless work and taxations,
the children of immigrants no longer question the barriers to
limitless personal achievement. While a very few wonder why their
frustrations rarely allow escape into the true individual freedom
of which America boasts, most simply satisfy themselves with
banal consumer temptations.
Nevertheless, the "American"
explosion in music, art, crafts, and technological arts followed
the immigrants wherever they were forced to flee. When Antonio
and Esther Meucci arrived in New York City, he was now forty-two.
They made their home near Clifton, Staten Island.
Clifton was once a picturesque little town,
nestled on a rocky ridge and surrounded by babbling brooks and
lush forests. The year was 1850. The Meuccis acquired a
large and spacious house, filled with windows. Golden bright
sunlight flooded the home in which Antonio devised the technology
of the future. The rooms contained numerous pieces of striking
art nouveau furniture which Meucci himself handcrafted. A
beautiful four octave piano and several of these furniture pieces
yet remain, the house itself having been declared a national
monument.
His poor wife, now crippled completely, was
confined to their second floor bedroom. It was there in Old
Clifton that Sr. Meucci developed his "teletrofono".
The device was successively redesigned and improved until several
distinct and original models emerged. Mundane needs being the
primary necessity, Meucci developed a chemical formula for making
special chemically formulated candles and opened a small factory
for their production. His smokeless candles earned a moderate
income by which the small family could maintain their place in
the New World. Throughout the long years to come, he also
supported countless others who were in need.
He patented this smokeless candle formula,
along with several other chemical processes related to his small
industry. Soon, Antonio found that his candles were sought by
neighbors, parish churches, and small general stores. He
therefore took his devotions, and went into production of the
same. Marketing the product locally, he was now again able to
supply his experimental facility. This was his encouragement. The
inventions began flowing again like rich red wine.
Meucci installed a small teletrofonic system in
his Clifton house, as he had done in Havana. Esther Meucci was
now completely crippled with arthritis. Connecting his
wifes room to his small candle factory, Antonio could now
speak throughout the day with his wife. The system lines were
loosely wrapped up and around staircase banisters, through halls,
across walls, and finally spanned the long distance to the
factory building, naturally running slack in several locations.
Meucci made sure that the lines did not run
tight in order to prevent wire stretching and cracking during
winter seasons. In every model aspect, Meuccis system was
the prototype. Everyone of his surrounding neighbors had become
personally familiar with his system, having been allowed to try
"speaking over the wire."
Meucci and his wife took boarders from time to
time in order to afford minimum luxuries...the luxuries of
ordinary people. When Garibaldi was exiled from Italy as an
insurrectionist, he sought out Meucci. A small factory was
established near his home for the manufacture of his chemically
treated candles.
With this, his sole and sturdy financial
source, Meucci continued his other beloved experiments. He had
already established and regularly used several teletrofonic
systems throughout his home and factory by 1852. Both he and
Garibaldi walked, hunted, and fished in the lush greenery and
flowing flowered hills of old Dutch Staten Island.
Each new teletrofonic design eventually was
added to a growing collection box in the timber lined cellar.
Improved models were made and brought into the general use of his
system. With these modified devices it was effortless to
communicate with his ailing wife, employees, and friends.
Distances posed no problem for Meucci. His system could bring
sound to any location. Numerous credible witnesses actually used
his remarkably extensive telephonic system across the
neighborhood. One such highly credible witness was Giuseppe
Garibaldi himself.
Garibaldi was welcomed to live with the Meucci
family in their modest Staten Island home for as long as he
wished. Garibaldi, Meucci, and his wife vanquished sorrow and
poverty with faith, hope, and love expressed in a myriad of ways.
Each supported the other in the struggle against indignity,
accusation, outrage, and all the particular little alienations
imposed upon them. The Meucci household not unaccustomed to the
deprivations through which character is developed.
Both Srs. Meucci and Garibaldi continued
manufacturing candles and other such products of commercial
value, supporting themselves and the needs of others in the new
land. Frequent financial crisis never deterred his dream quest.
Never did such reversals place a halt on Meuccis laboratory
experimentation or any of his devoted attentions.
As it happens in the course of time, new
changes bring fresh opportunities and joys to lift tired hearts.
The sun rose in the little windows after a long winters
dream. An old friend from Havana came to visit Meucci and his
wife. Carlos Pader wished to know whether Meucci had continued
experimenting with his now famous "teletrofono".
Pader was shown the results, but Antonio
confessed the need for new materials. Both Sr. Pader and another
friend, Gaetano Negretti, informed their friend Antonio that
there was an excellent manufacturer of telegraphic instruments on
Centre Street in Manhatten. And so, Sr. Meucci was introduced to
a certain Mr. Chester, a maker of telegraphic instruments.
Mr. Chester was an enthusiastic and friendly
tradesmen. He enjoyed speaking with Antonio. The two shared their
technical skills in broken dialects. Meucci was always welcomed
there on Centre Street. Meucci visited this establishment on
several occasions to purchase parts and observe the latest
telegraphic arts. It was here that Meucci "gained new
knowledge". He set to work, purchasing materials for new
experiments. New and improved teletrofonic models began appearing
in the neighborhood.
Meucci was methodical, thorough, and attentive
to the unfolding details of his experiments. Meucci kept
meticulous notes; a feature which later worked to vindicate his
honor. He worked incessantly on a single device before making any
new design modifications. Meuccis creative talent and
familiarity with materials allowed him to recognize and
anticipate the inventive "next move". In observational
acuity, inventive skill, and development of practical products he
was unmatched.
Thomas Edison, after him, most nearly imitated
Meuccis methods. Meucci searched by trial and error at
times when reason alone brought no fruit. It was, after all, an
accident which revealed the teletrofonic principles to him.
Providence itself in action.
TELETROFONO
Meucci methodically explored different means
for vibrating electric current with speech. From 1850 to 1862 he
developed over 30 different models, with twelve distinct
variations. His first models utilized the vibrating copper loop
principle which he discovered in Havana. Paper cones were
replaced with tin cylinders to increase the resonant ring. He
experimented with thin animal membranes, set into vibration by
contact with the vibrating copper strip. This model begins to
resemble the familiar form of the telephone as we know it.
Meucci wrapped fine electromagnetic bobbins
around his copper electrodes, increasing vocal amplitudes
considerably. In a second series, he explored the use of magnetic
vibrators. A great variety of loops, coils, soft-iron bars, and
iron horseshoes appear in Meuccis successive designs. These
latter models gave amazingly loud results. In addition,
Meuccis diagrams reveal experimentation with both separate
and "in-line" copper diaphragms. These latter operated
by the yet to be discovered "Hall Effect", where
current-carrying conductors vibrate more strongly in magnetic
fields produced by their own currents.
While power for his early teletrofonic system
was derived from large wet cell batteries in the basement, Meucci
made a pivotal discovery, discovered when he grounded his lines
with large dissimilar metal plates. Suddenly, his system operated
as if large batteries had been added to the line. Meucci
disconnected the basement batteries and the system continued to
operate, powered by ground currents alone.
This use of buried dissimilar plates repeatedly
appears throughout early telegraphic patents. The actual devices
by which this astounding electrification of lines was established
were called "earth batteries". Several significant
individuals made remarkable discoveries while developing earth
batteries throughout the latter 1800s. They found that the
earth batteries were not really generating the power at all.
Earth batteries tap into earth electricity and
draw it out for use. Some telegraphic lines continue to operate
well into the 1930s with no other batteries than their
ground endplates. Certain systems continued using their original
earth batteries without replacement in excess of 40 years!
Earth batteries are intriguing because they
seem never to corrode in proportion to the amount of electrical
power which they generate. In fact, they scarcely corrode at all.
Exhumed earth batteries showed minimal corrosion. A mysterious
self-regenerative action takes place in these batteries, a
phenomenon worthy of modern study.
Like Thomas Edison after him, Meucci was a
master of practical chemistry. Numerous of his processes remain
unused to this day. He developed strange chemical coatings; using
saltwater, graphite, soapstone, wax, muriatic acid, asbestos,
sulfur, and various bonding resins to treat wire conductors. Wire
lines, specially treated by Meucci, had current rectifying
abilities. These absorbed and directed both terrestrial and
aerial electricity into the line, a one-way charge valve.
Technically what he created is a large surface area diode.
When these specially coated wires were
elevated, Meucci enhanced the absorption of "atmospheric
electricity" into his system. Prevented from escape by
chemical coatings, a steady stream of aerial charges were
absorbed into the wire line. He succeeded in powerfully operating
his system with "aerial electricity" alone.
Meucci now freely used aerial and earth
electricity to power his teletrofonic system. In addition, he
discovered that the latent power in strong permanent magnets
could amplify speech with very great power. When coupled with
energy derived from the ground, Meucci found that true
amplifications could be effected. Meucci found that vocal force
being sufficiently powerful to produced amplified reproductions
at great distances in certain of his models which utilized
magnetite "flour".
Sound-responsive soft iron cores were replaced
with lodestone and surrounded by various powdered core composites
developed in Meuccis laboratory. Lodestones, surrounded
with cores of flour-fine iron powders, produced enormous outputs.
Meucci used exceedingly fine copper windings. The vocal range of
these magnetic responders was considerable when made in
Meuccis own unique design.
Clear, velvety speech was communicated with
great power in these fine-powder core designs. His use of
flour-fine magnetite powders produced the worlds first
ferrites; composites of iron, zinc, and manganese later used in
radiowave transformers.
His teletrofoni were now fully formed, handheld
devices of some weight. Surviving models from his system resemble
those much later manufactured by Bell telephone. They are
cup-shaped, wooden casings...handheld transmitter-receivers. One
speaks into the device, and then listens from the same for
replies. Meuccis diagrams, notebooks, and models prove his
priority over all the historically successive telephone designs.
In addition, Meucci used diaphragms which
conducted the current which vocalizations could modulate. He
developed remarkable graphite-salt coatings to enhance the
electrical conductivity of his responder diaphragms, preceding
Edisons carbon button microphone by a full 24 years!
TRANSOCEANIC
In addition to his existing system, Meucci
conceived of entirely new directions in communication arts. His
mind turned toward the sea...and to transoceanic teletrofonic
communication. Meucci tested the idea that seawater could
actually replace telegraph cables, bizarre as it must yet sound.
His notion would be termed "subaqueous conduction
wireless". Others had achieved moderate results across
limited waterways. Sommering, Lindsay, and Morse each sent weak
telegraph signals across streams. Meucci envisioned the whole
Atlantic as a possible reservoir for the transmission of
telephonic signals.
His experiments took him down to the Staten
Island seashore with his teletrofono, batteries, and large plates
of both copper and zinc. The dissimilar metal plates were
submerged quite a distance from each other. Vocal messages spoken
into the sea were electrically retrieved by a teletrofonic
apparatus connected to an equivalent arrangement of widely
separated, water-immersed plates on an opposed part of the
distant shore. The signals were clearly heard.
Most engineers will object that these
experiments could not sustain vocal communications across great
distances. They will say this because transmitter power should be
so dispersed that no intelligible signal could ever be retrieved.
The experiment having been tried across short distances actually
works. The most amazing rediscovery concerns the
signal-regenerative ability of seawater. Seawater requires only
an infinitesimal transmitter current in order to achieve strong
signal exchanges.
The submerged plates themselves generate
sufficient current to operate the teletrofonic system without
batteries. Electrical signals do not diminish in seawater as
theoretically expected. When Meucci spoke of transoceanic
communications he was not exaggerating. Seawater seems to be a
self-regenerative amplifier of sorts. The addition of a carrier
frequency (an electrical buzzer) would pitch the signals toward a
higher range, granting more signal focus.
Sir William Preece duplicated these experiments
for telegraphy across the English Channel in the early
1900s. Their developing success was eclipsed by the
appearance of aerial wireless. Some researchers have interpreted
the work of G. Marconi to be a blend of Meucci conduction
telegraphy and aerial wireless. While purists protest, it is
intriguing that Marconi would later actually resort to mile-long
submerged copper screens for transoceanic communications. The
submerged copper screens acted as a "capacitative
counterpoise", following his equally long aerials...out to
sea.
Several segments of these Marconi aerial-screen
systems have been located by investigators, both in New Brunswick
(N. Jersey) and in Bolinas (California). The Marconi
"bent-L" aerial system differs from Meuccis
design only in that it utilized several hundred thousand watts of
VLF currents. In effect, Marconi employed Meucci conduction
wireless in his early transoceanic systems.
Meucci became prolific when designing these
maritime inventions. It was told him that a certain deep-sea
diver, having once distinctly heard a steamship engine while
performing a salvage operation, was told (on resurfacing) that
the ship was fully forty miles away! This phenomenon so impressed
Meucci that his mind turned toward the use of his teletrofono in
deep-sea communications and offshore ranging.
His notion was truly original, involving this
submerged plate system for wireless vocal communication. The use
of short aerial rods projecting from the divers helmet
formed the very first "aerials". Divers could maintain
communications with their surface companions without interruption
if such teletrofonic aerials and internally housed responders
were installed in their helmets. Sealed aerial rods (one foot or
less in length) would protrude out from the helmet, forming the
wireless link; an invention truly worthy of Jules Verne!
Transmissions and receptions would occur through the remarkable
conductive-regenerative ability of seawater to conduct
electro-vocal signals.
Of chief concern in Meuccis mind was the
establishment of solid maritime wireless communications systems.
He designed several systems intended to aid harbor approach and
navigation during times of limited visibility. Clusters of
tone-transmitters (positioned as fixed stations or anchored as
buoys) could wirelessly communicate danger or safety to sea
captains equipped with onboard listening devices. Both landmark
stations and onboard responders would communicate through
seawater with submerged metal plates. These plates would be fixed
in position at some depth; much below each landmark and right
under the ship hull.
Navigators would be guided into safe harbor by
following a specific tonal signal, and avoiding the selected
danger tones. These tones would be subaqueous
transmissions...true tonal beacons. Navigators were to carefully
listen for guide-tones while entering a harbor. Pilots could
locate their offshore position with precision by simply listening
for the designated subaqueous tonal beacons.
Position could be triangulated by comparing
tones and their relative volumes. Tones could be determined by
comparison with a small on-board receiver containing tuning
forks. Maps could mark these tonal-stations and pilots could rely
on their presence. Meucci wished to eradicate the blinding
dangers of fog and storm for sailors. Meucci accurately foresaw
that an entire corps of maintenance operators would find
continual employment in such worthy service.
In all of this, Meucci actually anticipated the
LORAN system by a full seventy-five years! In the years before
radio pierced the night isolation of shipping, ships maintained
tight commonly used sea-lanes when far from coastlands.
Mid-oceanic collisions were not uncommon. Meucci conceived of
systems by which ships could transmit warning beacons toward one
another while out at sea. Helping to avoid such mid-ocean
disasters, sensitive compass needles would detect passing ships.
Plate-pairs would be poised beneath the ships hull in the
four cardinal directions. Relays could detect ships, responding
with loud alarms.
In addition, ships could launch teletrofonic
currents in the direction of specific approaching or passing
ships, establish continual vocal contact. Meucci accurately
foresaw the development of new maritime communications
corps, anticipating those wireless operators who would later be
called "sparks" by their crew mates.
EXPLOSIONS
Lack of funding alone prevented Meucci from
making large scale demonstrations of his revolutionary systems.
In addition, prejudices associated with his nationality prevented
New York financiers from even knowing of his activities. Meucci
turned to his own patriots for help.
Confident in the both the originality and
diversity of his teletrofonic inventions, Meucci was now sure
that he could convince Italian financiers to help commercialize
the Teletrofonic System; not in America, but in Italy. Meucci
(now fifty-two years old) set up a long distance demonstration of
his system in 1860 in which a famous Italian operatic singer was
featured. His songs being transmitted across several miles of
line, Meucci attracted considerable attention. Featured in the
Italian newspapers around New York City, he indeed attracted the
attentions of financiers.
Sr. Bendelari, one such impresario, suggested
that full scale production of the teletrofonic system begin in
Italy. He travelled to Italy with drawings and explanations of
what he had seen and heard. Contrary to the hopes of all, Sr.
Bendelari found it impossible to interest financiers in the
teletrofonic system. Civil wars distracted the ordinarily
aggressive Italian development of all such new technology.
Italian production of the teletrofono having
never begun, Meucci became extremely embittered over both the
incident and his own circumstance in America. American financiers
were no better. Most contemporary Americans who had any
"practical financial sense" at all could not believe
that any mechanical device could actually transmit the human
voice. They were far less interested in investing their fortunes
toward developing systems which they considered fraudulent.
On sound advice from sympathetic compatriots,
Meucci was warned never to bring anything to the American
industrial concerns without first protecting himself by legal
means. Before Meucci could dare bring his models the short ferry
trip to Lower Manhattan to the developers, he needed a patent.
Patents have never been cheap to obtain, this the
regulators tool. Even in those days, a patent cost a full
two-hundred and fifty dollars.
Exorbitant costs being established for the
financiers benefit, no independent inventor-novice could
ever become an independently successful competitor without
"financial assistance".
Meucci settled the matter by obtaining a
caveat, a legal document which was considerably cheaper than the
patent. Antonio could now only afford a caveat, a legal
declaration of a successfully developed invention.
The caveat describes an invention and shows the
time-fixed priority of an inventors work. Meucci had models
as well as the legal caveat. His caveat would stand in court,
bearing the official seal, a registry number, and the signatures
of witnesses. The Meucci caveat was taken in 1871, when he was 63
years old.
While travelling from Manhattan to Staten
Island, Meucci was nearly killed when the steam engine of the
ferry exploded. He survived this explosion in some inexplicable
miracle, severely burned and crippled. While he languished in a
hospital bed, his wife sold his original teletrofono models for
the small sum of six dollars in order to pay for his expenses.
These models were sold to one John Fleming of
Clifton, a secondhand dealer. Attempting to repurchase these
models, he was informed that a "young man" had secured
the models. Unable to locate the purchaser, Meucci was
devastated. He suddenly felt that his own creation was already
taking on a life of its own...fleeing away from him, out of
control.
Growing desperate with thoughts of his own
growing age and poor condition, Meucci now pursued the issue of
commercializing his invention without restraint. In 1874 Meucci
met with a vice-president of the Western Union District Telegraph
Company, a certain W.B. Grant. Meucci described his "talking
telegraph" and the complete system which was now
operational. Meucci requested a test of his teletrofoni on one of
the Telegraph Lines and was promised assistance and cooperation.
Mr. Grant appeared in earnest, engaged Meucci
for a long while, and requested Meucci to leave his models.
Meucci did so, being encouraged that he would be contacted very
shortly for the test run. Hours of waiting became days. At this
point, Meucci attempted to contact Grant again. The vice
president could "never be found". Meucci continued
visiting Western Union in hopes of reaching Grant and performing
the required long-distance tests as promised him originally.
Meucci became bitterly angry over this betrayal
of trust. The duplicity involved in the act of such
unprofessional denial so exposed the fundamental methodology of
American business that he wondered why he had ever left Cuba. So
infuriated was he that he maintained a vigil at the Union Office,
becoming an annoying eyesore. White haired, bearded, and bowed
over with age, Meucci was viewed as a harmless old fool by
younger, more aggressive office workers.
Adamant to the last, Meucci finally and loudly
demanded the return of his every model. He was then very curtly
informed that they "had been lost". Grant had passed
these devices onto Henry W. Pope for his professional opinion on
the exact working of the devices, forgetting the issue completely
in the course of a business day. The monopoly had beaten another
victim. He stormed out.
The path which the Meucci models took inside
Western Union has been traced. The models periodically kept
appearing and disappearing in the electrical research labs of
Western Union, revealed through the written studies of several
curious individuals. The models were transferred among several
engineers as successive new electrical directors were installed.
Each examined the models in complete ignorance. Lacking
introductory explanations, no one comprehended what the weighty
wooden cups could do when electrified.
Franklin L. Pope, friend and partner with young
Thomas Edison at the time, was given the models by his brother.
Together Pope and George Prescott could not understand the nature
of the devices, putting them into a storage area in Western
Union. This seems to be the last mysterious repository of Meucci
models. Given in trust years before, the models sat in the
dustbins of Western Union. Lost science.
The true history of telephonics begins with
Meucci. Others, far younger, were raised in an atmosphere which
was enriched by Meuccis developments. Phillip Reis noted
the telephonic abilities of loosely positioned carbon rods
through which flowed electrical currents. His primitive carbon
microphone was later stolen by a vengeful Edison, who was in
search of some means for both "breaking" the Bell
Companys hold on telephonics, and saving his own financial
record with Western Union Telegraph.
Meucci led the way long before others. It must
be mentioned that both Gray and Reis were independent and equally
great discoverers who each, though antedating Meucci by some 20
years, actually predated Bell by at least 10 years. Some have
suggested that, as Bell was encountering great difficulty in
developing his own telephonic apparatus, these same models were
given to him for the expressed purpose of speeding the race
along.
Western Union would engage Edison to
"bust" the Bell patent in later years. Edisons
invention of the carbon button telephonic transmitter was an
inadvertent infringement of Meuccis earliest responder
designs. The industrialization of the telephone revealed the
repetitious and convoluted infringement of Meuccis every
system-related invention. Bells own frantic rush to develop
telephony had more to do with his need to "live up to"
sizable investment monies given him for this research, and less
with any true inventive abilities. The truth of this is borne out
in considering Bells later work, involved in his frivolous
failed "kite developments". Indeed, without the
fortunate "assistance" by friends at the Patent Office,
Bell would have succeeded in neither defeating Meuccis
caveat nor Grays electro-harmonic patent.
TELEPHONE SYSTEMS
Those who wished the implementation of
telephony for financial gain, chose more controllable and less
passionate individuals. Neither Meucci, Gray, nor Reis fit this
category of choice. The Bell designs are obvious and direct
copies of those long previously made by Meucci. The dubious
manner in which the Bell patents were "handled and
secured" speak more of "financial sleight of hand"
than true inventive genius. The all too obvious manipulations
behind the patent office desk are revealed in the historically
pale claim that Bell secured his patent "15 minutes"
before Gray applied for his caveat. Today it is not doubted
whether perpetrators of such an arrogance would not go as far as
to claim "15 years priority".
Lastly, this fraudulent action denied the
years-previous Caveat of Meucci, which "could never be found
at all in the patent records" during later trial
proceedings. No mind. Meucci is a legend. A name suffused by
mysteries. The Meucci caveat remains to this day on public
record. All subsequent telephone patents are invalid. Meucci
bears legal first-right. No lawyer today will decline this
recorded truth.
All other court actions taken against Meucci
toward the end of his life was staged by both the corporate
Telephone Companies and the Court itself for the expressed
purpose of securing the communications monopoly. The complete and
operational Meucci Telephonic System, witnessed and used by
countless visitors and neighbors for equally numerous years
before Bell, was well documented in both Italian and local papers
of the day.
To read the transcript of the Meucci court
battle waged around the now aged and infirm Meucci is to witness
the fear which large megaliths sustain. Though Meucci was not
able to afford the yearly renewal price of his caveat, his
priority was damaging, otherwise they would not have taken such
measures to examine him publicly. The Bell Company sought to
minimize Meuccis system by calling it nothing more than an
elaborate "string telephone" in court proceedings,
exposing themselves on several counts of fraud. Scientifically,
this line of defense was unfounded. The obviously slack lines
made the Meucci System incapable of conducting merely elastic
vibrations with such clarity and amplitude. Moreover, the velvety
rich tones received through these devices were far too modified,
clarified, and loud to be "mere mechanical
transmissions".
It was then hoped that the elderly gentleman
would desist the entire crude process and give up. Meucci was
publicly and ethnically labelled by leading journalists as
"that old Italian, that old...candlemaker". Meucci
maintained his ground to the consternation of the prosecuting
attorney. Priority of diagrams, witnesses, working
models...nothing could satisfy the predetermined judgement of the
court.
To add insult to injury, Meuccis
character was vilified in the press. In numerous pro-corporate
newspaper articles Meucci is referred to as "a villain...a
liar...an old fool". Predetermined to satisfy the corporate
megalith, a deliberate and shameful court examination had as its
aim the eradication of Meucci and his claim of priority. This
process would later become the normal mode of business operation
when destroying competitive technologies. With no hope of
financial reprise in sight, Meucci ceased the excessive court
fees. This was precisely what the monopoly wished. The fact yet
remains that Meucci was first to invent the system.
Throughout the years, Meuccis name was
not even mentioned in the history of telephonics. Closer
evaluation of this true social phenomenon in "information
control" reveals that communications history sources were
controlled and principally provided in later years by Bell Labs
to school text companies. They would ensure that the otherwise
complex story was "straightened out".
It is also obvious that Meucci and his
countrymen were never truly "embraced" by the American
establishment until they took deliberate action. To the very end
of his life, Meucci simply and elegantly maintained his serene
statements in absolute confidence of the truth which was his own.
"The telephone, which I invented and which I first made
known...was stolen from me".
The more important fact in these matters of
intrigue is recognizing that discovery itself is no respecter of
persons or indeed of nations. Discovery touches those who honor
its revelations. Discovery is an inspiring ray whose tracings are
never limited by laws, prejudices, unbelief, nation, ethnic
group, or economic bracket.
LEGEND
Eager to maintain their ascendancy in the
annals of corporate America, incredible odds were marshalled
against the aged Meucci by The Bell Company. In this determined
counsel, we see the singular insecurity which frightens all
secure investments. In truth, no investment is ever secure, when
once discovery is loosed on the earth. What corporations have
always feared is discovery itself. It is an unknown. In attempts
to capture discoveries before they have time to take root and
grow, every corporate megalith employs patent researchers. Their
job is to waylay new company-threatening inventions.
Inventors represent the true unknown. They are
uncontrolled forces who truly hold the power of the economic
system in their grasp. Were it not so, then corporate predators
would not pursue them with such deliberate vehemence. No one can
destroy an idea once it has made its appearance on earth.
Discovery is neither controlled or eradicated by the powerful.
Attempts at wiping out new technology mysteriously result in a
thousand diversified echoes, moving in a thousand places
simultaneously.
The biography of Antonio Meucci is suffused
with the deepest of emotions. I have read the biographies of many
great and forgotten science legends, yet have not found one whose
pathos completely equals that of Meucci. Despite the manner in
which the new world treated him, the dignity of this great
inventor is silently mirrored in his every portrait. The face of
Antonio Meucci is serene...the face of a saint.
Copyright © 1997-2008 Borderland Sciences
Research Foundation, Inc. All Rights Reserved.