Master of Modern Communications: Alexander Graham Bell

È stato un inventore del XIX secolo che con il suo “telegrafo parlante” ha gettato le basi delle moderne telecomunicazioni. Sebbene la sua autorialità sia stata discussa, le sue iniziative si estesero a settori quali l’aviazione e l’educazione dei sordi.

Bandera UK
Sarah Davison

Speaker (UK accent)

Aggiornato il giorno

464 GRAHAM BELL POL SERRA

Ascolta questo articolo

Stampare

The American inventor Alexander Graham Bell, famous for his pioneering work on the development of the telephone, was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1847. Inventing was in Bell’s blood: as a child, he invented a machine to clean wheat and a type of speaking robot.

Life-Saving Move

In 1870, Bell’s family emigrated to Canada after the deaths of his two brothers from tuberculosis. His parents hoped the move would save their last child. A year later, Bell moved to Boston, US, to work as a teacher of the deaf. On a visit to see his mother, herself almost deaf, he conceived of the idea of electronic speech4 and started working on the development of an “electrical speech machine”, as he called the first telephone.

Transmitting Speech

Bell was fascinated with the idea of transmitting speech. By 1875 he had come up with a simple receiver that could turn electricity into sound. Others were working along the same lines, including the Italian engineer Antonio Meucci. However it was Bell who in 1876 was granted a patent for an apparatus designed for “transmitting vocal or other sounds telegraphically… causing electrical undulations”: the telephone.

Controversial Patent

Controversy surrounded Bell’s patent. He had filed for it describing his method on 14 February 1876, just hours before a fellow inventor, Elisha Gray, filed a caveat (notice of an impending patent) on a similar method. Some people suggest that Bell paid a Patent Office staff member to give him information on Gray’s device. It seems that Bell later felt “deeply ashamed”, but he never admitted to the act.

Valuable Patent

History credits Bell with being the inventor of the telephone and the father of modern communications, and Bell’s patent is considered one of the most valuable in history. It would be one month, however, before his phone actually produced intelligible speech. On 10 March 1876, Bell summoned his assistant with the words, “Mr. Watson, come here. I need you.” Watson duly came. The Bell Telephone Company was created in 1877, with Bell owning 30 per cent of the shares, making him a rich man. Five years later, he became a naturalised American.

A Lifetime Inventing

Bell carried on inventing until his death in 1922. Among his inventions were an early version of air conditioning, an iron lung, and a portable device for distilling sea water. During his lifetime he was considered one of the greatest scientific minds of all time. He even tried to improve on Thomas Edison’s phonograph, an early form of gramophone. He designed a removable cardboard cylinder, coated with mineral wax, and then recorded himself. However, for technical reasons, it was only possible to recover his recording a few years ago. If you want to hear his voice, coming to us down the years, just google his name and the phrase “Hear my voice”.   

464 Cover

Questo articolo appartiene al numero November 2023 della rivista Speak Up.

Business Buzzwords: 10 Key Soft Skills
iStock

Language

Business Buzzwords: 10 Key Soft Skills

Il successo professionale dipende in gran parte da una serie di capacità difficili da definire, che per molto tempo sono state sottovalutate: le "soft skills" (competenze trasversali).

Natalie Gommon

"Alice in Wonderland" by Lewis Carroll

Classic Books

"Alice in Wonderland" by Lewis Carroll

È molto più di un semplice romanzo per ragazzi. Attraverso le mirabolanti avventure di Alice, Carroll costruisce un sovversivo mondo immaginario in cui abbondano personaggi stravaganti, ragionamenti illogici e creazioni linguistiche ardite.

More in Explore

Yuval Noah Harari: 10 Warnings on Artificial Intelligence
AdobeStock

World

Yuval Noah Harari: 10 Warnings on Artificial Intelligence

Lo storico e divulgatore bestseller torna con un ampio saggio sull'evoluzione e l'influenza dell'informazione nella struttura delle società fin dall'età della pietra. Critico nei confronti degli effetti tossici dei social, l'autore israeliano sviluppa interessanti riflessioni sulle potenzialità e i pericoli dell'intelligenza artificiale.

Ruben Pujol

TODAY’S TOP STORIES

Sweet and Healthy Dreams: the Science of Sleep
iStock

Current Affairs

Sweet and Healthy Dreams: the Science of Sleep

Il sonno, secondo la saggezza popolare, è riparatore. Tuttavia, nonostante la sua importanza per il nostro benessere, ancora ignoriamo molte cose su disturbi come l’insonnia o la narcolessia. Un paio di libri fanno luce sulla scienza del sonno.

Alex Phillips