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"Speak out" N.Y. Herald - Public domain dedication image

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"Speak out" N.Y. Herald - Public domain dedication image

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Summary

President-elect Grover Cleveland holds a telephone receiver to his ear. Behind him on the wall is a portrait of President Chester A. Arthur captioned, "Pres. of U.S. till March 4, 1885."
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Signed, lower right: Th: Nast.
Title inscribed within image.
Bequest and gift; Caroline and Erwin Swann; 1974; (DLC/PP-1974:232.475)
Nast's cartoon refers to the New York Herald's request that Cleveland reveal his cabinet choices or some of the policies of his upcoming administration, since it was only a month before his inauguration. In a February 3, 1885 story, The Herald stated that there is "confusion and demoralization in Congress" because the President-elect was not acting as a leader to his party. The paper insisted that Democratic senators and congressmen were afraid to discuss or vote on anything because they did not want to offend or alienate any potential cabinet members.
Published in: Harper's Weekly, February 14, 1885.

The invention of the telephone still remains a confusing morass of claims and counterclaims, which were not clarified by the huge mass of lawsuits to resolve the patent claims of commercial competitors. The Bell and Edison patents, however, dominated telephone technology and were upheld by court decisions in the United States. Bell has most often been credited as the inventor of the first practical telephone. Alexander Graham Bell was the first to patent the telephone as an "apparatus for transmitting vocal or other sounds telegraphically". The telephone exchange was an idea of the Hungarian engineer Tivadar Puskás (1844 - 1893) in 1876, while he was working for Thomas Edison on a telegraph exchange. Before the invention of the telephone switchboard, pairs of telephones were connected directly with each other, practically functioned as an intercom. Although telephones devices were in use before the invention of the telephone exchange, their success and economical operation would have been impossible with the schema and structure of the contemporary telegraph systems. A telephone exchange was operated manually by operators, or automatically by machine switching. It interconnects individual phone lines to make calls between them. The first commercial telephone exchange was opened at New Haven, Connecticut, with 21 subscribers on 28 January 1878, in a storefront of the Boardman Building in New Haven, Connecticut. George W. Coy designed and built the world's first switchboard for commercial use. The District Telephone Company of New Haven went into operation with only twenty-one subscribers, who paid $1.50 per month, a one-night price for a room in a city-center hotel. Coy was inspired by Alexander Graham Bell's lecture at the Skiff Opera House in New Haven on 27 April 1877. In Bell's lecture, during which a three-way telephone connection with Hartford and Middletown, Connecticut, was demonstrated, he first discussed the idea of a telephone exchange for the conduct of business and trade.

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Date

01/01/1885
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Contributors

Nast, Thomas, 1840-1902, artist
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Source

Library of Congress
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