Antonio Meucci: The Story of the true inventor of telephone.

Inter4

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An invention none of us could live without, a tool of modern communications so basic that many of today's business and social activities would be inconceivable in its absence, the telephone, is at the center of a series of events so strange as to amount to a "whodunit."

Most of us were brought up on the story of Alexander Graham Bell, the romantic figure of an inventor with dash and charm. Some of these favorable impressions must have come from the famous, if apocryphal, "Come here Watson, I want you" legend of the invention of the device, a tradition augmented by the movie version of the tale, in which actor Don Amiche became more or less permanently attached to the persona of Bell.

But it seems that history must be rewritten if justice is to be done to an immigrant from Florence, Italy: Antonio Meucci, who invented the telephone in 1849 and filed his first patent caveat (notice of intention to take out a patent) in 1871, setting into motion a series of mysterious events and injustices which would be incredible were they not so well documented.

Meucci was an enigmatic character, a man unable to overcome his own lack of managerial and entrepreneurial talent, a man tormented by his inability to communicate in any language other than Italian. The tragic events of his personal and professional life, his accomplishments and his association with the great Italian patriot, Garibaldi, should be legendary in themselves but, curiously, the man and his story are practically unknown today.

Antonio Meucci was born in San Frediano, near Florence, in April 1808. He studied design and mechanical engineering at Florence's Academy of Fine Arts and then worked in the Teatro della Pergola and various other theaters as a stage technician until 1835, when he accepted a job as scenic designer and stage technician at the Teatro Tacon in Havana, Cuba.

Absolutely fascinated by scientific research of any kind, Meucci read every scientific tract he could get his hands on, and spent all his spare time in Havana on research, inventing a new method of galvanizing metals which he applied to military equipment for the Cuban government; at the same time, he continued his work in the theater and pursued his endless experiments.

One these touched off a series of fateful events. Meucci had developed a method of using electric shocks to treat illness which had become quite popular in Havana. One day, while preparing to administer a treatment to a friend, Meucci heard an exclamation of the friend, who was in the next room, over the piece of copper wire running between them. The inventor realized immediately that he held in his hand something much more important than any other discovery he had ever made, and he spent the next ten years bringing the principle to a practical stage. The following ten years were to be spent perfecting the original device and trying to promote its commercialization.

With this goal, he left Cuba for New York in 1850, settling in the Clifton section of Staten Island, a few miles from New York City. Here, in addition to his problems of a strictly financial nature, Meucci realized that he could not communicate adequately in English, having relied on the similarities of Italian and Spanish during his Cuban residence. Furthermore, in Staten Island, he found himself surrounded by Italian political refugees; Giuseppe Garibaldi, when exiled from Italy, spent his period of United States residency in Meucci's house. The scientist tried to help his Italian friends by devising any number of industrial projects using new or improved manufacturing methods for such diverse products as beer, candles, pianos and paper. But he knew nothing of management, and even those initiatives which succeeded were to have their profits eaten up by unscrupulous or inept managers or by the refugees themselves, who spent more time in political discussion than they did in active work.

Meanwhile, Meucci continued to dedicate his time to perfecting the telephone. In 1855, when his wife became partially paralyzed, Meucci set up a telephone system which joined several rooms of his house with his workshop in another building nearby, the first such installation anywhere. In 1860, when the instrument had become practical, Meucci organized a demonstration to attract financial backing in which a singer's voice was clearly heard by spectators a considerable distance away. A description of the apparatus was soon published in one of New York's Italian newspapers and the report together with a model of the invention were taken to Italy by a certain Signor Bendelari with the goal of arranging production there; nothing came of this trip, nor of the many promises of financial support which had been forthcoming after the demonstration.

The years which followed brought increasing poverty to an embittered and discouraged Meucci, who nonetheless continued to produce a series of new inventions. His precarious financial situation, however, often constrained him to sell the rights to his inventions, and still left him without the wherewithal to take out final patents on the telephone.

A dramatic event, in which Meucci was severely burned in the explosion of the steamship Westfield returning from New York, brought things to an even more tragic state. While Meucci lay in hospital, miraculously alive after the disaster, his wife sold many of his working models (including the telephone prototype) and other materials to a secondhand dealer for six dollars. When Meucci sought to buy these precious objects back, he was told that they had been resold to an "unknown young man" whose identity remains a mystery to this day.

Crushed, but not beaten, Meucci worked night and day to reconstruct his invention and to produce new designs and specifications, clearly apprehensive that someone could steal the device before he could have it patented. Unable to raise the sum for a definitive patent ($250, considerable in those days), he took recourse in the caveat or notice of intent, which was registered on December 28, 1871 and renewed in 1872 and 1873 but, fatefully, not thereafter.

Immediately after he received certification of the caveat, Meucci tried again to demonstrate the enormous potential of the device, delivering a model and technical details to the vice president of one of the affiliates of the newly established Western Union Telegraph Company, asking permission to demonstrate his "Talking Telegraph" on the wires of the Western Union system. However, each time that Meucci contacted this vice president, a certain Edward B. Grant, he was told that there had been no time to arrange the test. Two years passed, after which Meucci demanded the return of his materials, only to be told that they had been "lost." It was then 1874.

In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell filed a patent which does not really describe the telephone but refers to it as such. When Meucci learned of this, he instructed his lawyer to protest to the U.S. Patent Office in Washington, something that was never done. However, a friend did contact Washington, only to learn that all the documents relevant to the "Talking Telegraph" filed in Meucci's caveat had been "lost." Later investigation produced evidence of illegal relationships linking certain employees of the Patent Office and officials of Bell's company. And later, in the course of litigation between Bell and Western Union, it was revealed that Bell had agreed to pay Western Union 20 percent of profits from commercialization of his "invention" for a period of 17 years. Millions of dollars were involved, but the price may been cheaper than revealing facts better left hidden, from Bell's point of view.

In the court case of 1886, although Bell's lawyers tried to turn aside Meucci's suit against their client, he was able to explain every detail of his invention so clearly as to leave little doubt of his veracity, although he did not win the case against the superior - and vastly richer - forces fielded by Bell. Despite a public statement by the then Secretary of State that "there exists sufficient proof to give priority to Meucci in the invention of the telephone," and despite the fact that the United States initiated prosecution for fraud against Bell's patent, the trial was postponed from year to year until, at the death of Meucci in 1896, the case was dropped.

The story of Antonio Meucci is still little known, yet it is one of the most extraordinary episodes in American history, albeit an episode in which justice was perverted. Still, the genius and perseverance of an Italian immigrant - genius, poor businessman, tenacious defender of his rights against incredible odds and grinding poverty - is a story which must be told. Antonio Meucci is waiting to be recognized as the inventor of a key element in our modern culture.

Source

Comments? Remarks?
 
Because all these years Bell has been credited with the invention of telephone..
 
Unless some of his documentation magically shows up, I don't see any way to prove it. So it'll end up like the argument about the Wright brothers being first to fly... just an argument.
 
Originally posted by Speedo
Unless some of his documentation magically shows up, I don't see any way to prove it. So it'll end up like the argument about the Wright brothers being first to fly... just an argument.

Just to ask, do you credit the Wright brother or Santos Dummond as the first to fly?
 
He has been recognized as the inventor of the telephone by the US congress, 2001 I think. I tried to point out that this was the real inventor of the telephone in the 'Your country's inventions'-thread and that it was likely that Bell stole his invention, since they shared a lab in NY, but got ignored by all canadians and scots fighting over Bell.:(
 
The whole idea of an inventor is really stupid. Nobody (with a few unique exceptions) work in a vacuum. Instead, the inventor works on others' ideas and products, makes a little refinement to them. Then somebody else again makes the invention a little better. I guess the reason Meucci didn't get the title was just bad luck.
 
According to the article, at the time that Meuicci supposedly invented the telephone he was living in America (having immigrated there), which would make him an American, and thereby make this whole thread a moot point (since it seems to be an objection to the idea tha an American invented the telephone). If Meucci did invent the phone, and he was a citizen of the US (or even just living here when he allegedly did so) then it was still an American invention; and thus your rejection of the claim that a US inventor did so (and subsequent pursuit of this laurel for yet another American) is frankly puzzling at best.

So I guess my question is: what is your basic problem with any country claiming credit for what the people in that country do?
 
Just to ask, do you credit the Wright brother or Santos Dummond as the first to fly?

To my knowlege the Wrights made the first powered flight. I am not familiar with Santos Dummond, and google give me nothing but an airport named after him.
 
Wasn't Graham Bell a Scot? And haven't Scots invented practically everything? Using that logic, I do not see his claim as being successfully refuted. ;)
 
Originally posted by Speedo


To my knowlege the Wrights made the first powered flight. I am not familiar with Santos Dummond, and google give me nothing but an airport named after him.

There is an ideological dispute here.

See, when airplane was invented, there were several people trying to come up with a solution.

Turn out that the Wright brothers have created the first machine heavier than air to fly, but Santos Dummond - a Brazilian living in Paris - created the first machine that was able to fly with autonomy, there is, taking off without external support.

Hence, Brazil dispute the claim that the Wright brothers prototype was an airplane, and claims that it was really Santos Dummond that created this invention (hence the airport named after him).

A few months ago I saw some reports about that time in the Veja magazine - largest news week publication here in Brazil - and according to them, the flight from Santos Dummond was actually previous even than the first documented Wright Brother flight, as the date of their first take-off is claimed, but no evidence of it was ever given - unlike Dummond, who traveled over Paris, next to the Eiffel tower, for everyone to see his "14-bis" plane.

Dummond, however, is not widely known outside of Brazil (AFAIK), and I always credited it to the fact that USA version of airplane invention is supported by USA large credibility in the international community. Nonetheless, a friend of mine once went to a museum in USA that if I'm not mistaken, was dedicated to the Wright brothers, and there they had a timeline that placed him right after them (his father was expelled from the museum for changing the pictures and placing Dummond first :rolleyes: ).

Granted, while Dummond was inventing just for the fun of it (he was a rich man) and the Wright brothers were thinking of how to profit with their ideas (what would make secret tests very understandable), if it's indeed true that the first Documented flight belonged to Dummond, I think it's him that deserve the credit.

One thing is to be recognized, though; The Wright kept creating with far greater efficiency than Dummond in the following years, and their contribution to the modern science of flight is much more meaningful than that of the Brazilian...

... What does not make Brazil's dispute any less legitimate.

Regards :).
 
Turn out that the Wright brothers have created the first machine heavier than air to fly, but Santos Dummond - a Brazilian living in Paris - created the first machine that was able to fly with autonomy, there is, taking off without external support.

In that case then it is the Wrights. "Flight" in this case is a powered, heavier than air machine which can be controlled. People had been flying in unpowered/uncontrolled ballons and gliders for many years already.
 
As I said, it's a political dispute. Each side will define airplane as it fit'stheir interest. As for me, it's meaningless who invented it, as long as they work.

Regards :).
 
Its a shame what happened to Tony and his phone. Oh man, imagine the knock down drag 'em out fight he had with his wife when he got out of the hospital and he found out she sold his invention? Sounds like a lost episode of The Honeymooners:lol:
 
After checking out the Meucci story at the top from Inter4 I Googled Meucci Telephone Invention. Lots of stuff pro and con. The one that was detailed was against Meucci saying all the stuff he did before Bell didn't work and was never accepted by the court.

This article described it this way in detail:


The Canadian Parliamentary Motion on Alexander Graham Bell, in the first session of Canada's 37th Parliament was unanimously passed by all four parties of its federal government on June 21, 2002, to affirm that Alexander Graham Bell, who had lived in both Brantford, Ontario and Baddeck, Nova Scotia for extended periods of time, was the inventor of the telephone.[1][2][3]

The symbolic motion was a response to the United States' 107th Congress' earlier resolution (HRes 269) of June 11, 2002, which recognized the contributions of Antonio Meucci and has been interpreted by some as establishing priority for the invention of the telephone to Meucci, who would later be associated with the Globe Telephone Company.[4][5][2][6] The House of Representatives' resolution did not annul or modify any of Bell's patents for the telephone.

During the 108th Congress another resolution, SRes 223 which was identical to HRes 269, was introduced in the United States Senate. On September 10, 2003 the resolution was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary where it remained and died, unenacted.[7][8][9]

The Canadian parliamentary motion and the HRes 269 resolution were both widely reported by various news media at the time of their proclamations. The HRes 269 resolution is still cited by Meucci advocates as proof that he has been acknowledged as the first inventor of the telephone.[10] The resolution has equally been criticized for its factual errors, inaccuracies, biases and distortions.[6][5][11]


Full text of the Parliament of Canada motion on Bell:

As directly quoted in Hansard, the official Canadian parliamentary record:[1]

Hon. Sheila Copps (Minister of Canadian Heritage, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I would like to ask the House for unanimous consent on the following motion, which has been discussed with all parties, regarding Alexander Graham Bell. I move [that]:

This House affirms that Alexander Graham Bell of Brantford, Ontario and Baddeck, Nova Scotia is the inventor of the telephone.

The Speaker: Does the hon. Minister of Canadian Heritage have the unanimous consent of the House to propose this motion?

Some hon. members: Agreed.

The Speaker: Is it the pleasure of the House to adopt the motion?

Some hon. members: Agreed.

(Motion agreed to)

[continuing....]

Hon. Sheila Copps: Mr. Speaker, might I suggest that we forward a copy of this to the congress in the United States so they get their facts straight?


Full text of the U.S. House of Representatives Resolution 269:

As directly quoted in HRes 269 (Ver. EH), and recorded by the US GPO (table and paragraph numbering added for referencing purposes): [12]

H. Res. 269 In the House of Representatives, U.S., June 11, 2002.

¶ 1 Whereas Antonio Meucci, the great Italian inventor, had a career that was both extraordinary and tragic;
¶ 2 Whereas, upon immigrating to New York, Meucci continued to work with ceaseless vigor on a project he had begun in Havana, Cuba, an invention he later called the ‘‘teletrofono’’, involving electronic communications;
¶ 3 Whereas Meucci set up a rudimentary communications link in his Staten Island home that connected the basement with the first floor, and later, when his wife began to suffer from crippling arthritis, he created a permanent link between his lab and his wife’s second floor bedroom;
¶ 4 Whereas, having exhausted most of his life’s savings in pursuing his work, Meucci was unable to commercialize his invention, though he demonstrated his invention in 1860 and had a description of it published in New York’s Italian language newspaper;
¶ 5 Whereas Meucci never learned English well enough to navigate the complex American business community;
¶ 6 Whereas Meucci was unable to raise sufficient funds to pay his way through the patent application process, and thus had to settle for a caveat, a one year renewable notice of an impending patent, which was first filed on December 28, 1871;
¶ 7 Whereas Meucci later learned that the Western Union affiliate laboratory reportedly lost his working models, and Meucci, who at this point was living on public assistance, was unable to renew the caveat after 1874;
¶ 8 Whereas in March 1876, Alexander Graham Bell, who conducted experiments in the same laboratory where Meucci’s materials had been stored, was granted a patent and was thereafter credited with inventing the telephone;
¶ 9 Whereas on January 13, 1887, the Government of the United States moved to annul the patent issued to Bell on the grounds of fraud and misrepresentation, a case that the Supreme Court found viable and remanded for trial;
¶ 10 Whereas Meucci died in October 1889, the Bell patent expired in January 1893, and the case was discontinued as moot without ever reaching the underlying issue of the true inventor of the telephone entitled to the patent; and
¶ 11 Whereas if Meucci had been able to pay the $10 fee to maintain the caveat after 1874, no patent could have been issued to Bell: Now, therefore, be it
¶ 12 Resolved, That it is the sense of the House of Representatives that the life and achievements of Antonio Meucci should be recognized, and his work in the invention of the telephone should be acknowledged.
Attest.

Attest: Clerk


Critical views of both the Resolution HRes 269 and Meucci's Patent Caveat:

In 2003, the distinguished Italian telecommunications inventor and Meucci book author Professor Basilio Catania, interviewed on the parliamentary Bell motion and the congressional Meucci resolution, first commented on Bell's record as an inventor and scientist:

"I am not the kind of man who can make statements without proofs. I did not do it with Meucci and I do not see why I should do it with Bell... ...I can, however, state that the theoretical description of the electrical transmission of speech in Bell's first patent is nearly perfect and appears to me as the first clear treatise ever written."[13]

Professor Catania later went on to note the straightforwardness of the follow-up parliamentary motion compared to the seaminess of the initial congressional resolution:

"The Canadian reaction to an unfortunate passage in Resolution No. 269 of the US House of Representatives is quite understandable. In my opinion the insinuation against the morality and scientific stature of Alexander Graham Bell, in the above resolution, was both unnecessary and unproven, though there had been suspicions that Bell might have fished something from Meucci's ideas. Personally, I would have refrained from stating anything that is not fully proven. I do, however, appreciate that, in the Canadian motion pro Bell, nothing [derogatory] is said against Antonio Meucci... "[13]

However, intellectual property law author R.B. Rockman was more critical in his view of HRes 269.[6] After first reviewing the essential details of American Bell Telephone Company v. Globe Telephone Company, Antonio Meucci, et al. (31 Fed 728 (SDNY, 1887)), where he noted major inconsistencies in Meucci's various testimonies, the paucity of direct evidence that both the Globe and Meucci brought forward in support of their defenses and the court's definitive rejection of those defenses in favour of Bell, Rockman then compares the 'Bell v. Globe and Meucci' court decision (of July 19, 1887) with HRes 269:

"I conclude that the comments of Mr. Grosvenor [who wrote a memo highly critical of HRes 269 by comparing it with Bell v. Globe] are more likely correct in comparison to the statements [within the preamble of HRes 269] by the United States House of Representatives."[6]

Rockman then proceeded to dissect and parse the U.S. Government's 1887 legal challenge to Bell's telephone patent, which had been brought by United States Attorney General Augustus H. Garland, a major stock shareholder of the Pan-Electric Company which was the instigator of the suit. Pan-Electric sought to overturn Bell's patent in order to compete against the American Bell Telephone Co.[6][14][15]

It was this very court challenge that is referenced in HRes 269's preamble, in paragraph No. 9, which inferred an immoral and possibly criminal intent by Bell ("...the Government of the United States moved to annul the patent issued to Bell on the grounds of fraud and misrepresentation"), to which Rockland wrote:

"The United States House of Representatives in its resolution of June 11, 2002 states merely that the government of the United States filed the lawsuit, and that the Supreme Court found the complaint viable and remanded the case for trial. The House of Representatives resolution, in my opinion, leaves out many of the salient details [of the Garland-initiated suit], and presents a disjointed and incorrect view of the invention of the telephone."[6]

The same paragraph No. 9 of the Meucci resolution also did not mention that the U.S. Attorney General, plus another cabinet member and two senators had been given or owned millions of dollars of stock in Pan-Electric, as revealed by Joseph Pulitzer in the New York World, a fact which many viewed as a strong incentive for them to try to overturn Bell's patent.[11]

President Grover Cleveland subsequently ordered the Attorney General not to 'pursue the matter' after the court case stalled out. [11] One of several biographies on the controversial Attorney General Augustus Garland's involvement in the 'Government case' noted:

"He did, however, suffer scandal involving the patent for the telephone. The Attorney General's office was intervening in a lawsuit attempting to break Bell's monopoly of telephone technology, but it had come out that Garland owned stock in one of the companies that stood to benefit. This congressional investigation received public attention for nearly a year, and caused his work as attorney general to suffer."[15]

The 'Government case' became one of the greatest scandals in Grover Cleveland's presidency, and was ended when Cleveland ordered Garland to discontinue the trial. [11]

Other factual errors were also found within the preamble to the HRes 269 resolution, among them were:

* Paragraph No. 2 of the resolution referred to Meucci's invention involving "electronic communications", however Meucci's patent caveat described a 'lover's telegraph' which transmitted sound vibrations mechanically across a taut wire, a conclusion that was also noted in Rockman's review ("The court further held that the caveat of Meucci did not describe any elements of an electric speaking telephone…..", and "The court held that Meucci's device consisted of a mechanical telephone consisting of a mouthpiece and an earpiece connected by a wire, and that beyond this the invention of Meucci was only imagination.") [11][6]

* Paragraphs Nos. 7 & 8 implied that Bell had access to Meucci's works prior to patenting the telephone ("….Meucci later learned that the Western Union affiliate laboratory reportedly lost his working models", followed by: "Alexander Graham Bell, who conducted experiments in the same laboratory where Meucci’s materials had been stored was granted a patent…. with inventing the telephone"). [11] The same inference in the resolution was also described by Rockman. [6] Research by Professor Catania himself showed that Meucci's samples were reportedly lost at a laboratory of American District Telegraph (ADT) of New York, however ADT would not become a subsidiary of Western Union until 1901.[16][17] Writer and publisher (and Bell's great-great-grandson) Edwin S. Grosvenor also noted that with Bell living and working in the Boston and Brantford areas, and with Meucci living and working in the Staten Island, New York area, there was no overlap where Bell would have had access to Meucci's works prior to Bell's patent application. Grosvenor further pointed out that in 1878, two years after Bell received his patent, the American Bell Telephone Comp., not Bell, was awarded a Western Electric laboratory as part of a patent infringement settlement with the Western Union Telegraph Company. Alexander Graham Bell never worked in that laboratory, and the timing of the transfer made it irrelevant in any event to Bell's patent application of February 1876. [11] Additionally, the American Bell Telephone Company and Western Union were both competitors to each other and did not share facilities both prior to, and subsequent to the patent lawsuit settlement.

* Paragraph No. 11 stated that "…if Meucci had been able to pay the $10 fee to maintain [his] caveat after 1874, no patent could have been issued to Bell". However Grosvenor noted in a memo that Bell had succeeded in building a telephone based on a sound knowledge and understanding of its principles, whereas Meucci had been found by the court not to have understood the basics of the electric telephone's operation, with that court case having been conducted some time after Bell was awarded his patent. Since Meucci's caveat didn't describe any of the principles of electric telephony, it would therefore have been irrelevant to Bell's application even had the caveat been renewed. [11]

In total Grosvenor listed 10 errors in detail found within the congressional Meucci resolution, and was highly critical of both its intent and accuracy. [11] He also asked two salient questions in Section "C" of the same report: "1) Should Congress overrule the US courts and its own committee, which looked at evidence extensively, and without reviewing any evidence in the matter?", and "2) Should [the U.S.] Congress pass resolutions on historical facts without checking with legitimate historians or their own library?" The same document also noted that HRes 269 contradicted the findings of its own Congressional committee's investigation, which had, in 1886, produced a report of 1,278 printed pages. [11]

Grosvenor concluded that: " The historical “facts” stated in HR 269 were obtained from highly biased sources, and [were] based on shoddy, cursory research."[11]



References:

Notes:

1. ^ a b "House of Commons of Canada, Journals No. 211, 37th Parliament, 1st Session, No. 211 transcript". Hansard of the Government of Canada, June 21, 2002, pg.1620 / cumulative pg.13006, time mark: 1205. Retrieved: April 29, 2009.

2. ^ a b Bethune, Brian. "Did Bell steal the idea for the phone?", Macleans, January 23, 2008. Retrieved: April 30, 2009.

3. ^ Fox, Jim, "Bell's Legacy Rings Out at his Homes", Globe and Mail, 2002-08-17;

4. ^ Resolution's sponsor Vito J. Fossella "Rep. Fossella's Resolution Honoring True Inventor of Telephone To Pass House Tonight. Antonio Meucci Receives Recognition 113 Years After His Death". Office of Congressman Vito J. Fossella. June 11, 2002. Archived from the original on 2008-05-04. http://web.archive.org/web/20080504143729/http://www.house.gov/fossella/Press/pr020611.htm. Retrieved 2011-02-26. Quote: Antonio Meucci never received the recognition he deserved during his lifetime, but this evening – 113 years after his death – the House of Representatives is expected to pass a Resolution honoring his contributions and recognizing him as the true inventor of the telephone. The Resolution was authored by Congressman Vito Fossella (R-NY13).

5. ^ a b Estreich, Bob. Antonio Meucci: (section) The Resolution. Retrieved from BobsOldPhones.net website, February 25, 2011. Quote: "It should be noted that the text of the Resolution DOES NOT acknowledge Meucci as the inventor of the telephone. It does acknowledge his early work on the telephone, but even this is open to question."

6. ^ a b c d e f g h Rockman, Howard B."Intellectual Property Law for Engineers and Scientists." IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society, Wiley-IEEE, 2004, pp. 107–109. ISBN 978-0471449980.

7. ^ United States Senate. Bill Text: 108th Congress (2003-2004) S.RES.223.IS, U.S. Congress' Thomas website, September 10, 2003. Retrieved February 28, 2011.

8. ^ U.S. Senate. "SUBMISSION OF CONCURRENT AND SENATE RESOLUTIONS -- (Senate - September 10, 2003)", U.S. Congress Thomas Website, Page: S11349, September 10, 2003.

9. ^ GovTrack.us. S.Res.223 (108th Congress), Retrieved from GovTrack.us website on February 28, 2011.

10. ^ "News Flash: U.S. House of Representatives Says Alexander Graham Bell Did Not Invent the Telephone." History News Network, George Mason University, June 20, 2002. Retrieved: April 30, 2009.

11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Grosvenor, Edwin S. "Memo on Misstatements of Fact in House Resolution 269 and Facts Relating to Antonio Meucci and the Invention of the Telephone." alecbell.org website, June 30, 2002.

12. ^ "HRes 269: In the House of Representatives, U.S." US Government Printing Office, June 11, 2002. Retrieved: May 1, 2009.

13. ^ a b Cusmano, Domenic. "Interview with Basilio Catania." Accenti.ca, July 16, 2003, Retrieved: April 30, 2009.

14. ^ "Augustus Hill Garland (1832–1899)". Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture website. Retrieved: May 1, 2009. Note: according to this article: "Garland soon found himself embroiled in scandal. While Garland was in the Senate, he had become a stockholder in, and attorney for, the Pan-Electric Telephone Company, which was organized to form regional telephone companies using equipment developed by J. Harris Rogers. The equipment was similar to the Bell telephone, and that company soon brought suit for patent infringement. Soon after he became attorney general, Garland was asked to bring suit in the name of the United States to invalidate the Bell patent. He refused...." However, in Rockman (2004), there is no mention of Garland refusing to do so, and moreover Garland had been given his shares in Pan-Electric, by the company, for free.

15. ^ a b "Augustus Hill Garland (1874-1877)", Old Statehouse Museum website. Retrieved: May 1, 2009. Note: According to this biography: "He did, however, suffer scandal involving the patent for the telephone. The Attorney General's office was intervening in a lawsuit attempting to break Bell's monopoly of telephone technology, but it had come out that Garland owned stock in one of the companies that stood to benefit. This congressional investigation received public attention for nearly a year, and caused his work as attorney general to suffer."

16. ^ Catania, Basilio Antonio Meucci -Questions and Answers: What did Meucci to bring his invention to the public?, Chezbasilio.it website. Retrieved July 8, 2009

17. ^ History of ADT, ADT.com website. Retrieved July 8, 2009.


Bibliography:

* Bruce, Robert V. Bell: Alexander Bell and the Conquest of Solitude. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1990. ISBN 0-80149691-8.

* Evenson, A. Edward. "The Telephone Patent Conspiracy of 1876: The Elisha Gray - Alexander Bell Controversy. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland Publishing, 2000. ISBN 0-7864-0138-9.

* Gray, Charlotte. Reluctant Genius: Alexander Graham Bell and the Passion for Invention. New York: Arcade Publishing, 2006. ISBN 1-55970-809-3.

* Mackay, James. Sounds Out of Silence: A Life of Alexander Graham Bell. Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing Company, 1997. ISBN 1-85158-833-7.

* Micklos, John Jr. Alexander Graham Bell: Inventor of the Telephone. New York: Harper Collins Publishers Ltd., 2006. ISBN 978-0-06-057618-9.

* Shulman, Seth. The Telephone Gambit: Chasing Alexander Bell's Secret. New York: Norton & Company, 2008. ISBN 978-0-393-06206-9.
 
This thread was made before I became a member. That's a few years ago now. Impressive necro. There is QI-segment about this. Nothing on youtube unfortunately.
 
In before the lock.

This thread was made before I became a member. That's a few years ago now. Impressive. There is QI-segment about this. Nothing on youtube unfortunately.
Was his post spam? Or was it a copy paste?
 
Wow, me posting in the same thread three times in the same day. This is definitely an oldie. :)
 
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