1990 >> July >> A Pictorial History Of The Civil War Telegraph  

A Pictorial History Of The Civil War Telegraph
by Mike Tucker

Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", July 1990, page 17

While doing some research on telegraph lines in some books, I ran into sketches of the telegraph during the Civil War. We can imagine the clatter of rifle shots being exchanged; shrapnel from cannonballs flying about and the haze of gunpowder smoke and dust occluding the battlefield like a thick mist. At the same time, the telegraph field crews were hurriedly stringing wire on poles equipped with "teapots" and "slashtops". This short era of history involves some very unique and rare insulators.

I am submitting the following sketches as a pictorial glimpse of the Civil War telegraph.

 

BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR ARTICLE PREPARATION

Alvin F. Harlow, Old Wires and New Waves, (New York, 1936) 
John E. O'Brien, Telegraphing in Battle, (Scranton, PA, 1910) 
R.L. Thompson, Wiring a Continent, (New York, 1947)



From Leslie's Weekly, New York Public Library
ONE OF THE FIRST ARMY TELEGRAPH STATIONS IN THE FIELD, 1861



SETTING UP A LINE ON THE BATTLE-FIELD, CIVIL WAR



Grant, Sheridan, Meade, Rawlins and an Operator



Field Telegraph -- Battery Wagon



Telegraph Operator Tapping Rebel Telegraph Line Near
Egypt, on the Mississippi Central Railroad



Courtesy of The Century Magazine
A Field Expedient



Courtesy of The Century Magazine
Light Field Service



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