登陆注册
38544000000017

第17章 CHAPTER III THE HOLDING OF THE BUSINESS(3)

Theodore Vail was given a banquet by his old-time friends in the Washington postal service, and toasted as "the Monte Cristo of the Telephone."It was said that the actual cost of the Bell plant was only one-twenty-fifth of its capital, and that every four cents of investment had thus become a dollar. Even Jay Gould, carried beyond his usual caution by these stories, ran up to New Haven and bought its telephone company, only to find out later that its earnings were less than its expenses.

Much to the bewilderment of the Bell Company, it soon learned that the troubles of wealth are as numerous as those of poverty. It was beset by a throng of promoters and stock-jobbers, who fell upon it and upon the public like a swarm of seventeen-year locusts. In three years, one hundred and twenty-five competing companies were started, in open defiance of the Bell patents.

The main object of these companies was not, like that of the Western Union, to do a legitimate telephone business, but to sell stock to the public.

The face value of their stock was $225,000,000, although few of them ever sent a message. One company of unusual impertinence, without money or patents, had capitalized its audacity at $15,000,000.

How to HOLD the business that had been established --that was now the problem. None of the Bell partners had been mere stock-jobbers. At one time they had even taken a pledge not to sell any of their stock to outsiders. They had financed their company in a most honest and ****** way; and they were desperately opposed to the financial banditti whose purpose was to transform the telephone business into a cheat and a gamble. At first, having held their own against the Western Union, they expected to make short work of the stock-jobbers. But it was a vain hope. These bogus companies, they found, did not fight in the open, as the Western Union had done.

All manner of injurious rumors were presently set afloat concerning the Bell patent. Other inventors--some of them honest men, and some shameless pretenders--were brought forward with strangely concocted tales of prior invention.

The Granger movement was at that time a strong political factor in the Middle West, and its blind fear of patents and "monopolies" was turned aggressively against the Bell Company. A few Senators and legitimate capitalists were lifted up as the figureheads of the crusade. And a loud hue-and-cry was raised in the newspapers against "high rates and monopoly" to distract the minds of the people from the real issue of legitimate business versus stock-company bubbles.

The most plausible and persistent of all the various inventors who snatched at Bell's laurels, was Elisha Gray. He refused to abide by the adverse decision of the court. Several years after his defeat, he came forward with new weapons and new methods of attack. He became more hostile and irreconcilable; and until his death, in 1901, never renounced his claim to be the original inventor of the telephone.

The reason for this persistence is very evident.

Gray was a professional inventor, a highly competent man who had begun his career as a blacksmith's apprentice, and risen to be a professor of Oberlin. He made, during his lifetime, over five million dollars by his patents. In 1874, he and Bell were running a neck-and-neck race to see who could first invent a musical telegraph--when, presto! Bell suddenly turned aside, because of his acoustical knowledge, and invented the telephone, while Gray kept straight ahead.

Like all others who were in quest of a better telegraph instrument, Gray had glimmerings of the possibility of sending speech by wire, and by one of the strangest of coincidences he filed a caveat on the subject on the SAME DAY that Bell filed the application for a patent. Bell had arrived first. As the record book shows, the fifth entry on that day was: "A. G. Bell, $15";and the thirty-ninth entry was "E. Gray, $10."There was a vast difference between Gray's caveat and Bell's application. A caveat is a declaration that the writer has NOT invented a thing, but believes that he is about to do so; while an APPLICATION is a declaration that the writer has already perfected the invention. But Gray could never forget that he had seemed to be, for a time, so close to the golden prize; and seven years after he had been set aside by the Western Union agreement, he reappeared with claims that had grown larger and more definite.

When all the evidence in the various Gray lawsuits is sifted out, there appear to have been three distinctly different Grays: first, Gray the SCOFFER, who examined Bell's telephone at the Centennial and said it was "nothing but the old lover's telegraph. It is impossible to make a practical speaking telephone on the principle shown by Professor Bell. . . . The currents are too feeble"; second, Gray the CONVERT, who wrote frankly to Bell in 1877, "I do not claim the credit of inventing it"; and third, Gray the CLAIMANT, who endeavored to prove in 1886 that he was the original inventor. His real position in the matter was once well and wittily described by his partner, Enos M. Barton, who said: "Of all the men who DIDN'T invent the telephone, Gray was the nearest."It is now clearly seen that the telephone owes nothing to Gray. There are no Gray telephones in use in any country. Even Gray himself, as he admitted in court, failed when he tried to make a telephone on the lines laid down in his caveat. The final word on the whole matter was recently spoken by George C. Maynard, who established the telephone business in the city of Washington. Said Mr. Maynard:

"Mr. Gray was an intimate and valued friend of mine, but it is no disrespect to his memory to say that on some points involved in the telephone matter, he was mistaken. No subject was ever so thoroughly investigated as the invention of the speaking telephone.

同类推荐
  • 達朹志

    達朹志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • THE EUROPEANS

    THE EUROPEANS

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛语御禅师语录

    佛语御禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 布水台集

    布水台集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 金箓早朝仪

    金箓早朝仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 万历首辅

    万历首辅

    一个重回大明的故事。重建大明河山,抵御外敌于国门之外。
  • 虚无执掌者

    虚无执掌者

    因嫉恶如仇,惨遭杀害,无意间来到魔法大陆,掌握了举世无双的虚无魔法,且看吴麟如何由一个人人嘲笑的废物变为世人尊敬的绝世天才……
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 嫡女骄

    嫡女骄

    重生归来,司徒娇要亲手编织自己的命运,除姨娘,护亲娘,助兄长,教庶妹,得一世骄宠。
  • 何为风为意

    何为风为意

    婚礼现场,有人抢婚!韩意当时只觉得自己被打昏了。醒来发现自己在一张床,身上被绑的紧紧的。“救命…”韩意歇斯底里的喊,但没人应,判没人。挣扎开了绑在身上的绳子,一步步的往门口挪刚靠近,门就被从外面打开,一个男人走了进来。韩意第一反应就是装晕。然后男人咳嗽了一声。楚锋!韩意知道他是李楚锋后,立马站了起来。“楚锋,快带我走,不然等下伟等急就不好了。”韩意并不知道是李楚锋抢的婚。李楚峰用手抬起韩意的下巴。“带你走开玩笑?你是我抢来的。为什么要送回去?”李楚峰没给韩意说话的机会。“只要让我玩够,就放你走。”“凭什么”韩意甩开李楚锋的手……
  • 质子为妃

    质子为妃

    无数万年前,据说天上落下七颗流星这才形成了北斗七国。然七国间神奇的并存了数万年却没有发生大规模的吞并战役,这本身就是一件不同寻常之事。而故事就从天枢国的女姬落水开始。
  • 美漫的神之长子

    美漫的神之长子

    在神之长子以及神之次子的带领下,泰伦帝国成功的摧毁了堕落的萨尔那加,但是幽灵特工马克却在意外之中被异位面的埃蒙附体。为了摆脱埃蒙选择自我牺牲。可是埃蒙却跟着马克来到了另一个世界。复仇者多了一位十二级灵能战力,而神盾局也多了一位幽灵特工教官。美国队长:“复仇者!集结!”凯拉克斯:“太阳轰炸准备就绪。”阿塔尼斯:“我的部队集结完毕。”马克:“EnTaroTassadar”
  • 一揽天下

    一揽天下

    诸天碑在手,一揽天下仙!李默的人生遭遇了大起大落,从一个高高在上的纨绔天才,流落成倒夜香的小厮。然而,故事才刚刚开始……
  • 年上也可

    年上也可

    【20岁准研究生VS32岁设计师老板】【小白兔(白莲花)VS肉食男(纯渣男)】现实题材,慢热向。前期甜中带渣,中后期虐中带甜,结局HE文案一远离是非,只身异乡,遇见爱人,许也可以为,她终于迎来了新生。结束婚姻,痛失挚爱,又得新欢,方秋辰以为,他总算有些许安宁。可是秘密,它欲盖弥彰。可是谎言,它入木三分。可是爱意,它藕断丝连。越是在乎,就越是不愿让你瞥见我的丑陋。嗅我清香的花吧,吻我青葱的叶吧,可你不要摸我深埋在泥土的根啊,他们那样狰狞虬蜷,他们会告诉你,我是个坏人呀。文案二(商场里,方秋辰陪何亦安买衫,瞥见扶梯上的许也可。)方秋辰:一别三年,她音信全无,再见时,她已挽着别的男人笑意盈盈。原来是老天惩罚我,浪荡一生,却唯独与最爱擦肩而过。许也可:刚刚好像看到他了。原来心里装着一个放不下的人的时候,眼睛也会骗人。同在这么小的一个徐汇区,却没有一次再相逢。商场放的什么歌,居然要让人落泪。(BGM:回音哥《他和她》) 【文案更新:2019.11.28,禁止盗用】阅读指南:1.男女主双视角(奇男偶女)、第一人称2.现实题材,平实文风
  • 燕落醒花梦夕拾

    燕落醒花梦夕拾

    江州城逸王府内有一外号病猫的美人公子,萤火是号称碧玉飞针的红衣杀手,公子是心性清冷狡黠的夕拾王爷,万金悬赏,让杀手遭遇病猫王爷,狐的狡猾,让她陷进他设的圈套,病猫曰:“要么当本王的王妃要么当阶下囚。”萤火说:“夕拾你就是个骗子,我要离开你。”病猫曰:“哼,想离开本王,除非本王死了。”这是命中的劫数还是归宿,看淡江湖路,笑谈红尘事,看病猫如何驯服红衣杀手,看这天下最终落入谁之手。