登陆注册
38544000000035

第35章 CHAPTER V THE EXPANSION OF THE BUSINESS(3)

When the message rate was fairly well established, Hudson died--fell suddenly to the ground as he was about to step into a railway carriage. In his place came Frederick P. Fish, also a lawyer and a Bostonian. Fish was a popular, optimistic man, with a "full-speed-ahead"temperament. He pushed the policy of expansion until he broke all the records. He borrowed money in stupendous amounts--$150,000,000 at one time--and flung it into a campaign of red-hot development. More business he demanded, and more, and more, until his captains, like a thirty-horse team of galloping horses, became very nearly uncontrollable.

It was a fast and furious period. The whole country was ablaze with a passion of prosperity.

After generations of conflict, the men with large ideas had at last put to rout the men of small ideas. The waste and folly of competition had everywhere driven men to the policy of cooperation.

Mills were linked to mills and factories to factories, in a vast mutualism of industry such as no other age, perhaps, has ever known. And as the telephone is essentially the instrument of co-working and interdependent people, it found itself suddenly welcomed as the most popular and indispensable of all the agencies that put men in touch with each other.

To describe this growth in a single sentence, we might say that the Bell telephone secured its first million of capital in 1879; its first million of earnings in 1882; its first million of dividends in 1884; its first million of surplus in 1885. It had paid out its first million for legal expenses by 1886; began first to send a million messages a day in 1888; had strung its first million miles of wire in 1900; and had installed its first million telephones in 1898. By 1897 it had spun as many cobwebs of wire as the mighty Western Union itself; by 1900 it had twice as many miles of wire as the Western Union, and in 1905 FIVETIMES as many. Such was the plunging progress of the Bell Companies in this period of expansion, that by 1905 they had swept past all European countries combined, not only in the quality of the service but in the actual number of telephones in use. This, too, without a cent of public money, or the protection of a tariff, or the prestige of a governmental bureau.

By 1892 Boston and New York were talking to Chicago, Milwaukee, Pittsburg, and Washington.

One-half of the people of the United States were within talking distance of each other.

The THOUSAND-MILE TALK had ceased to be a fairy tale. Several years later the western end of the line was pushed over the plains to Nebraska, enabling the spoken word in Boston to be heard in Omaha. Slowly and with much effort the public were taught to substitute the telephone for travel. A special long-distance salon was fitted up in New York City to entice people into the habit of talking to other cities. Cabs were sent for customers; and when one arrived, he was escorted over Oriental rugs to a gilded booth, draped with silken curtains. This was the famous "Room Nine." By such and many other allurements a larger idea of telephone service was given to the public mind; until in 1909 at least eighteen thousand New York-Chicago conversa-tions were held, and the revenue from strictly long-distance messages was twenty-two thousand dollars a day.

By 1906 even the Rocky Mountain Bell Company had grown to be a ten-million-dollar enterprise.

It began at Salt Lake City with a hundred telephones, in 1880. Then it reached out to master an area of four hundred and thirteen thousand square miles--a great Lone Land of undeveloped resources. Its linemen groped through dense forests where their poles looked like toothpicks beside the towering pines and cedars. They girdled the mountains and basted the prairies with wire, until the lonely places were brought together and made sociable.

They drove off the Indians, who wanted the bright wire for ear-rings and bracelets; and the bears, which mistook the humming of the wires for the buzzing of bees, and persisted in gnawing the poles down. With the most heroic optimism, this Rocky Mountain Company persevered until, in 1906, it had created a seventy-thousand-mile nerve-system for the far West.

Chicago, in this year, had two hundred thou- sand telephones in use, in her two hundred square miles of area. The business had been built up by General Anson Stager, who was himself wealthy, and able to attract the support of such men as John Crerar, H. H. Porter, and Robert T. Lincoln. Since 1882 it has paid dividends, and in one glorious year its stock soared to four hundred dollars a share. The old-timers--the men who clambered over roof-tops in 1878 and tacked iron wires wherever they could without being chased off--are still for the most part in control of the Chicago company.

But as might have been expected, it was New York City that was the record-breaker when the era of telephone expansion arrived. Here the flood of big business struck with the force of a tidal wave. The number of users leaped from 56,000 in 1900 up to 810,000 in 1908. In a single year of sweating and breathless activity, 65,000 new telephones were put on desks or hung on walls--an average of one new user for every two minutes of the business day.

Literally tons, and hundreds of tons, of telephones were hauled in drays from the factory and put in place in New York's homes and offices. More and more were demanded, until to-day there are more telephones in New York than there are in the four countries, France, Belgium, Holland, and Switzerland combined.

As a user of telephones New York has risen to be unapproachable. Mass together all the telephones of London, Glasgow, Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Sheffleld, Bristol, and Belfast, and there will even then be barely as many as are carrying the conversations of this one American city.

同类推荐
  • 重编诸天传

    重编诸天传

    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 Marble Faun V.1

    The Marble Faun V.1

    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。
  • 里乘

    里乘

    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。
  • 醒梦骈言

    醒梦骈言

    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。
  • 白石道人歌曲疏证

    白石道人歌曲疏证

    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
  • 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!
  • 羽门

    羽门

    现代世界的一个平凡少年,早上醒来竟穿越了,这里没有科技,只有灵力,少年带着一颗赤诚之心来到这里,结果却是没有灵力的废物!?
  • TFBOYS转角爱

    TFBOYS转角爱

    爱其实很简单,只要一个转身,你就会遇见你爱的那个他(她),爱就在转角......
  • 天空之国乌托邦

    天空之国乌托邦

    入学乌托邦的两大学院。圣洁高雅的的圣列斯顿学院、幽深丛林里的墨陀玫林学院。在烧烤加上贪食的火蛇,随处可见的音符,就任老师的李白、苏轼、范仲淹。在绝美圣境缤纷斑斓的乌托邦生活。在悠远小巷喝着麦芽酒的店老板,在森林创作的贝多芬和达芬奇,在暮光之城喂鸽的老人,在深海骑着蓝鲸的潜水员。和其他学院在巨木之林竞争宝藏。在空想国度乌托邦的学习生活就要开始了!所幻所想所有幻想!
  • 棠来之昱

    棠来之昱

    为了不让姜昱和阮棠在一起,江析权在姜昱出车祸断了肋骨接上之后,关紧大门找人把他肋骨再多打断几根,把他脑袋打破故意想让打成他失忆。都没有让姜昱放弃要去牵小姑娘的手。那年18岁的姜昱碰到了13岁顶着鼻涕泡在盛夏烈日哭唧唧的阮棠,可能是阮棠哭的鼻涕泡比同龄小孩儿子的好看吧。也可能是送了她一袋子冰糖,她收下了吧也可能是搓了她的脑袋,她没反抗吧也可能是看上了她一尘不染的眼睛,里面全是他的倒影吧反正最后是成了他以后在她成年之前好几年的念想。所以以后的日子里面,但凡是想到阮棠的时候他都会往瓶子里投下一颗冰糖,每隔一段时间就想办法送给她。
  • 拂云上

    拂云上

    捡到个天神当迷弟,诓来个魔君当徒弟,女主:这是什么神仙运气啊~看天界魔界还有谁敢放肆,哈,哈,,幸福得太突然了!#脸红#当然害羞是不可能害羞的,千载难逢的机会,怎么能不好好潇洒一番?
  • 修真狂神在都市

    修真狂神在都市

    老爸风流,儿子因此浪迹江湖。却不料得到大神庇佑,成就无双霸业。一段奇妙之旅,一曲神话仙途,一段诙谐的奇妙之旅。大千世界,奇人异事,尽在本书。
  • 中华人民共和国集会游行示威法

    中华人民共和国集会游行示威法

    为加强法制宣传,迅速普及法律知识,服务于我国民主法制建设,多年来,中国民主法制出版社根据全国人大常委会每年定期审议通过、修订的法律,全品种、大规模的出版了全国人民代表大会常务委员会公报版的系列法律单行本。该套法律单行本经过最高立法机关即全国人民代表大会常务委员会的权威审定,法条内容准确无误,文本格式规范合理,多年来受到了社会各界广泛关注与好评。
  • 韶华知琉璃

    韶华知琉璃

    她本是灵山上一只狐仙他是仙人山上身居高位的仙人她以为他是真心帮她原来这一切早有预谋他以为她对他有情却殊不知这只是一切劫难的开始“……顾少卿,欠你的,本仙已经还清了。”
  • 佛说大乘观想曼拏罗净诸恶趣经

    佛说大乘观想曼拏罗净诸恶趣经

    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。