# 16T83 - 1933 5c pale brown,perf 14x12.5,Carlton
Telegraph Stamps Make a Great Addition to Your Revenue Collection
Telegraph stamps were created solely for the pre-payment of telegraph fees. A customer would complete a telegraph form, and give it to the clerk along with payment. The clerk would then apply and cancel the stamp to show that the fee had been paid.
Completion Of Transcontinental Telegraph
The telegraph was the first device to send messages using electricity. Samuel F. B. Morse (1791-1872) is credited with inventing the telegraph. He first demonstrated the telegraph in 1837. Morse also created âMorse Code,â a âdot and dashâ system used to send information through the telegraphâs clicking sounds. In 1840, Morse received the patent for the telegraph and in 1844; he built an experimental line from Washington, D.C., to Baltimore, Maryland.
On May 24, 1844, Morse sat in the Supreme Court chamber of the Capitol and tapped out the first message, âWhat hath God wrought!â (This phrase is included in the stamp design of U.S. #924 among the telegraph wires.)
Construction began in 1861, and there were many difficulties to overcome. Telegraph wire and glass insulators had to be shipped to San Francisco from the East, and then loaded on horse-drawn wagons to be carried across mountains, deserts, and plains. Telegraph poles had to be transported as well, because there werenât many trees on the plains and deserts. Native Americans also posed a threat. During the summer of 1861, Sioux warriors cut down some of the completed line and used the wire for bracelets. However, when some of those warriors later fell ill, their medicine man claimed that the great spirit of the âtalking wireâ had made them ill and they didnât cut the line again.
Telegraph Stamps
The telegraph was a relatively new form of communication when the Revenue Act was passed in 1862, but writers of the law included telegrams in the items that were taxed.
The telegraph stamp was similar to a postage stamp because it verified that a message had been paid for. Telegrams, the messages sent by telegraph, were reserved for urgent news because they were more expensive than sending a letter. Even though the Telegraph Act of 1860 stated that the fee was 30¢ per word, early messages sent on the First Transcontinental Telegraph were charged at $1 per word.
Telegraph Stamps Make a Great Addition to Your Revenue Collection
Telegraph stamps were created solely for the pre-payment of telegraph fees. A customer would complete a telegraph form, and give it to the clerk along with payment. The clerk would then apply and cancel the stamp to show that the fee had been paid.
Completion Of Transcontinental Telegraph
The telegraph was the first device to send messages using electricity. Samuel F. B. Morse (1791-1872) is credited with inventing the telegraph. He first demonstrated the telegraph in 1837. Morse also created âMorse Code,â a âdot and dashâ system used to send information through the telegraphâs clicking sounds. In 1840, Morse received the patent for the telegraph and in 1844; he built an experimental line from Washington, D.C., to Baltimore, Maryland.
On May 24, 1844, Morse sat in the Supreme Court chamber of the Capitol and tapped out the first message, âWhat hath God wrought!â (This phrase is included in the stamp design of U.S. #924 among the telegraph wires.)
Construction began in 1861, and there were many difficulties to overcome. Telegraph wire and glass insulators had to be shipped to San Francisco from the East, and then loaded on horse-drawn wagons to be carried across mountains, deserts, and plains. Telegraph poles had to be transported as well, because there werenât many trees on the plains and deserts. Native Americans also posed a threat. During the summer of 1861, Sioux warriors cut down some of the completed line and used the wire for bracelets. However, when some of those warriors later fell ill, their medicine man claimed that the great spirit of the âtalking wireâ had made them ill and they didnât cut the line again.
Telegraph Stamps
The telegraph was a relatively new form of communication when the Revenue Act was passed in 1862, but writers of the law included telegrams in the items that were taxed.
The telegraph stamp was similar to a postage stamp because it verified that a message had been paid for. Telegrams, the messages sent by telegraph, were reserved for urgent news because they were more expensive than sending a letter. Even though the Telegraph Act of 1860 stated that the fee was 30¢ per word, early messages sent on the First Transcontinental Telegraph were charged at $1 per word.