登陆注册
19316500000082

第82章

WILLIAM Fothergill Cooke was born near Ealing on May 4, 1806, and was a son of Dr. William Cooke, a doctor of medicine, and professor of anatomy at the University of Durham. The boy was educated at a school in Durham, and at the University of Edinburgh. In 1826 he joined the East India Army, and held several staff appointments. While in the Madras Native Infantry, he returned home on furlough, owing to ill-health, and afterwards relinquished this connection. In 1833-4 he studied anatomy and physiology in Paris, acquiring great skill at modelling dissections in coloured wax.

In the summer of 1835, while touring in Switzerland with his parents, he visited Heidelberg, and was induced by Professor Tiedeman, director of the Anatomical Institute, to return there and continue his wax modelling. He lodged at 97, Stockstrasse, in the house of a brewer, and modelled in a room nearly opposite. Some of his models have been preserved in the Anatomical Museum at Heidelberg. In March 1836, hearing accidentally from Mr. J. W. R. Hoppner, a son of Lord Byron's friend, that the Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University, Geheime Hofrath Moncke. had a model of Baron Schilling's telegraph, Cooke went to see it on March 6, in the Professor's lecture room, an upper storey of an old convent of Dominicans, where he also lived.

Struck by what he witnessed, he abandoned his medical studies, and resolved to apply all his energies to the introduction of the telegraph.

Within three weeks he had made, partly at Heidelberg, and partly at Frankfort, his first galvanometer, or needle telegraph. It consisted of three magnetic needles surrounded by multiplying coils, and actuated by three separate circuits of six wires. The movements of the needles under the action of the currents produced twenty-six different signals corresponding to the letters of the alphabet.

'Whilst completing the model of my original plan,' he wrote to his mother on April 5, 'others on entirely fresh systems suggested themselves, and I have at length succeeded in combining the UTILE of each, but the mechanism requires a more delicate hand than mine to execute, or rather instruments which I do not possess. These I can readily have made for me in London, and by the aid of a lathe I shall he able to adapt the several parts, which I shall have made by different mechanicians for secrecy's sake. Should I succeed, it may be the means of putting some hundreds of pounds in my pocket. As it is a subject on which I was profoundly ignorant, until my attention was casually attracted to it the other day, I do not know what others may have done in the same way; this can best be learned in London.'

The 'fresh systems' referred to was his 'mechanical' telegraph, consisting of two letter dials, working synchronously, and on which particular letters of the message were indicated by means of an electro-magnet and detent. Before the end of March he invented the clock-work alarm, in which an electro-magnet attracted an armature of soft iron, and thus withdrew a detent, allowing the works to strike the alarm.

This idea was suggested to him on March 17, 1836, while reading Mrs.

Mary Somerville's 'Connexion of the Physical Sciences,' in travelling from Heidelberg to Frankfort.

Cooke arrived in London on April 22, and wrote a pamphlet setting forth his plans for the establishment of an electric telegraph; but it was never published. According to his own account he also gave considerable attention to the escapement principle, or step by step movement, afterwards perfected by Wheatstone. While busy in preparing his apparatus for exhibition, part of which was made by a clock-maker in Clerkenwell, he consulted Faraday about the construction of electro-magnets, The philosopher saw his apparatus and expressed his opinion that the 'principle was perfectly correct,' and that the 'instrument appears perfectly adapted to its intended uses.' Nevertheless he was not very sanguine of making it a commercial success. 'The electro-magnetic telegraph shall not ruin me,' he wrote to his mother, 'but will hardly make my fortune.' He was desirous of taking a partner in the work, and went to Liverpool in order to meet some gentleman likely to forward his views, and endeavoured to get his instrument adopted on the incline of the tunnel at Liverpool; but it gave sixty signals, and was deemed too complicated by the directors. Soon after his return to London, by the end of April, he had two simpler instruments in working order. All these preparations had already cost him nearly four hundred pounds.

On February 27, Cooke, being dissatisfied with an experiment on a mile of wire, consulted Faraday and Dr. Roget as to the action of a current on an electro-magnet in circuit with a long wire. Dr. Roget sent him to Wheatstone, where to his dismay he learned that Wheatstone had been employed for months on the construction of a telegraph for practical purposes. The end of their conferences was that a partnership in the undertaking was proposed by Cooke, and ultimately accepted by Wheatstone. The latter had given Cooke fresh hopes of success when he was worn and discouraged. 'In truth,' he wrote in a letter, after his first interview with the Professor, 'I had given the telegraph up since Thursday evening, and only sought proofs of my being right to do so ere announcing it to you. This day's enquiries partly revives my hopes, but I am far from sanguine. The scientific men know little or nothing absolute on the subject: Wheatstone is the only man near the mark.'

同类推荐
  • 优婆塞戒经

    优婆塞戒经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太上玉佩金珰太极金书上经

    太上玉佩金珰太极金书上经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 仙溪志

    仙溪志

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 吴礼部词话

    吴礼部词话

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 释门章服仪应法记

    释门章服仪应法记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 秦家媳妇儿

    秦家媳妇儿

    江小北是一个土里土气的农村姑娘,一朝野鸡变凤凰,怀上了富豪大少爷秦少明的孩子。本来正以为可以嫁入豪门过上幸福的生活的时候,不料一只拦路虎挡在了她嫁入豪门的路上。
  • 安若璇离

    安若璇离

    倒影在河中选择了倒退感情在冷漠拍打下零碎苦涩河水的滋味冰冷橱窗里的美味古墙在安静钟声下沉睡回音在尖叫下迅速破溃虚伪我永远不会带着面具走在空旷的广场阳光照进了历史的心房探询人生每一个门廊最后发现自卑是痛苦的温床扔掉面具慢满回想
  • 做尽天下鸳鸯事

    做尽天下鸳鸯事

    那一天,雨下得很大,我安静地躲在树上,等着雨过。蓦然回首,遇见了一个疯子。只见他一身白衫如雪,三分清冷,七分仙风道骨,确实俊俏得不行。就是脑子有点问题。他说,他要渡我成仙。我眯起眼睛。是的,我在鄙视他。
  • 西安半坡博物馆

    西安半坡博物馆

    古老而奔腾不息的黄河水像母亲的乳汁一样,浸润着宽广而深厚的黄土高原,三秦大地留下了中华民族先祖光辉灿烂的足变迹。沧海桑田,遥远的历史早已被漫漫黄土所尘封,昔日的熙熙攘攘也被无尽的岁月所淹没。
  • OZ大乱斗之梦想的传说

    OZ大乱斗之梦想的传说

    本书虽字节很多,但是多的是对话,因为原则上就是对话多,不知道拉姐看到这部小说会有什么想法呢?注:前两章是根据主角们真是的生活和环境写的,小说中会提到一些技能之类的东西到时候自然会做出解释
  • 食品安全(“科学与文化”系列科普图书)

    食品安全(“科学与文化”系列科普图书)

    食品安全是一种公共安全,也是一个国家的公共安全问题,食品安全关系到国民生活质量和水平。
  • 傲视王者

    傲视王者

    重生前,他是天龙王国里小有名气的法师,因为得到了一个件强大的神器,结果他被各个势力追杀得无路可逃,最后导致重生重生后,他是天龙大陆传说里无所不能的传奇法师,把曾经的敌人全部踩翻,拉起一支顶级团队,打最高端的副本,踩最牛逼的11C,学习终极禁咒魔法,你敢动我?好,老子用禁咒轰死你丫!想知道他的发展历程吗?那就请看‘傲视王者‘
  • 都市至尊仙王

    都市至尊仙王

    世界顶级财团面临遗产交接,国色天香的唐大小姐,即将成为下一任财团掌门人。她财、貌无双。她权倾当世,风华绝代。她是无数宅男心中的梦幻情人,高冷女神。但她有可怕的厌男癖!万千富少为她痴狂,然而究竟谁能抱得美人归,似乎一切早已命中注定,叶流殇再世为人,欲重塑巅峰,寻回那份曾经逝去的懵懂…
  • 重生坂井悠二

    重生坂井悠二

    我是一位穿越经验丰富的穿越者,要知道本人可是穿越了大约99次哟(大拇指)~于是,第100次,我作为作为一名叫做坂井悠二的少年复活了,结果,我发现我又死了!妈蛋,别告诉本大爷这一团渣渣一般的火焰就是我!红世使徒、火雾战士、密斯提斯......于是,一个围绕着重生为坂井悠二的家伙的故事就此展开......
  • 仙种记

    仙种记

    一株灵药转世化身为人,机缘巧合下重新踏入仙途,面对陌生的修炼界,他能否走上巅峰?血腥仙途,没有安稳的修仙途径,有的只有无限的热血战斗!