成人X站

MYNORTHWEST HISTORY

‘Victorian Internet’ hits Seattle October 1864

Oct 11, 2023, 7:34 AM | Updated: 7:37 am

Seattle was first connected to the outside world via telegraph in October 1864, when the city looke...

Seattle was first connected to the outside world via telegraph in October 1864, when the city looked very much like this photo taken on Commercial Street (now First Avenue) near the telegraph office in 1865. (Courtesy MOHAI)

(Courtesy MOHAI)

Editor’s Note: Originally published October 18, 2017

A cannon was fired in downtown Seattle at 1 p.m. on the afternoon of Oct. 26, 1864. The occasion was the arrival of the first message to reach the city via telegraph.

RELATED: Brigade terrorized the Northwest in the 1970s

It came to the Yesler Building, a small wooden structure at the southwest corner of Commercial Street and Mill Street, nowadays better known as First and Yesler.

鈥淎 courier from the front reports in full retreat, closely pursued by our forces,鈥 it reportedly read. 鈥 was pushing and rather trying to coop him up in the valley and starve him to death.鈥

It was Civil War news that arrived that day, and it was already about 24 hours old. But it was a game-changer. No longer would messages be restricted to travel at the speed of horse, boat, or even train. Local newspapers could now publish news from afar that was just days old, rather than weeks or even months after the fact. A place like far-off Seattle in Washington Territory could begin to feel like it was connected to the United States.

is professor emeritus at UCLA and author of 鈥淲hat Hath God Wrought, The Transformation of America, from Oxford University Press. He says that beginning in the 1840s and thanks to a number of inventors such as , the telegraph destroyed time and distance, and made the world smaller, and life better.

Effects of the telegraph

鈥淓nthusiasm for the telegraph was quite universal,鈥 Howe said. 鈥淭he telegraph appealed to a whole lot of different elements in American culture and society of that time. People love it because it demonstrates scientific progress. And in the 19th century, they’re aware of a lot of scientific progress being made, and they’re quite enthusiastic about it, and they believe in progress in general with justification.鈥

In the mid 19th century, Howe said, 鈥渓ife is improving for a lot of people, especially if you were free and white and living in the United States.鈥

But most importantly, according to Howe, the telegraph mobilized capital, which was absolutely critical to the growth of a place like tiny, remote Seattle in the 1860s.

鈥淚t became ever so much more practical to raise money to invest in factories or any kind of economic activity,鈥 Howe said. 鈥淚t makes a huge difference if you know what stocks are selling for and what the prices of commodities are in New York, even though you’re out in Washington Territory.鈥

Before the telegraph allowed for near-instantaneous communication to financial centers in San Francisco and points east, Howe said 鈥渋f you look and see who had invested in business enterprise, you will see that the investors usually lived pretty nearby and they wanted to invest in an enterprise that they can really trust, which means maybe it has to be run by their brother-in-law or their cousin.鈥

Howe says connection via the telegraph meant 鈥測ou can have genuinely publicly-held companies鈥 and that investors could 鈥渃ompare the performance of one company with another.鈥

It鈥檚 easy to forget that Seattle鈥檚 destiny as the economic capital of the Northwest wasn鈥檛 a sure thing circa 1870. According to census figures, Seattle had a population of just 1,100, while Olympia had 1,200 and Walla Walla had 1,400. Meanwhile, Portland, Oregon had a whopping 8,300 residents. The only true metropolis on the West Coast at this time was San Francisco, which had a population of more than 150,000.

And it was San Francisco where the transcontinental telegraph had first arrived in October 1861, as part of a federally-subsidized project of the private company called .

Telegraph makes its way north

In 1863, a group of local investors in Portland saw the value in connecting with San Francisco (an earlier effort, around 1855 or 1856, had tried and failed). The new concern built lines as far south as Eugene, but then ran out of money and sold out to the California State Telegraph Company, a smaller West Coast rival of the larger Western Union. With this new infusion of resources, crews worked from the north and south and met up at Roseburg, Oregon in early 1864, with telegraph service beginning in Portland sometime around March 1, 1864.

Next, the company set its sights north, aiming for New Westminster, which was then the capital of British Columbia (the capital would move a few years later to Vancouver Island). Seattle, rather than Olympia, was picked to be one of the main stations along the line.

Professor Howe says that in the 1860s, the federal government recognized the value in connecting all of the United States and even the remote corners like Washington Territory, especially during the early years of the Civil War.

鈥淭he government wanted the people in the far northwest to feel an immediate sense of being an American and being involved in the wartime struggle,鈥 Howe said. 鈥淚t’s very clear that the government wanted the telegraph to be reinforcing these feelings.鈥

According to Howe, this policy came straight from the top, from President Lincoln himself.

Lincoln, Howe says, was a devoted consumer of, and advocate for, the telegraph.

鈥淗e was the one who kept insisting that he must be in telegraphic contact with his armies and his generals, and learning what they wanted to do and telling them whether to do it or not,鈥 Howe said. 鈥淎nd [Lincoln] is the single most clear explanation for why the Union Army made so much more use of the telegraph than the Confederate Army did. It took the Confederate government in Richmond much longer to learn about what was going on the battlefront, because they were still using conventional communications like guys on horseback, galloping along.鈥

RELATED: 成人X站 Radio accidentally saves American history

Howe says that the wartime information in the first message to reach Seattle back in October 1864 likely originated directly from battlefronts; in this specific case, from Missouri and Tennessee. One local history book says the message came through Portland, via Kansas City and New York. At each of those cities along the way, a telegraph operator would鈥檝e had to receive the message, and then re-send in Morse code via telegraph key.

鈥淥f course, it would have had to be transmitted from the battlefront to Washington and thence to New York even before those transmissions occurred,鈥 Howe said, which explains why it took a full day to get here.

The 1860s were a time of consolidation, and the California State Telegraph Company sold out to Western Union in 1865, as Western Union came to monopolize the telegraph industry in the United States.

, author of a seminal 1998 book about the telegraph and its similarities to the web called 鈥淭he Victorian Internet,鈥 says this was a perfectly natural state of affairs, then and now.

Introducing Western Union

鈥淵ou’ve got a big, fast-growing country, and you’ve got the need for one part of the country to communicate with another, [and] you’ve got a system where lots and lots of private companies spring up to meet that need, and you’ve got all of these different networks,鈥 Standage said. 鈥淎nd that all becomes a bit of a mess, and they gradually all get balled up into this enormous monopoly Western Union by the end of the 19th century.鈥

鈥淲estern Union argues that actually it’s great to have a monopoly, because people aren’t wasting time competing with other companies, they just get on with serving customers,鈥 Standage said.

Ironically, Standage says, 鈥淭his is the same sort of argument we heard from Internet giants more recently.鈥

It鈥檚 hard to quantify how much the telegraph contributed to Seattle鈥檚 economic growth in the 1860s and beyond, but it鈥檚 easy to see the impact of the rapid delivery of news from afar.

Less than six months after the city was connected, it took just hours for word to reach Seattle on the afternoon of Saturday April 15, 1865 that the man largely responsible for the spread of the telegraph across the United States, at the hands of an assassin.

Thanks to the telegraph, Seattleites, like Americans everywhere, could mourn the death of President Lincoln in near real-time.

You can hear Feliks every Wednesday and Friday morning on Seattle鈥檚 Morning News with Dave Ross and Colleen O鈥橞rien, read more from him鈥here, and subscribe to The Resident Historian Podcast聽here. If you have a story idea, please email Feliks鈥here.

MyNorthwest History

The 鈥淥ld Faithful Avalanche Zone鈥 on Highway 2 over Stevens Pass, circa 1978. (Courtesy Rich Ma...

Ted Buehner

How 11 feet of snow led to America鈥檚 deadliest avalanche near Stevens Pass in 1910

Discover how 11 feet of snow caused America's deadliest avalanche near Stevens Pass.

2 months ago

Image: This is a photo of the DC-7C airliner that took off from McChord Air Force Base on June 3, 1...

MyNorthwest Staff

Feliks Banel’s Flight 293 podcast ‘Unsolved Histories’ inspires Congress to take action

Feliks Banel's "What Happened to Flight 293" podcast has inspired the creation of bipartisan bills in the U.S. House and Senate.

3 months ago

Martin Luther King Jr. Day...

Terry Tang, The Associated Press

The long struggle to establish Martin Luther King Jr. Day

On the third Monday of January, federal, state and local governments recognize Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

3 months ago

Image: Customers lined up outside the Skakey's in Renton on Friday, Jan. 17, 2025. They were lookin...

Steve Coogan

Lines bust out the door as last Western Washington Shakey’s is set to close

The last Shakey's Pizza Parlor in Western Washington announced this week it will permanently close Monday.

3 months ago

Image: The exterior of the original Burgermaster in Seattle can be seen from the parking lot on Tue...

Steve Coogan

Burgermaster to close its original location in Seattle after 73 years

Burgermaster announced Wednesday it will close its original location in Seattle's University District at the end of February.

3 months ago

hydroplane racing...

Feliks Banel

New Year鈥檚 Eve icon’s forgotten ties to Northwest hydroplane racing

He was a fixture every New Year鈥檚 Eve, first on radio and then on TV, but bandleader Guy Lombardo also had a strong, very loud 鈥 and sometimes very fast 鈥 hydroplane racing connection to Seattle

4 months ago

‘Victorian Internet’ hits Seattle October 1864