Home > Recreation > Antiques > Telephones and Telegraphs > Telegraphs
http://www.trainweb.org/railwayop/
Site dedicated to Canada's railway telegraph, agents, operators, and railway.
http://www.sparkmuseum.com/TELEGRAPH.HTM
Early telegraph instruments from the John Jenkins Spark Museum collection.
http://k6ix.net/J38Keys.html
Descriptions of a common telegraph key used by the U.S. Army Signal Corps.
http://www.insulators.info/books/mpet/
The entire 19th century book by Franklin Pope is viewable at this site. This was the standard reference book used by the U.S. Signal Service.
http://www.morsex.com/n1fn/keys.htm
An assortment of telegraph keys from the personal collection of Marshall Emm, N1FN.
http://www.qsl.net/sv1edy
A telegraph instrument collecting site located in Greece by ham radio operator, Apostolos Bourousis, SV1EDT.
http://www.qsl.net/k7gse/
The personal Vibroplex and telegraph collection of Frank O. Remington.
http://www.zianet.com/sparks/
Informational and photo display site on telegraph keys. Includes information about instruments used during the spark-era of radio. By Russ Kleinmann, WA5Y.
http://physics.kenyon.edu/EarlyApparatus/Electricity/Telegraph/Telegraph.html
An assortment of telegraph instrument images compiled from several early physics apparatus collections by Professor Thomas Greenslade Jr. of Kenyon College.
http://www.telegraph-office.com/
A resource for wire and wireless telegraph instrument collectors and historians. Several images of instruments are viewable in the photo galleries.
http://w1tp.com/
The Telegraph Museum on this site contains hundreds of images of American and foreign telegraph instruments from different eras. Presented by Tom Perera, W1TP.
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