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WIRELESS telegraphy is destined to play an important part in the wars of the future, but it is of practical value every day to the armies and navies of the world, even in the piping times of peace.
WASHINGTON, May 28. -The fact that there has been a tentative discussion in the War and Navy Departments as to the ultimate consolidation of various Government departments using wireless telegraph ...
In the final hours it took the R.M.S. Titanic to sink, wireless telegraph operators issued a series of increasingly frantic messages calling for rescue. They went from detailed to desperate. The ...
The U.S. government will try to stop a company’s planned salvage mission to retrieve the Titanic’s wireless telegraph machine, arguing the expedition would break federal law and a pact … ...
When RMS Titanic set sail in 1912, it was blessed and cursed with the latest in communication technology—the wireless telegraph. In the last hours after Titanic hit an iceberg, radio messages ...
Titanic telegraph machine can be removed despite 'remains of more than 1,500 people' 'Transmissions sent among those ships’ wireless operators tell the story of Titanic’s desperate fate that ...
The recent announcement that wireless telegraph communication had been established on a commercial basis between Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, and Clifden, Ireland, has been followed by the usual storm ...
Saint-Pierre — a maritime historian who has studied artifacts recovered from the site of the 1914 shipwreck off the coast of ...
The Titanic could disappear in the next 20 years 02:14. A federal judge in Virginia has ruled that a salvage firm can retrieve the Marconi wireless telegraph machine that broadcast distress calls ...
A desperate drama played out in the Marconi wireless telegraph rooms of the doomed Titanic on the night it sank more than 100 years ago, killing about 1,500 people. Now, the story of the ship’s ...
A salvage firm wants to recover the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Machine that transmitted the ship's increasingly frantic distress calls. Read more on Boston.com.
A wireless telegraph machine, sometimes called the "voice of the Titanic" for its role in sending out distress messages on the fateful night in 1912 when the RMS Titanic cruise liner hit an ...