SAMUEL F. B. MORSE - AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED 11/22/1863 CO-SIGNED BY: SARAH ELIZABETH MORSE - HFSID 31729
Price: $2,000.00
SAMUEL F.B. MORSE and SARAH E. MORSE
The two sign a 3-page, handwritten 1863 letter to their son Willy, away at school
Autograph letter signed: "Yr Affectionate Father/Saml F.B. Morse" and "Your loving
mother/S.E. Morse", 1 page, 4½x7½. 5 West 32nd Street, 1863 November 22. To their
son Willy. Samuel F. B. Morse married his second wife, Sarah Elizabeth Griswold, in
1848. In a three-page letter, Mrs. Morse writes about family affairs, about his pet
"Spottie is full of mischief. He tears many things that comes in his way." She tells him
she is "going to have somethings on Christmas" wanting to know if he has "enough
handkerchiefs…." Beneath his wife's signature, Morse writes, in part: "I add a few
lines to your dear mother's letter. She says the truth when she says she thinks of you every
day. Both you & dear Arthur are constantly in our thoughts…You must do all you can
to please Mrs. Charles, Mrs. Fay and the other teachers and be diligent in your
Studies…." Samuel Finley Breese Morse (1791-1872) was an American painter and
inventor. While attending Yale College Morse painted for a living and later studied art in
Europe.His first wife died suddenly and Morse, heartbroken, became determined to formulate
a faster way to send messages long distances.While returning by ship from Europe in 1832,
Morse encountered Charles Thomas Jackson of Boston, a man who was well schooled in
electromagnetism. Witnessing various experiments with Jackson's electromagnet, Morse
developed the concept of a single-wire telegraph. On May 24, 1844, using a code of
dots and dashes that he developed, sent the message, "What hath God wrought!" from
the Supreme Court room in the Capitol building to Baltimore, the first successful
application of the telegraph. In time the Morse code, which he developed, would become
the primary language of telegraphy in the world. It is still the standard for rhythmic
transmission of data. The original Morse telegraph, submitted with his patent application, is
part of the collections of the National Museum of American History at the Smithsonian
Institution. Light ink show-through. Normal mailing folds. Top right corner has small rip. Ink blot
on last page. Pencil note (unknown hand) on bottom left corner of first page. Otherwise, fine
condition.
Following an offer submission, users will be contacted at their account email address within 48 hours. Our response will be to accept your offer, decline your offer, or send you a final counteroffer. All offers can be viewed within the "Offer Review" area of your HistoryForSale account. Please review the Make Offer Terms prior to submitting an offer.
If you have not received an offer acceptance or counter-offer email within 24-hours please check your spam/junk email folder.