13 July 1866: The Great Eastern steamship [above], the
largest vessel afloat at that time, departed Valentia Island Co Kerry for
Newfoundland on this day. Its task was to attempt once again to try and lay a
working telegraph cable from Europe to the Americas.
‘It was the brainchild of American entrepreneur Cyrus Field,
who made two unsuccessful attempts before finally succeeding. The first officer
on the Great Eastern - the biggest vessel in the world at the time - was
Wicklow native Captain Robert Halpin. While Belfast born scientist and
engineer, Lord Kelvin, worked on the technical aspects of the cable. Prior to
the laying of the Transatlantic Cable it took approximately two weeks for
message from Europe to reach North America … weather permitting as all
communications were sent via boat.
The idea of a transatlantic cable was first proposed in
1845, but the distances and depths presented formidable problems. In 1856 the
Atlantic Telegraph Company was registered with a capital of £350,000 (then
about $1,400,000). On the American side Cyrus W. Field was the driving force;
on the British side it was Charles Bright and brothers John and Jacob Brett.
After so many failed attempts, the final, successful, cable
was laid with virtually no problems. On 27 July 1866, the cable was pulled
ashore at a tiny fishing village in Newfoundland known by the charming name of
Heart’s Content. The distance was 1686 nautical miles from Valentia Island. The
Great Eastern had averaged 120 miles a day while laying out the cable.
The first message sent on this, finally successful, cable
was: “A treaty of peace has been signed between Austria and Prussia”. Queen
Victoria, then at Osborne, in the Isle of Wight, sent a message to the
President of the United States. “The Queen congratulates the President on the
successful completion of an undertaking which she hopes may serve as an
additional bond of Union between the United States and England.'' *
Almost immediately, the cable opened for business but only
the very wealthy could afford it – the initial rates were a startling $1 a
letter, payable in gold – at a time that a monthly wage for a labourer might be
$20.''
http://www.valentiaisland.ie/explore-valentia/valentia-transatlantic-cable-station/
Launched at the Isle of Dogs, Kent, 31 January 1858, The
Great Eastern was 693 feet in length
(over 200 metres) 22,500 tons dead weight and had passenger accommodation for
over 3,000 passengers. Five times larger than any other ship then built, she
had six masts, five funnels, 6,500 yards of sail, two 58 ft paddle wheels, a 24
ft screw (which remains the biggest ever built) and a coal carrying capacity of
15,000 tons.
The ship’s Captain was Robert Charles Halpin of Co Wicklow
who led the successful attempt to repair the line and also layed thousands of
miles of vital cables to link together various far flung locations across the
Globe. This helped usher in the Age of Telegraphy which enabled men and nations
to communicate together at faster levels than ever before.
For the next 100 years Valentia Island was a major portal
for the dispatch and reception of messages between the distant continents in
what was for its time an 'Information Superhighway' in itself. The station
finally ceased being a conduit for transatlantic communication in 1966 when air
mail & satellites made it un-economic to maintain it any longer. It was an
end of an Era.
* No mention of Ireland!
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