Record Details
Book cover

Telegram! : modern history as told through more than 400 witty, poignant, and revealing telegrams

Book  - 2003
973.9 Ros
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Stamford Available
  • ISBN: 0805071016
  • Physical Description xv, 207 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
  • Edition 1st ed.
  • Publisher New York : H. Holt, 2003.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Includes index.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 25.95

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 0805071016
Telegram! : Modern History As Told Through More Than 400 Witty, Poignant, and Revealing Telegrams
Telegram! : Modern History As Told Through More Than 400 Witty, Poignant, and Revealing Telegrams
by Rosenkrantz, Linda
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Summary

Telegram! : Modern History As Told Through More Than 400 Witty, Poignant, and Revealing Telegrams


There was a time when the sight of a Western Union delivery boy coming up the walk filled Americans with a sense of excitement or trepidation. Between its invention in the mid-nineteenth century and its post-1960s relegation to money transfer and congratulations, the telegraph served as the primary medium for urgent messages.Telegram!collects the most poignant and revealing examples of this earliest form of instant communication. Organized into categories such as "Parents and Children," "Hooray for Hollywood," and "Lincoln in the Telegraph Office," the telegrams range from such moving personal notes as W.C. Fields's wire to his dying friend John Barrymore, "You can't do this to me," to political advice, such as one voter's telegraphed suggestion to President Herbert Hoover: "Vote for Roosevelt and make it unanimous." The communication compiled here also provides a novel and engaging perspective on modern history. Abraham Lincoln virtually conducted the Civil War over the telegraph wires, financial nabobs used them to discuss (and fail to predict) the stock market crash that precipitated the Great Depression, and Japanese diplomats in Washington sent a flurry of encoded telegrams to Tokyo in the weeks leading up to the attack on Pearl Harbor. This handsome volume blends history, sociology, wit, and creativity as captured and dispatched by the telegram in its golden age.