Close
Logo
Cart (0)
Login
Register
0
Selected 
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
 Click here to refresh results
 Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
 Hide details
play button
Conceptually similar
Caselli's pantelegraph, 1874
AR921378 
Caselli's pantelegraph of 1865, (c1870). Artist: Anon
AR926328 
Alexander Glen's facsimile telegraph system, 1886
AR922551 
Facsimile or copying telegraph system by Amstutz of Cleveland, Ohio, USA, 1896.
AR922904 
Giant burning glass of the Academie des Sciences, Paris, 18th century, (1874).  Artist: Amedee Guillemin
AR922917 
Main station of the Exchange Telegraph Company, London, 1882.
AR923198 
Morse's first telegraph, 1837 (c1900). Artist: Sir John Gilbert
AR923137 
Cook and Wheatstone's 5-needle telegraph, 1837 (1915).
AR921390 
Morse electric printing telegraph, c1882.
AR923134 
Lord Kelvin's transatlantic telegraph, 1877. Artist: John Wright Oakes
AR923159 
Operator sending a message on a Morse electric printing telegraph, 1887.
AR923144 
Magnetism, c1850.
AR922846 
Operator receiving a message in Morse code on an electric printing telegraph, 1887.
AR923148 
Opening of the London to Paris telegraph link, 1852.
AR923174 
Lesage experimenting with the first electric telegraph, Geneva, 1774 (1876).
AR913566 
Lesage experimenting with the first electric telegraph, Geneva, 1774 (c1870).
AR913563 
Leclanche wet cell, an early storage battery, 1896.
AR924057 
Charles Wheatstone (1802-1875), British physicist, 19th century.
AR923741 
Leclanche wet cell, an early storage battery, 1887.
AR924053 
Leclanche wet cell, an early storage battery, 20th century.
AR924059 
Caselli's pantelegraph, 1874 
Caselli's pantelegraph, 1874. This device, invented by the Italian abbot and inventor Giovanni Caselli (1815-1891) was effectively an early fax machine. At the sending station the dispatch was written or drawn on sheet of metallized paper in thick insulating ink and placed on a curved plate. At the receiving station, a sheet of paper impregnated with potassium ferrocyanide was placed in a plate and a stylus produced an image on the impregnated paper. From Les Applications de la Physique by Amedee Guillemin. (Paris, 1874). 
Unique Identifier AR922561 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 4683px × 3729px 
Photo Credit HIP / Art Resource, NY 
 Add to lightbox
 Add to cart
Tags
19th century
Amedee
Amedee Guillemin
B&W
B/W
Black & White
Black and white
CASELLI
Chemistry
Communication
COMMUNICATIONS
concept
country
ELECTRIC
Electricity
FACSIMILE
fax machine
GIOVANNI
GIOVANNI CASELLI
Guillemin
Invention
Italian
Italy
LOCATION
Monochrome
NINETEENTH CENTURY
Oxford Science Archive
pantelegraph
Print Collector1
Science
Technology
TELECOMMUNICATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
Telegraph
TELEGRAPHY
Wood Engraving