This morning while I was browsing the collections. I stumbled upon this image and caption. https://lccn.loc.gov/2011647929 I also found this secondary source explaining about re-enactors and military telegraph http://www.civilwarsignals.org/pages/tele/tele.html
I'll sadly admit that my main connection to the telegraph during the Civil War was the fact that armies strung telegraph wire between trees as what we might today describe as a form of military barbed wire. If there was telegraph wire it would make sense that there were telegraph operators. Interesting read to give me more background. Thanks!
Tom Bober http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82014635/1897-02-27/ed-1/seq-5/ This is an article about their qualifying for pensions. The military signal corps would telegraph weather conditions to the newspapers. I know I have seen articles from about late 1860's to early 1870's. I wonder if the military reports actually were the start of the weather service we know today?
This is a post I found today http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn88064005/1888-05-26/ed-1/seq-2/ telegraphs weather Science
Telegraphs definitely played a large role in real-time weather forecasting! I did a fair amount of research and discussion on this with Michael Apfeldorf when we were working on the Weather Forecasting Primary Source Set. If memory serves, the invention of the telegraph was a somewhat unspoken factor in the advancement of modern-day weather reporting and forecasting. The telegraph gets a mention in the Teacher Guide of the Primary Source Set. You can check it out here.
This post reminded me of something I submitted to the TPS Network a couple of years ago. I'll just include it here and it may give others some good resources to use in conjunction with study of the Union Telegraph Corps.:
I would like to make people aware of some wonderful new teaching materials being developed in a collaboration with The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens, North Carolina State University, The National Archives, The University of Minnesota, and The Papers of Abraham Lincoln. It is called Decoding the Civil War. About 2012 The Huntington Library in San Marino California was able to acquire the entire collection of telegraphic correspondence for The Union during The Civil War. This is the collection of the lead telegrapher Thomas T. Eckert. Through a collaboration with the crowdsourcing website Zooniverse the first step is to open the collections up to citizen historians to help transcribe and ultimately decode the thousands of messages in the collections. Units of study are being built around these telegraph messages and other primary source documents to help teachers bring these documents and this part of The Civil War to students in the classroom. These lessons contain primary source documents from The Library of Congress. I invite you to take a look at what is available and share with others who you know will be interested in this material. I am including the links here. Have some fun on Zooniverse helping to transcribe some of the telegraph messages yourself. For me it has been a way of looking directly into The Civil War in a form that I have not experienced before. I welcome any feedback, correspondence, or thoughts on this material and the lessons. I am excited to see how student work with and react to these materials. Please feel free to contact me about any questions or comments you have about these resources.
Wall Street Journal Article
Decoding the Civil War: Zooniverse Website
https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/zooniverse/decoding-the-civil-war
C3 Teachers: Decoding the Civil War
http://www.c3teachers.org/decoding/
On March 21 I will be attending an Educator Night at the Huntington about this work. It will be facilitated by John Lee from North Carolina State University. He helped put these materials together and he is also one of the writers of the C3 Framework. Please feel free to contact me with any questions or comments.
Thanks!
Raul Almada This is fabulous! What an amazing gift you have shared with us. I am blown away by what this could mean. Thank you!