Showing 4 items matching "morse tape"
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National Communication MuseumTool - Morse Inker Tape
... Morse Inker Tape......morse tape...Small wooden case (.1) holding a length of morse tape (.2) which was the first telegram ever sent in Western Australia . ...Accompanying signs and decoded message (.4,.5). Tool Morse Inker Tape ...This tape is from the first telegram ever sent in Western Australia. This important event occurred on 21 June 1869. At this time the transmitted message was received on paper tape and later transcribed onto a telegram form for delivery. The original tape was presented to the Honourable Frederick Palgrave Barlee, Colonial Secretary of Western Australia, as a souvenir. "FPB" appears on an engraved shield on the lid. James Coats Fleming, the first telegraphist and later Superintendent of Telegraphs, sent the telegram. During 1875, Colonial Secretary Barlee transferred from Perth to Belize and then to Trinidad where he died in 1884. The fate of the case and spool, souvenir of that first telegram, was unknown. In July 1940, the WA Agent-General in London advised the Premier's Department in Western Australia that a Mrs EW Hillyer of Hertfordshire had the spool and case and was willing to sell it for ten guineas ($21). The Postmaster General's Department agree to the purchase and it duly arrived by registered mail. As a communications museum was planned in Melbourne, it was sent there to be included in the collection. Nothing more was heard until early 1980s when the relic arrived at the Post and Telecommunication museum in Perth. The case had been found in an old Melbourne strongroom where it had apparently been placed for safe-keeping and then forgotten. Initial attempts to decode the message on the tape were unsuccessful. Eventually, it was discovered that the Western Australian Telegraph Company, responsible for that first transmission, had devised its own code. A copy was obtained from the Battye Library and the message deciphered.This Morse tape is of historic significance as the first telegram ever sent in Western Australia. The occasion was momentous as the transition point between isolation and ease of connection for business and personal communications. The case is of aesthetic interest for the craftsmanship involved in the engraved text. Further, the tape has research potential owing to the unique information contained within this tape; that is, the code of the Western Australian Telegraph Company. This tape, may in turn be used to decode further messages sent by the Western Australian Telegraph Company. As the first telegraph message sent in Western Australia, this tape is rare. Despite a tumultuous journey from 1869 to the early 1980s, the tape's ceremonial wooden case provides provenance information which supports the tape's historic importance.Small wooden case (.1) holding a length of morse tape (.2) which was the first telegram ever sent in Western Australia . Wound onto a mother of pearl reel (.3). Accompanying signs and decoded message (.4,.5)..1 engraved on a metal shield shaped plaque on the lid: "WESTERN AUSTRALIAN / TELEGRAPHS / FPB" Inside: 'TRANSLATION OF REGISTER / TO THE CHAIRMAN OF FREMANTLE TOWN TRUST / His Excellency Colonel Bruce heartily congratulates the / inhabitants of Fremantle on this annihilation of distance / between the Port and the Capital, and he requests that this, / the first message, may be made publicly known. / GOVERNMENT HOUSE, / PERTH, June 21, 1869 / Transmitted 11 am / J.C.F."|.2: "Instrument Register / of the First / Telegraphic Message / in / Western Australia"|.3: "The first Telegraph Pole / in / WESTERN AUSTRALIA / was erected by / The Hon. Frederick P. Barlee / Colonial Secretary / on 19th Febr. 1869"telegram, commemorative item, morse inker, morse tape, morse code, code, postmaster-general's department -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)Equipment - Equipment, Army, Trainer - Morsecode
... Metal, plastic, pale blue paint, black and silver knobs, On/Off switch, morse key. Sticky taped on white paper reads Morse Code Trainer....This item was donated by Leading Aircraftman Gregory Frederick Mead (A316860) who was with the Royal Australian Air Force and served in Vietnam with Base Support Flight from May 1968 to September 1968 and No. 1 Operational Support Unit from September 1968 to May 1969 Signals Trainer Morse Code Leading Aircraftman Gregory Frederick Mead A316860 Royal Australian Air Force RAAF Base Support Flight No. 1 Operational Support Unit NS No. 5805-99-580-8558 Key telegraph F.I.L.71 Ser.No 2353 Metal, plastic, pale blue paint, black and silver knobs, On/Off switch, morse key. Sticky taped on white paper reads Morse Code Trainer. ...This item was donated by Leading Aircraftman Gregory Frederick Mead (A316860) who was with the Royal Australian Air Force and served in Vietnam with Base Support Flight from May 1968 to September 1968 and No. 1 Operational Support Unit from September 1968 to May 1969Metal, plastic, pale blue paint, black and silver knobs, On/Off switch, morse key. Sticky taped on white paper reads Morse Code Trainer.NS No. 5805-99-580-8558 Key telegraph F.I.L.71 Ser.No 2353signals, trainer, morse code, leading aircraftman gregory frederick mead, a316860, royal australian air force, raaf, base support flight, no. 1 operational support unit -
Kiewa Valley Historical SocietyBook - Kergunyah Telephone Numbers
... morse code, eg. 1 long 2 short. Also ref. KVHS 0897 Mt Beauty Switchboard This book is a list of residents living at Kergunyah who have a phone and lists their phone numbers. Kergunyah is in the Kiewa Valley. The book also notes some problems with the line eg. 'suspect sheath damage'. kergunyah telephone kiewa valley switchboard "Kergunyah" on front cover Stiff beige cardboard cover bound by black tape ...In rural Australia phone calls were made through the switchboard usually situated at the local post office. This book lists the residents of Kergunyah and their phone numbers. If you want to talk to a neighbour for example, you ask for that person or give the operator their number. The switchboard operator 'puts the caller through'. However some people shared a number and were therefore on a party line eg. in this book 6 people share number 3. The operator would then ring the individual's code, like morse code, eg. 1 long 2 short. Also ref. KVHS 0897 Mt Beauty SwitchboardThis book is a list of residents living at Kergunyah who have a phone and lists their phone numbers. Kergunyah is in the Kiewa Valley. The book also notes some problems with the line eg. 'suspect sheath damage'. Stiff beige cardboard cover bound by black tape "Subscribers' M.D.F. / Record" printed on centre of cover. 7 pages but only written on pages 2 and 3 with residents' names and phone numbers in columns."Kergunyah" on front coverkergunyah, telephone, kiewa valley, switchboard -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and VillageMorse key
... Morse key telegraphic printer, 250 ohm resistors inward and outward switch and teleprinter with tape reel to record messages spare wheel on wood base to collect and store full reels from teleprinter....Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village 89 Merri Street Warrnambool great-ocean-road flagstaff hill warrnambool shipwrecked-coast flagstaff-hill flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum maritime-museum shipwreck-coast flagstaff-hill-maritime-village morse key teleprinter telegraphic printer codes signals communication telegraphy Morse key telegraphic printer, 250 ohm resistors inward and outward switch and teleprinter with tape reel to record messages spare wheel on wood base to collect and store full reels from teleprinter. ...Morse key telegraphic printer, 250 ohm resistors inward and outward switch and teleprinter with tape reel to record messages spare wheel on wood base to collect and store full reels from teleprinter.flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, morse key, teleprinter, telegraphic printer, codes, signals, communication, telegraphy
