Hi All,
In a Tumblety article Roger Palmer addressed the matter of the three-day delay between San Francisco Police Chief Crowley's 19th November telegram to Scotland Yard and Robert Anderson's 22nd November reply.
Roger wrote that, "In 1888 it was technologically impossible to send instantaneous messages between London and San Francisco."
All views on Tumblety's Ripper candidature aside, I had absolutely no reason to doubt this fact, until I read the following newspaper article from the New York Herald, 19th November 1888.
Admittedly these telegrams were not instantaneous, but it does seem that Victorian communications were blazingly fast and far more sophisticated than we might have imagined.
Regards,
Simon
In a Tumblety article Roger Palmer addressed the matter of the three-day delay between San Francisco Police Chief Crowley's 19th November telegram to Scotland Yard and Robert Anderson's 22nd November reply.
Roger wrote that, "In 1888 it was technologically impossible to send instantaneous messages between London and San Francisco."
All views on Tumblety's Ripper candidature aside, I had absolutely no reason to doubt this fact, until I read the following newspaper article from the New York Herald, 19th November 1888.
Admittedly these telegrams were not instantaneous, but it does seem that Victorian communications were blazingly fast and far more sophisticated than we might have imagined.
Regards,
Simon
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