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- Date: Thu, 15 Oct 1992 00:11:49 -0500
- From: TELECOM Moderator <telecom@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
- Message-Id: <199210150511.AA11371@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
- To: ptownson@gaak.LCS.MIT.EDU
- Subject: 19th Century Telegraphers (Book Review)
- Status: R
-
- Date: Thu, 15 Oct 00:10:00 GMT
- Reply-To: TELECOM Moderator <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Organization: TELECOM Digest
-
- I received this interesting book review in my mail today and thought
- it worthwhile sharing with TELECOM Digest readers.
-
- PAT
-
- From: haynes@cats.UCSC.EDU (Jim Haynes)
- Date: Wed, 14 Oct 92 18:20:09 -0700
- Subject: 19th Century Telegraphers (Book Review)
-
-
- Book Review
-
- The American Telegrapher: a social history 1860-1900
- Edwin Gabler
- Rutgers University Press, 1988
- ISBN 0-8135-1284-0 (hardbound), 0-8135-1285-9 (paperback)
-
- I seem to read a lot of books which are at the same time both
- interesting and tedious. This is one such book. Written by an
- academic historian for reading by other academic historians, it is
- long on footnotes, theories, and statistics and short on
- flesh-and-blood storytelling; yet there is enough of the latter to
- entertain the casual reader. Part I of this review is an attempt to
- convey the general message of the book. Part II is for fun: a
- selection of stories about the lives and times telegraphers a century
- ago.
-
- Part I
-
- There are five chapters: a history of the Great Strike of 1883 as an
- introduction to the world of the operators; a description of the
- telegraph industry and especially Western Union; a social portrait of
- the telegraphers; a study of women telegraphers; and a summary of the
- labor movement and politics of telegraphers. An epilogue compares the
- situation of telegraphers in the 1880s with that of the air traffic
- controllers a hundred years later.
-
- Telegraph and railroad companies following the Civil War represented
- an entirely new kind of business, one in which the company's assets
- are strung out for hundreds or thousands of miles with offices and
- employees sprinkled along the lines. There were other affinities
- between the two kinds of companies. Railroads used telegraphy to
- support their own operations. Railroad rights-of-way were ideal
- places to run telegraph lines, affording easy access for construction
- and maintenance at a time when there were few roads. Telegraph
- business was likely to be found in the same places the railroads
- served. In many small towns the railroad station served as the public
- telegraph office, as there was not enough telegraph business to
- support an office for telegraph alone. Some railroads such as B & O
- operated their own public telegraph businesses. (cf. Southern Pacific
- a century later getting into the communications business.) Other
- railroads had contract arrangements with the telegraph companies,
- principally Western Union, for use of rights of way, interconnection
- of circuits, and providing public telegraph service at the railroad
- stations.
-
- These new kinds of businesses needed a new kind of management. The
- military became their model. Many of the top managers were alumni of
- the Civil War military telegraph system. The companies had divisions,
- rule books, general orders and special orders, and chains of command.
- Management style was authoritarian. As is the case with some
- companies today, the telegraph and railroad companies then were headed
- by a mixture of people who knew the business and those who were
- primarily financial wizards.
-
- Telegraph operators represented the beginning of a new social class,
- the lower-middle-class white-collar employees of large corporations.
- Many were the children of farmers or of city blue-collar workers. A
- great many were of Irish lineage. For all of these telegraphy offered
- a step up the social ladder as well as an escape from hard physical
- labor and city slums or rural isolation. Telegraphy was an occupation
- open to women, although the majority of operators were male (and, like
- the women, young and unmarried).
-
- The national economy was fairly flat or even deflationary during the
- period 1860-1890. Western Union profits rose handsomely throughout
- the period. The operators did not share in this prosperity. For one
- thing, there was an oversupply of them. First-class operators, who
- could send and receive thirty to forty words per minute for hours on
- end, were assigned to press and market reporting circuits. They could
- command pay two to three times as great as that of the second-class
- operators who made up the bulk of the force. Many operators learned
- the craft by hanging around small railroad and telegraph offices;
- others worked their way up from messenger and clerk jobs in larger
- offices; still others were trained at a number of schools that sprang
- up around the country. Most of the latter seem to have been
- disreputable if not completely fraudulent, operating for profit and
- promising high pay and mobility to rural youth. They were the
- century-ago counterparts of the for-profit data processing schools of
- our own times, the kind that advertised on matchbook covers and turned
- out an oversupply of under-qualified graduates for high tuition fees.
-
- Another financial problem for the telegraphers resulted from their new
- social class. Telegraphers' pay was on a par with that of skilled
- blue-collar workers; but their living expenses were greater. With the
- move to suits and ties and shined shoes they felt a need to live in
- middle-class housing, eat middle-class meals, and partake of
- middle-class entertainments.
-
- A few of the operators' perceptions of mistreatment by the companies
- were more apparent than real. The 1840s through 1860s had been a
- period when telegraphy was just getting started. Job opportunities
- were abundant and promotions were rapid. As the industry matured
- there were fewer spectacular success stories; telegraphy even seemed
- to be a dead-end job. Other complaints had a more solid foundation.
- Mergers of telegraph companies eliminated jobs. An economic downturn
- in the 1870s caused Western Union to institute across-the-board salary
- reductions, which were partially offset by monetary deflation.
- Operators tended to move around a lot, which allowed the company to
- hire cheaper replacements for those who left.
-
- The first attempt of telegraph workers to organize was the National
- Telegraphic Union of 1863. This was more of a mutual benefit society
- than a labor union. It provided members with sickness and funeral
- benefits and aimed to elevate the character of the members and promote
- just and harmonious relations with employers. With conditions for
- telegraphers growing worse after the Civil War the Telegraphers'
- Protective League was formed in 1868 as a very different kind of
- organization. It was a secret organization, because there was nothing
- at the time to protect its members from the unbridled power of their
- employers. Rather than relieving the sick and burying the dead it
- proposed to raise the members to a financial position in which they
- could take care of themselves.
-
- The TPL felt strong enough by January, 1870 to risk a strike against
- Western Union. It failed after about a week. There were just too
- many operators seeking work, especially in the winter season; the
- company was too strong; and the union was too poorly organized. The
- operators' situation continued to deteriorate through the 1870s as
- Western Union reduced wages, the number of would-be operators
- increased, and the company absorbed its competitors. An attempt to
- form another union in 1872 fizzled. In 1881 Jay Gould took over
- Western Union, moving the company closer to being a true national
- monopoly. By the summer of 1882 a number of regional labor
- organizations put aside their differences to form the Brotherhood of
- Telegraphers of the United States and Canada under the aegis of the
- Knights of Labor. The Brotherhood, unlike its predecessors, accepted
- the female operators as members.
-
- In July, 1883 the Brotherhood presented a list of grievances to
- Western Union and some other firms, hoping for at least a compromise
- settlement and at worst a short strike. When the company made no
- meaningful concessions the telegraphers walked out on July 19. At
- first things looked good for the Brotherhood. About three fourths of
- Western Union operators honored the strike. Public opinion was much
- on the side of the telegraphers, at least to the extent that it was
- against the side of Jay Gould and the W.U. monopoly. One competing
- telegraph company settled quickly with the union; and another (B & O)
- came close to, but never close enough. Union leaders worked hard to
- keep the public on their side, urging the strikers to be models of
- dignity and sobriety. The women were as valiant as the men, if not
- more so, in upholding the strike.
-
- Still, public sympathy did not feed the hungry; and the strike
- dwindled until it was officially called off August 17. Operators
- wishing to return to work had to sign a pledge of loyalty; those
- considered militant unionists were blacklisted by the company. Still,
- it appears the company was somewhat humbled by the power of the union
- and made a few concessions to the operators. Failure of the strike
- led to some ill feeling in the larger labor movement. The
- telegraphers accused the Knights of insufficient support; the Knights
- leadership felt the telegraphers had acted impulsively and without
- sufficient preparation. The Brotherhood soon withdrew from the
- Knights; and union activity reverted to local groups. Yet by 1885
- there was a new organization, the Telegraphers' Union of America,
- which rejoined the Knights in 1886. This seems to have faded away by
- the early 1890s along with the Knights. Railroad telegraphers formed
- the Order of Railway Telegraphers in 1886. An Order of Commercial
- Telegraphers was formed in 1890 but never amounted to much, and allied
- itself with the railway telegraphers in 1897-98. The next attempt to
- form a union didn't happen until 1907, with the Commercial
- Telegraphers' Union of America, which also suffered disaster in a
- strike against Western Union.
-
- Gabler concludes with a discussion of a number of labor and political
- issues affecting telegraphers. One of the Brotherhood's demands had
- been equal pay for equal work, male and female. This seems to have
- been widely hailed as the Right Thing to do. I wonder whether the
- male telegraphers supported the demand because it was right; or if
- they supported it because they knew if the companies had to pay men
- and women the same they would hire only men.
-
- Some wanted a craft union, with membership limited to telegraphers,
- with an apprenticeship program that would raise the quality of
- operators while reducing their numbers. There was some interest in
- government licensing of operators. Others favored an industrial
- union, open to all Western Union employees. Some objected to the
- secret fraternal rites that were a feature of the Knights of Labor;
- Catholic workers were forbidden to become members of secret
- organizations of any kind. The operators wanted to protect their new
- middle-class image by being models of respectability and sobriety;
- some of the linemen on the other hand had no scruples about cutting
- wires to increase pressure on the companies during a strike. Some
- felt that telegraphy should be a government monopoly, as was and still
- is the norm in Europe. Some saw salvation in a worker-owned
- cooperative, if they could only convince the banks or the government
- to put up the money necessary to establish the system. Others sought
- to improve the status of the working classes through political action;
- quite a number were attracted to the United Labor Party of Henry
- George. A hundred years later issues like these are still with us.
-
- Part II
-
- Dr. Gabler had access to a vast amount of material: census records,
- archives of the telegraph companies, contemporary newspaper accounts,
- magazines published for the edification and amusement of operators,
- and even novels in which telegraphers were used as characters. The
- footnotes and bibliography take up 48 pages. One page in the book is
- an illustration of advertisements in a telegraphers' magazine of 1883.
- They include a book on shorthand, a book of money-making secrets, a
- book on the mysteries of love-making, a book on fortune telling, watch
- charms with microscopic pictures, a book of advice to the unmarried, a
- package of stationery, a book on politeness, a book of letters for all
- occasions, playing cards with marked backs, a book of magic tricks, a
- book on business, and a book on ballroom dancing. The theme is that
- these appealed to working-class young adults who felt a need to learn
- how to behave properly as members of the middle-class.
-
- A number of telegraph operators rose to prominence. Thomas Edison and
- Andrew Carnegie are the best known; Theodore N. Vail was a founder of
- AT&T; others found success in business or politics; and almost all the
- upper management of Western Union was drawn from the ranks of
- operators. In 1885 there were five doctors and one dentist
- moonlighting as telegraph operators -- maybe medicine and dentistry
- didn't pay all that well in those days.
-
- Thomas Edison, as a young telegrapher in the 1860s, would work a full
- day and then stay in the office at night, listening to a press circuit
- to get high speed code practice. Later he worked the Boston end of a
- New York circuit with an operator named Jerry Borst. Operators formed
- friendships with their counterparts at the other end of the wires.
- The telegraph companies insisted that operators should work at
- whatever circuits they were assigned. Edison and Borst conspired to
- change three characters of the code, so that nobody else could copy
- their transmissions and they could always work together. Cockroaches
- were such a problem in the office that Edison devised a bug zapper to
- protect his lunch from the little beasties.
-
- Friendships over the wires were nourished during lulls in traffic by
- exchanges of jokes and local news, and by checker games. Sometimes
- love and courtship blossomed too. At other times operators were rude
- to one another. On one occasion two operators got so angry at each
- other that they arranged to meet at a town halfway between their posts
- and settle the matter with fists at 1:00 AM. "Salting" (sending too
- fast for the receiving operator) was a frequent source of irritation.
- Salting was also part of the common practice of hazing new operators.
-
- Operators frequently got privileges, such as free passes to theaters
- and on trains. With the chronic oversupply it was common for
- operators to travel back and forth across the country looking for
- work, or for better conditions. Operators didn't get vacations, paid
- or otherwise; but in the summer months telegraph offices would open in
- the resort towns where the rich took their vacations, and operators
- could find work there.
-
- In 1883 Western Union employed 444 telegraphers in New York City, 96
- in Boston, 88 in St. Louis, and 83 in Chicago. This seems to support
- a conjecture of mine that W.U. was weakened all its life by
- overattention to serving New York City and insufficient effort to
- develop the business in other parts of the country.
-
- There was friction between the city operators and the rural operators.
- The city operators were proud of their skills, and wanted to move the
- traffic. They resented they way country operators would frequently
- interrupt transmissions. The country operators, usually working in
- railroad depots, countered that telegraphy was but a small part of
- their duties. They had to answer questions from the public, sell
- tickets, meet trains, tend switches and signals, handle freight, and
- keep the lamps burning. They commonly worked shifts as long as twelve
- or even sixteen hours.
-
- Development of duplex and then quadruplex operation greatly increased
- the pressure on operators, as the receiving operators could not
- interrupt the senders. Gender stereotyping held that only male
- operators had the stamina to handle these heavily-loaded circuits; yet
- the book cites a number of examples of women who worked these
- circuits. Women were consistently paid less than men. The companies
- were well aware that women were a bargain compared with men, and
- continually tried to replace men with women.
-
- Nellie Welch had full charge of the telegraph office in Point Arena,
- California in 1886. She was eleven years old.
-
- Western Union and the Cooper Union Institute in 1869 jointly started a
- free eight-month telegraphy course for women. It lasted through the
- early 1890s, turning out about 80 graduates a year. They would first
- take non-paying jobs assisting regular operators, and then be hired as
- operators on lightly loaded city circuits. This school was much
- despised by men for its contribution to the oversupply problem,
- thought it probably hurt the opportunities for women more than those
- for men.
-
- Beginner and less-skilled operators were called "plugs" or "hams."
- (Note the endless controversy over the origin of the term "ham" for
- amateur radio operators.) The schools that turned out these operators
- were called "plug factories."
-
- Craft magazines sought to shame operators who taught telegraphy. They
- were urged to pass on the secrets of Morse only to brothers, sisters,
- sons, and daughters. At least one railroad operator quit his job
- rather than cooperate with a student placed with him by the company.
-
- ----------------
-
- [Moderator's Note: My thanks for this very interesting article.
- Digest readers are encouraged to send book reviews and other special
- articles like this to Telecom for distribution on the net. PAT]
-
-
-
-