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  2. 1 day ago · “The Telephone Tangle,” art by Steve Stiles and Bob McLeod. Again with the clever! Shortly before getting the assignment to write an Atom story for this one-shot anthology, I’d read an article in American Heritage magazine about Elisha Gray, who applied for the telephone patent later the same day as Alexander Graham Bell in 1876.

  3. 4 days ago · Cahill, like Elisha Gray who had invented the musical telegraph, had also been a student at Oberlin College, where he studied the physics of music. Cahill took inspiration from Gray’s earlier invention, but thought it could be much improved, and intended to create an instrument to be played over the phone lines.

  4. 4 days ago · One such story is that of Alexander Graham Bell and Elisha Gray, who both invented a telephone device around the same time. However, Bell managed to file a patent application a few hours earlier than Gray. Consequently, Bell is credited as the inventor of the telephone, and he reaped the financial benefits.

  5. 3 days ago · On January 25th, 1915, Alexander Graham Bell made the call from his office on 15 Dey Street in the Financial District of Manhattan to his assistant Thomas Agustus Watson in San Francisco.

  6. 5 days ago · Alexander Graham Bell: the telephone. On 14 February 1876, Alexander Graham Bell took out a patent for his telephone at the United States Patent Office, two hours before Elisha Gray announced a similar device. In a short film made in 1930, an actor played the part of Alexander Graham Bell.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Bell_LabsBell Labs - Wikipedia

    4 days ago · The Bell Patent Association was formed by Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Sanders, and Gardiner Hubbard when filing the first patents for the telephone in 1876. Bell Telephone Company, the first telephone company, was formed a year later. It later became a part of the American Bell Telephone Company.

  8. 3 days ago · Alexander Graham Bell, pioneer of telecommunication and an alumnus of University College London (UCL), was awarded the first U.S. patent for telephone in 1876. After 90 years in 1966, Kao and Hockham published their groundbreaking article in fiber-optic communication .