HONORING
THE
LIFE AND ACHIEVEMENTS OF 19TH CENTURY ITALIAN-AMERICAN INVENTOR ANTONIO MEUCCI -- (House of Representatives - June 11, 2002)
[Page: H3308]
---
Mrs.
JO ANN DAVIS of
Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I move to suspend the rules and agree to the
resolution
(H. Res. 269) expressing
the sense
of the House
of Representatives to honor the life and achievements of 19th century
Italian-American
Inventor Antonio
[Page: H3309]
Meucci, and his
work in the invention
of the telephone.
The
Clerk read as follows:
H.
Res. 269
Whereas
Antonio
Meucci, the great Italian inventor, had a career that was both
extraordinary
and tragic;
Whereas, upon
immigrating
to New York, Meucci continued to work with ceaseless vigor on a project
he had begun in Havana,
Cuba, an
invention he later
called the ``teletrofono'', involving electronic communications;
Whereas Meucci set
up a rudimentary communications link in his Staten Island home that
connected
the basement with the first floor, and later, when his wife began to
suffer
from crippling arthritis, he created a permanent link between his lab
and
his wife's second floor bedroom;
Whereas, having exhausted
most of his life's savings in pursuing his work, Meucci was unable to
commercialize
his invention, though he demonstrated his invention in 1860 and
had
a description of it published in New York's Italian language newspaper;
Whereas Meucci never
learned English well enough to navigate the complex American business
community;
Whereas Meucci was
unable to raise sufficient funds to pay his way through the patent
application
process, and thus had to settle for a caveat, a one year renewable
notice
of an impending patent, which was first filed on December 28, 1871;
Whereas Meucci later
learned that the Western Union affiliate laboratory reportedly lost his
working models, and Meucci, who at this point was
living on
public assistance, was unable to renew the caveat after 1874;
Whereas in March 1876,
Alexander Graham Bell, who conducted experiments in the same laboratory
where Meucci's materials
had been
stored, was
granted a patent and was thereafter credited with inventing the
telephone;
Whereas on January
13, 1887, the Government of the United States moved to annul the patent
issued to Bell on the grounds of fraud and misrepresentation, a case
that
the Supreme Court found viable and remanded for trial;
Whereas Meucci died
in October 1889, the Bell patent expired in January 1893, and the case
was discontinued as moot without ever reaching
the underlying
issue of the true inventor of the telephone entitled to the patent; and
Whereas if Meucci had
been able to pay the $10 fee to maintain the caveat after 1874, no
patent
could have been issued to Bell: Now, therefore, be
it
Resolved, That it is the sense of the House of Representatives that the
life and achievements of Antonio Meucci should be recognized, and his
work
in the invention of the telephone should be acknowledged.
The
SPEAKER pro tempore.
Pursuant to the rule, the gentlewoman from Virginia (Mrs. Jo Ann Davis)
and the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr.
Davis) each
will control 20 minutes.
The
Chair recognizes
the gentlewoman from Virginia (Mrs. Jo Ann Davis).
GENERAL LEAVE
Mrs.
JO ANN DAVIS of
Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members may
have
5 legislative days within
which to
revise and extend
their remarks on House Resolution 269.
The
SPEAKER pro tempore.
Is there objection to the request of the gentlewoman from Virginia?
There
was no objection.
Mrs.
JO ANN DAVIS of
Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Mr.
Speaker, I am pleased
to have the House consider House Resolution 269, important legislation
introduced by my distinguished
colleague, the gentleman
from New York (Mr. Fossella).
This
resolution expresses
the sense of the House of Representatives in honoring the life and
achievements
of the 19th century Italian-American inventor, Antonio Meucci. We have
all grown up believing that Alexander Graham Bell invented the
telephone.
However, history must be rewritten if justice is to be done to
recognize
Meucci as the true inventor of the telephone.
[Time: 14:45]
Bell
was issued a patent
for the telephone in 1887. However, 17 years earlier, in 1860, it was
Meucci
who successfully demonstrated
his
electronic communications
link in his Staten Island, New York home, an invention he later called
the teletrofono.
Meucci
was a poor
man who never learned English and was unable to navigate the business
world.
He did not have the $10 needed to apply for a patent for his invention
and was never able to get the financial backing needed to pursue a
patent. Later,
following a
tragic accident
in which Meucci was severely burned, the laboratory where he worked on
his invention
supposedly lost
his
working models
needed to get a patent. Just a few years later, Bell who worked in the
same laboratory, earned
the patent for
the telephone.
The
story of Antonio
Meucci is not well known. While he has not received credit for his
invention
in our history books, the House of Representatives will today honor the
genius of the Italian American inventor Antonio Meucci.
Mr.
Speaker, I ask
all Members to support this resolution.
Mr.
Speaker, I reserve
the balance of my time.
Mr.
DAVIS of Illinois.
Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Mr.
Speaker, Antonio
Meucci was born in Florence, Italy in 1808. He was fond of chemistry
and
at the age of 17 conceived an improved powerful propeller to be used in
fireworks, so powerful that his little rockets lost control, caused
damage
to properties in the vicinity. This was the beginning of a life filled
with experiments and discoveries.
Meucci spent the
first
27 years of his life in Florence, Italy, 15 years in Havana, Cuba, and
39 years in Clifton, New York.
While in Havana,
Meucci discovered
the latest discoveries in electricity, electrochemistry and
electrotherapy
in his laboratory which was next to his apartment. In 1865 Meucci
wrote,
``At Havana, by means of some little experiments, I came to discover
that
with an instrument placed at the ear and with the aid of electricity
and
a metallic wire, the exact word could be transmitted holding the
conductor
in the mouth ..... ''. Meucci had discovered electrical speech
transmission.
Meucci and his wife,
Esther, moved to New York in 1850 where he established a very
successful
candle business. However, in 1854, his wife aggravated her rheumatoid
arthritis
to the point where she could seldom leave her bedroom in the third
floor
of the house.
Esther's illness stimulated
the resuming of Meucci's speaking telegraph, as it allowed her to
communicate
with him and others from her bedroom. Meucci established a telephone
link
from Esther's room to the basement as well as to a larger laboratory in
the yard. To call attention, a mechanical call bell was used, its wires
running parallel to those of the telephone. Only one instrument was
used
at each end, that was alternately brought to the ear or mouth of the
user.
Meucci received little credit for the invention he later called the
teletrofono.
This
resolution recognizes
his work, the importance of his efforts, and I am pleased to not only
support
it, but I also want to commend the gentleman for bringing it to the
attention
of all of the Members of this House and to the American people.
Mr.
Speaker, I reserve
the balance of my time.
Mrs.
JO ANN DAVIS of
Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I yield such time as he may consume to the
gentleman
from New York
(Mr. Fossella),
the
chief sponsor
of this bill.
Mr.
FOSSELLA. Mr. Speaker,
I thank the gentlewoman for yielding me time. I thank Members on both
sides,
the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Davis), as well as the gentleman from
New Jersey (Mr. Pascrell) for supporting this resolution.
Mr.
Speaker, it is
my strong belief that Italian Americans have contributed greatly to the
United States and continue to contribute proudly as
well. We
know Columbus discovered America. Two Italians signed the Declaration
of
Independence. Enrico
Fermi split
the atom, and
Captain Don Gentile, the fighting ace, was described by General Dwight
Eisenhower as a ``one-man
force.''
He, like so
many other Italian-Americans, did and were willing to give their life
in
defense of freedom and liberty
and
supporting these great
United States.
Mr.
Speaker, I wanted
to spend a few minutes today to honor an Italian American and former
Staten
Island resident who is often overlooked, as
announced
already, and his name was Antonio Meucci.
The
19th century was
a time of great technological innovation, as its birth heralded the
beginning
of the Industrial Revolution. However, unlike the
century just
ended and the new one we are beginning to explore, the rough-and-tumble
of our young Nation
had yet to
develop information
exchange to the extent we enjoy today.
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The
Founding Fathers
made America a guarantor of unprecedented and, to this day, unmatched
liberty.
This liberty included again an unprecedented appreciation for
intellectual
property rights. Today with our study of historical records and ability
to examine many disparate sources of information, we now know it is
likely
the invention of what we know today as a telephone took place in the
middle
of the 19th century rather than its end, and its creator is believed to
be Antonio Meucci. He worked for years to develop a new system of
electronic
communication. However, poor and sick, he was unable to keep the
patents
enforced and died before the courts could decide with finality whether
he or Alexander Graham Bell was the true inventor of the telephone.
It is
known that Meucci
demonstrated his device in 1860, that a description appeared in New
York's
Italian language newspaper,
and that
Western Union
received working models from Meucci but reportedly lost them.
It is
also known that
Meucci, due to his limited means, settled for a caveat, a one-year
renewable
notice of an impending patent, first filed
in 1871, but
which he was unable to pursue after 1874, while Alexander Graham Bell
was
not granted a patent until 1876.
Finally, it is known
that the Supreme Court of the United States directed the case to
proceed
to trial but Meucci died a short time later, rendering the case moot.
So
with these facts
before the House today, I ask for the passage of this resolution to
honor
the life and achievements long overdue of Antonio Meucci, a great
Italian
American and a former great Staten Islander.
Mrs.
JO ANN DAVIS of
Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr.
DAVIS of Illinois.
Mr. Speaker, I yield such time as he may consume to the gentleman from
New Jersey (Mr. Pascrell), one who represents
the feisty tradition
of Italians and of Italian Americans, and a great spokesman not only
for
Italy and Italian Americans, but a great spokesman for all of America.
Mr.
PASCRELL. Mr. Speaker,
I want to thank the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Davis) for yielding me
time.
Mr.
Speaker, first
I want to commend my good friend, the gentleman from New York (Mr.
Fossella).
How refreshing it is to talk about an Italian
American
out of the Hollywood spotlight and an Italian American not recognized.
If only we took the time in this society to deal with all ethnics,
people
of all racial persuasions in fairness, and that is what this resolution
is all about: Fairness, honesty, breaking the stereotypes that many of
us have learned; in fact, probably, taught without our even knowing.
We
recognize today
the life and achievements of Antonio Meucci. He was a pauper. He had
nothing.
He came here with nothing.
He could not
even put
$10 up for a patent application. And yet his life is one of brilliance
in science, particularly. He is only a footnote in our history books.
We
all know those great publishers that steer the education process of
America.
He earns, if he is lucky, a footnote. Indeed, many local libraries, if
you search for his name in a card catalog, you may come up empty. Yet, substantial
evidence exists
that he indeed developed the first telephone. It is Alexander Graham
Bell
who is most commonly
given
credit. After all,
it was he, and not Meucci, who was awarded one of the most valuable
patents
in American history. But the fact remains that Meucci's scientific
discoveries
concerning human voice transmission as well as his tangible teletrofono
preceded those of Bell.
In
fact, when you examine,
Mr. Speaker, how this all happened in a place where Meucci heard an
exclamation
of a friend who
was in another
room over a
piece of copper wire running between them, he realized immediately that
he had something that
was more
important than any
discovery he had ever made. But that realization also came with the
understanding
that to succeed
as
an
inventor, he would
need an environment that truly fostered his inquisitive mind and his
vibrant
spirit.
I
believe that it is
proper to honor the far-reaching contributions that Antonio Meucci made
to our society, and I am not the only one. The Government of the United
States and the Supreme Court agree with me. In this Supreme Court
document,
Mr. Speaker, it is very clear in the many pages laid out across the
record
that this is no ordinary young man in his struggle. In 1887 the
Government
moved to annul the patent issued to Bell on the grounds of
misrepresentation,
an indication that the Supreme Court found viable and remanded for
retrial.
This is only one of many published documents during the time, the late
1800s that outlined the case being made for Meucci, indeed, the case we
are making today on both sides of the aisle. In 1860 a description of
his
first telephone model was published, as the gentleman from New York
(Mr.
Fossella) pointed out, in an Italian language newspaper in New York
City,
16 years before Bell's patent.
Indeed, Meucci's extraordinary
career flourished upon immigrating to New York in 1850. His poor
finances,
his limited English,
his grasp of
the language
was not very good. It plagued him throughout his life. Yet, he worked
tirelessly
to bring long distance communication to a practical stage.
When
his wife fell
paralyzed in 1855, Meucci set up a telephone system which joined
several
rooms of his house with his workshop in another
building. This
was the first such installation anywhere; anywhere. Unfortunately,
Meucci
was unable to raise those funds to pay his way through the arduous
patent
application process. Instead, he had to settle for a caveat, which is a
one-year renewable notice of an impending patent. He first filed this
on
December 28, 1871. Three years later his finances were absolutely zero.
Living with the aid
of public assistance and unable to get a 7-A loan, which today we have
available through small business, Meucci was forced to allow the caveat
to lapse at the end of that year. Two years after the expiration of his
caveat, Alexander Graham Bell performed experiments in the same
laboratory
that Meucci worked, and he took out a patent for his own
voice-transmitting
device. The same laboratory.
It is
possible that
sometimes several inventors have the same idea at roughly the same
time.
In this case, what has mattered is not who had the idea for the
telephone
first, but who first turned the idea into a viable commercial
enterprise.
Let us not forget that if Antonio Meucci could have paid the $10 fee to
maintain his caveat, the Bell patent could not have been granted. Ten
dollars.
[Time: 15:00]
Let
us not forget that
the Supreme Court of the United States found that Meucci's case was
viable
and warranted a trial at a circuit court. It is unfortunate that Meucci
died before his case could even be continued and before a resolution
could
be reached
as to
who
truly invented
the telephone; but most importantly, let us not forget that Antonio
Meucci's
great contributions to science have had a profound impact on our modern
society.
Mr.
Speaker, many people
from many different nations have contributed to this greatest of all
democracies.
Antonio Meucci was one such person. He is a reflection of our brothers
and sisters from all over the world who came to this country with
nothing
and worked hard to make this a better place for mankind. Some heralded,
some not even a footnote in the library.
It is
fitting that
his efforts are recognized here today, and I thank the gentleman from
New
York for allowing me to work with him on this important resolution.
Mr.
DAVIS of Illinois.
Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
We
have no further
requests for time, and I would just like to close by thanking both the
gentleman from New York (Mr. Fossella) and the
gentleman from
New Jersey (Mr. Pascrell) for this tremendous depiction of history that
they have given us this afternoon, which reinforces my desire to be a
strong
supporter of this resolution; and it also reinforces how great and how
much opportunity there is that exists in this country. Every time we
pass
one small measure, in this instance, it might have been a microbusiness
loan that could have changed the history of our understanding of
telecommunications.
[Page: H3311]
Mr.
Speaker, I yield
back the balance of my time.
Mrs.
JO ANN DAVIS of
Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to yield 1 minute to the gentleman
from New York (Mr. Fossella).
Mr.
FOSSELLA. Mr. Speaker,
I just wanted to add and commend the two gentlemen, the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Davis)
and especially
the gentleman
from New Jersey (Mr. Pascrell) for a very strong and passionate defense
in support of the life of a great American and great inventor and
merely
add to the course, so to speak, that he was emblematic and remains so
as
a representative of all those who have come to this country to seek a
better
life and an opportunity and, in particular, to those Americans of
Italian
descent who have and will continue to make this the greatest country in
the history of the world and in a small way and a long overdue way but
in a small measure. I would ask my colleagues to support it.
Mrs.
JO ANN DAVIS of
Virginia. Mr. Speaker, the story of Antonio Meucci is a tragic one, and
although he successfully demonstrated his
electronic communication
years before Alexander Graham Bell received a patent for the telephone,
Meucci has
been
all but
forgotten.
This
resolution attempts
to remedy this oversight and give credit to one of history's great
inventors.
Meucci should be remembered
with other
innovators,
like Edison, the Wright Brothers, and Marconi, whose vision and
tenacity
changed our lives for the better.
Mr.
Speaker, I urge
all Members to support this resolution.
[Begin
Insert]
Mr.
ISRAEL. Mr. Speaker,
I rise today to honor a great New Yorker and a great inventor, Antonio
Meucci. As the first member of the House
to join with
our colleague from New York, Mr. Fosella, on this resolution, I am
gratified
that it is coming before us today.
House
Resolution 269
honors the life and achievements of Antonio Meucci, who came to New
York
in 1950. Born in San Frediano, near
Florence, Italy
in April 1808, he was an inventor through and through. He constantly
read
scientific tracts and conducted experiment after experiment. He went to
Havana in 1835 to work as a stage technician. It is there that he had
the
first inkling of his greatest invention.
Meucci developed a
type of electro-shock treatment for the ill. While preparing to
administer
one of his treatments, Meucci heard his patient say something from the
next room over the piece of copper wire running between them. This was
the event that sparked his breakthrough.
Meucci spent the next
ten years bringing the idea of voices being transmitted over wire to a
practical stage. With this goal, he left Cuba for New York in 1850.
There
he found many other Italians who had left their native land, including
the great revolutionary Garibaldi, who stayed in Meucci's Staten Island
home.
During his time in
New York he had success with his invention. After his wife became ill
in
1855, he installed a kind of intercom system in
his house, the
first installed anywhere in the world. Five years later, he was
arranging
demonstrations to attract
financial
backing. Unfortunately,
nothing came of this, and he spent a considerable time in poverty. His
poverty forced him to sell rights to his inventions to others, and he
never
filed for a patent on a telephone. After an accident left the inventor
hospitalized, his wife sold all of his inventions, including the
telephone
prototype, to help pay for his treatment. The ``secondhand dealer''
resold
the items to an ``unknown young man.'' To this day, we do not know the
identity of this unknown young man.
Meucci tried to reconstruct
his invention, but unable to raise the $250 needed for a patent, a
considerable
sum in 1871, he filed
a ``notice of
intent'' on
December 28, 1871, which he renewed for two years, but not after. He
tried
to sell his ``Talking Telegraph''
to the
newly established
Western Union Telegraph Company, asking permission to demonstrate it
over
their wires. That test never got set up, and in 1876, Alexander Graham
Bell filed a patent.
Meucci instructed his
lawyer to protest to the U.S. Patent Office, but his lawyer failed to
do
so. A friend did contact the office, only to learn
that all
the documents filed by Meucci had been lost. Later investigation
produced
evidence of illegal relationships
linking
certain employees
of the Patent Office and officials of Bell's company.
Antonio Meucci was
a brilliant inventor but a poor businessman. Despite his lack of
success
in business, he most certainly invented the telephone. He is honored in
my district with a road named for him in Copiague. I am proud that we,
the entire House of Representatives, today will honor this man who has
been overlooked by history for too long.
Ms.
JACKSON-LEE of
Texas. Mr. Speaker, I add my voice to the praise and honor of Antonio
Meucci
who, through his work
toward the
invention of the
telephone, has brought the world together as few others have. Through
his
ingenuity and perseverance,
this
Italian-American
changed the way the world communicates, although as a newcomer to
America,
he was often
thwarted by his
own inability
to communicate with those who could have, and should have given him the
recognition he deserved.
Antonio Meucci came
to America, pursuing his dream of introducing his ``Talking Telegraph''
to the world, and hoping to make a living doing
so. Instead,
he struggled against his own meager beginnings--not having the money or
verbal skills he needed
to protect his
intellectual
property. He also struggled against the incompetence and greed of
others.
Tragically, this extraordinary
man's
decade-long
struggle for justice ended in poverty and frustration. I am pleased
that
we are finally helping him attain his rightful place in history.
I
strongly support
H.R. 269, honoring a man who embodies the travails of the American
Immigrant
experience--Antonio Meucci,
the true
inventor of the
telephone.
[End Insert]
Mrs.
JO ANN DAVIS of
Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
The
SPEAKER pro tempore
(Mr. Dan Miller of Florida). The question is on the motion offered by
the
gentlewoman from Virginia
(Mrs. Jo Ann
Davis) that
the House suspend the rules and agree to the resolution, H. Res. 269.
The
question was taken;
and (two-thirds having voted in favor thereof) the rules were suspended
and the resolution was agreed
to.
A motion to reconsider was laid on the table.
END
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