The thrilling story of the nineteenth centuryâs Apollo moonshot: an Atlantic-spanning telegraph cable that created the global village and changed the world.
In 1854, the American entrepreneur Cyrus Field set out to lay a 2,000-mile telegraph cable across the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. Nothing like it had ever been attempted. Field knew nothing about telegraphy, electricity, ships, or oceans, and science itself still lacked a universal theory of electricity. But he believed that wiring the world for near-instantaneous communication would bring about peace on Earth. In 1866, after enduring over a decade of global scorn, catastrophic failures, staggering losses, and brushes with death, he would finally lay his great cable, ushering in the global information age. From acclaimed author James M. Tabor, Lightning Beneath the Sea is an unforgettable tale of radical vision, unwavering determination, and triumph against overwhelming odds that transformed life on Earth forever.
In a propulsive narrative, Tabor tells how Field swiftly assembled an all-star scientific dream team that included telegraph legend Samuel F. B. Morse; a young Lord Kelvin, called the da Vinci of his day; Michael Faraday, the father of electrical engineering; and legendary philanthropist Peter Cooper. Together they battled epic storms, freak accidents, corporate sabotage, the enmity of Abraham Lincoln, and the hubris of the projectâs original chief electricianâan eccentric who insisted on being called Wildmanâwhile racing two rival efforts to establish telegraphic communications between continents. When it was finally done, Fieldâs cable lay up to 2.5 miles deep under the ocean, and the London Daily News announced: âTime and space seem literally annihilated.â The cableâs legacy can be traced today in the hundreds of descendants that still carry 98 percent of the worldâs information through a âworld undersea web.â
Deeply researched and written with verve, Lightning Beneath the Sea is the gripping account of an epochal achievement.
The thrilling story of the nineteenth centuryâs Apollo moonshot: an Atlantic-spanning telegraph cable that created the global village and changed the world.
In 1854, the American entrepreneur Cyrus Field set out to lay a 2,000-mile telegraph cable across the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. Nothing like it had ever been attempted. Field knew nothing about telegraphy, electricity, ships, or oceans, and science itself still lacked a universal theory of electricity. But he believed that wiring the world for near-instantaneous communication would bring about peace on Earth. In 1866, after enduring over a decade of global scorn, catastrophic failures, staggering losses, and brushes with death, he would finally lay his great cable, ushering in the global information age. From acclaimed author James M. Tabor, Lightning Beneath the Sea is an unforgettable tale of radical vision, unwavering determination, and triumph against overwhelming odds that transformed life on Earth forever.
In a propulsive narrative, Tabor tells how Field swiftly assembled an all-star scientific dream team that included telegraph legend Samuel F. B. Morse; a young Lord Kelvin, called the da Vinci of his day; Michael Faraday, the father of electrical engineering; and legendary philanthropist Peter Cooper. Together they battled epic storms, freak accidents, corporate sabotage, the enmity of Abraham Lincoln, and the hubris of the projectâs original chief electricianâan eccentric who insisted on being called Wildmanâwhile racing two rival efforts to establish telegraphic communications between continents. When it was finally done, Fieldâs cable lay up to 2.5 miles deep under the ocean, and the London Daily News announced: âTime and space seem literally annihilated.â The cableâs legacy can be traced today in the hundreds of descendants that still carry 98 percent of the worldâs information through a âworld undersea web.â
Deeply researched and written with verve, Lightning Beneath the Sea is the gripping account of an epochal achievement.