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Topic: Meucci


  
  Meucci
This figure shows that Meucci, holding in his left hand an instrument similar to that of the patient, was bending down to switch on the current, by manually connecting one end of the wire to one end of the battery.
Meucci's second experiment in Havana was performed shortly after his first one and was mainly aimed at preventing the patient from undergoing a strong electrical shock.
Meucci's experiments, both in Havana and Clifton, on the electrical transmission of the human voice, are basically substantiated by Meucci's own testimony at the Bell/Globe trial of 1885-1886 and by some fifty affidavits, sworn by various witnesses between 1880 and 1885.
chem.ch.huji.ac.il /~eugeniik/history/meucci.html   (5978 words)

  
  Antonio Meucci
Inventor of the telephone, Antonio Santi Giuseppe Meucci was born in Florence, Italy, moving to Havana, Cuba in 1835 and relocating to New York in 1850.
Meucci discovered the principle of the telephone in 1849 and developed a working model by 1859.
The Meucci circuit diagrams, notarized in September 1885 (though dated 27 September 1870), clearly predate the work of Pupin, Campbell, Heavyside and Vaschy, and the contested Alexander Graham Bell patent.
freemasonry.bcy.ca /biography/meucci_a/meucci_a.html   (193 words)

  
  Antonio Meucci - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Meucci was born in San Frediano, a borough of Florence.
Meucci constructed a form of telephone around 1854 as a way to connect his second-floor bedroom to his basement laboratory, as his wife was an invalid suffering from rheumatism.
Meucci was recognised as the first inventor of the telephone by the United States House of Representatives, in House Resolution 269, dated 11 June 2002.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Antonio_Meucci   (506 words)

  
 CalendarHome.com - - Calendar Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Meucci's electromagnetic telephone was described in L'Eco d'Italia of New York at the beginning of 1861, though all issues of the 1861-1863 period are not available in the major libraries of the United States.
Meucci states that he employs the well-known conducting effect of continuous metallic conductors as a medium for sound, and increases the effect by electrically insulating both the conductor and the parties who are communication.” As originally expressed by Mr.
In 1856 Meucci constructed the first electromagnetic telephone, made of an electromagnet with a nucleus in the shape of a horseshoe bat, a diaphragm of animal skin, stiffened with potassium dichromate and keeping a metal disk stickened in the middle.
encyclopedia.calendarhome.com /cgi-bin/encyclopedia.pl?p=Antonio_Meucci   (5409 words)

  
 Tiziano Thomas Dossena: Meucci, the Forgotten Genius.
Meucci was cautioned by supportive compatriots to avoid bringing any inventions to American industrial firms without a legal protection: he needed a patent.
Meucci, unable to obtain a patent, secured a caveat, a legal document that declared the invention to be successfully developed, a more economic alternative to the patent.
The Meucci caveat remains to this day on public record, but during the lengthy trial proceedings, it "could never be found at all in the patent records".
www.dossena.org /tiziano/meucci.html   (880 words)

  
 The Garibaldi Meucci museum on Staten Island, New York
The house in Rosebank was furnished with art-nouveau furniture Meucci handcrafted and a few pieces are on display there, along with models and records of his inventions.
On Staten Island, Meucci improved the prototype and ran lines between his wife’s bedroom, as she was now an invalid, down the stairs, through the house, and out the window, extending some distance to the factory building.
Antonio Meucci lived to 1889, and throughout his old age, he battled the monopoly in court trying to confirm his rights to the patented invention.
wvwv.essortment.com /guiseppegariba_obg.htm   (1267 words)

  
 Guardian Unlimited | The Guardian | Bell did not invent telephone, US rules
When Meucci's wife, Ester, became paralysed he rigged a system to link her bedroom with his neighbouring workshop and in 1860 held a public demonstration which was reported in New York's Italian-language press.
Meucci could not afford the $250 needed for a definitive patent for his "talking telegraph" so in 1871 filed a one-year renewable notice of an impending patent.
Meucci sued and was nearing victory - the supreme court agreed to hear the case and fraud charges were initiated against Bell - when the Florentine died in 1889.
www.guardian.co.uk /international/story/0,3604,738675,00.html   (631 words)

  
 Hearing through Wires
Meucci powered telephones with electricity taken from the ground through special earth batteries, and from the sky by using large surface area diodes to draw static from the air.
Meucci settled the matter by obtaining a caveat, a legal document which was considerably cheaper than the patent.
Meucci requested a test of his teletrofoni on one of the Telegraph Lines and was promised assistance and cooperation.
www.borderlands.com /archives/arch/hearing.htm   (7900 words)

  
 Antonio Meucci - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Antonio Santi Giuseppe Meucci, (born 13 April 1808, died 18 October 1896) was an Italian inventor; he is credited as the inventor of the telephone.
Meucci was born in, a borough of Florence.
They emigrated to the Americas, stopping first in Cuba, where Meucci accepted a job at in Havana.
www.bexley.us /project/wikipedia/index.php/Antonio_Meucci   (466 words)

  
 Olimpia Meucci, MD, PhD | Department of Pharmacology and Physiology | Drexel University College of Medicine
Meucci O., Fatatis A., Simen A.A., and Miller R.J. Expression of CX3CR1 chemokine receptors on neurons and their role in neuronal survival.
Meucci O., Fatatis A., Holzwarth J. and Miller R.J., Developmental regulation of the toxin sensitivity of Ca2+ permeable AMPA receptors in cortical glia.
Galli C., Meucci O., Scorziello A., Werge T.M., Calissano P., and Schettini G., Apoptosis in cerebellar granule cells is blocked by high KCl, forskolin, and IGF-1 through distinct mechanisms of action: the involvement of intracellular calcium and RNA synthesis.
www.pages.drexel.edu /~om29/publications   (321 words)

  
 ANTONIO MEUCCI
Meucci was an enigmatic character, a man unable to overcome his own lack of managerial and entrepreneurial talent, a man tormented by his inability to communicate in any language other than Italian.
In 1860, when the instrument had become practical, Meucci organized a demonstration to attract financial backing in which a singer's voice was clearly heard by spectators a considerable distance away.
When Meucci sought to buy these precious objects back, he was told that they had been resold to an "unknown young man" whose identity remains a mystery to this day.
www.italianhistorical.org /MeucciStory.htm   (1098 words)

  
 Bell cut off as phone inventor - theage.com.au
When Meucci's wife, Ester, became paralysed, he rigged a system to link her bedroom with his neighbouring workshop and in 1860 held a public demonstration.
Meucci could not afford the $250 needed for a definitive patent so in 1871 filed a one-year renewable notice of an impending patent, but could not afford to renew it.
Meucci sued and was nearing victory - the supreme court agreed to hear the case and fraud charges were initiated against Bell - when the Florentine died in 1889.
www.theage.com.au /articles/2002/06/17/1023864404146.html   (369 words)

  
 Meucci Ranch - Appaloosa Horses - Appaloosas For Sale
The herd at Meucci Ranch is strongly unabashedly influenced by: Three Bars, Impressive Tardy, Kelo, Kid Clu, Sonny D Bar and The Phenomenal.
Bob and Ruth Meucci are always happy to welcome visitors by appointment, and enjoy sharing their appreciation of a good horse with their Mississippi neighbors as well as their Appaloosa friends from around the world.
Meucci Ranch specializes in breeding world-class appaloosa horses.
www.meucciranch.com   (1006 words)

  
 PowerPedia:Antonio Meucci - PESWiki
Meucci was born in San Frediano, a borough of Florence, Italy.
Meucci constructed a form of telephone in 1857 as a way to connect his second-floor bedroom to his basement laboratory, as his wife was an invalid suffering from rheumatism.
Meucci died before the Court reached a verdict and the case was closed.
peswiki.com /index.php/PowerPedia:Antonio_Meucci   (960 words)

  
 Meucci 9711
Meucci cues are built with one priority in mind - give every player more power with less effort.
Meucci builds shafts and butts that are more flexible causing less cue ball deflection and increased amplification of stroke while diminishing warpage.
Meucci's are the only cues balanced far enough back for automatic grip positioning every time.
www.qstix.com /meucci-9711-p-174.html   (385 words)

  
 Antonio Meucci - Questions and Answers
A telephone link is established between Meucci's two laboratories (one in the basement of his cottage, the other in the yard) and the bedroom of his wife, Esther, crippled by arthritis, located at the third floor of the cottage.
Meucci's caveat does not contain the entire specification and drawings that Meucci had handed to his patent lawyer in order to apply for a regular patent.
Obviously, the request by Meucci's lawyers was aimed to protect their client as much as possible from possible misunderstandings and was fully justified by the importance of the proceeding.
www.esanet.it /chez_basilio/meucci_faq.htm   (9319 words)

  
 fUSION Anomaly. Hearing Through Wires: The Physiophony of Antonio Meucci
Meucci’s next experiments dealt with the development of a means for separating the physiophonic action from the human body entirely.
Meucci settled the matter by obtaining a caveat, a legal document which was considerably cheaper than the patent.
Meucci requested a test of his teletrofoni on one of the Telegraph Lines and was promised assistance and cooperation.
fusionanomaly.net /hearingthroughwiresthephysiophonyofantoniomeucci.html   (7798 words)

  
 Meucci: The Real Inventor of the Telephone
On the past June 15th, 2002, the US Congress officially recognized that the italian inventor Antonio Meucci is to be credited for the invention of the telephone, and not Alexander G. Bell, as so far claimed.
Initially obsessed with medical uses of electricity, Meucci realized soon that one could transmit voice via wire, and between 1850 and 1862 he developed at least 30 different models of telephone, although he was too poor to protect his inventions with a patent (this would have costed him $250, that he did not have).
After 113 years, the Congress on request of an italian-american representative officially stated that Meucci was to be considered the inventor of the telephone.
www.dickran.net /history/meucci_bell.html   (491 words)

  
 Telephone: Meucci and Bell
Antonio Meucci was born in 1808, and studied mechanical engineering and design in Florence at the Academy of Fine Arts.
Meucci could not afford the expensive $250 fee to take out a patent on his invention, and instead filed a one year notice of impending (meaning coming soon) patent in 1871.
However in 2002, 113 years after Meucci's death, the American Congress recognised officially that it was Meucci and not Bell who invented the telephone.
www.kidcyber.com.au /topics/agbell.htm   (331 words)

  
 Pool Fool - Meucci Pool Cues
Meucci pool cues are built with one priority in mind - give every player more power with less effort.
Meucci's are the only pool cues balanced far enough back for automatic grip positioning every time.
Bob Meucci not only lends his name to Meucci cues, he personally creates the look and feel of each Meucci cue what is arguably the most well known cue in the world.
www.pool-tables-cues.com /categories/Meucci-Cue/152/1   (321 words)

  
 News Flash: U.S. House of Representatives Says Alexander Graham Bell Did Not Invent the Telephone
On June 11, to little fanfare, the United State House of Representatives declared that the telephone was invented by an Italian-American named Antonio Meucci, a sausage and candle maker.
Meucci claimed that "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." Bruce says he was deluded.
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.
hnn.us /articles/802.html   (1180 words)

  
 Meucci Originals - Pool Cues - Billiards - Cue Shafts
Meucci Originals - Pool Cues - Billiards - Cue Shafts
Meucci Opens the New Factory in Byhalia, MS What IS it?
Meucci Cues - Majestic Cue Only 150 Ever
rd.business.com /index.asp?epm=s.1&bdcq=Meucci&bdcr=1&bdcu=http://www.meuccicues.com/&bdct=20071109093647&bdcp=&partner=2662601&bdcs=nwuuid-2662601-06E940A8-AB6C-DECB-C11A-724F1A5C6844-ym   (121 words)

  
 Meucci: The Real Inventor of the Telephone
On the past June 15th, 2002, the US Congress officially recognized that the italian inventor Antonio Meucci is to be credited for the invention of the telephone, and not Alexander G. Bell, as so far claimed.
Initially obsessed with medical uses of electricity, Meucci realized soon that one could transmit voice via wire, and between 1850 and 1862 he developed at least 30 different models of telephone, although he was too poor to protect his inventions with a patent (this would have costed him $250, that he did not have).
After 113 years, the Congress on request of an italian-american representative officially stated that Meucci was to be considered the inventor of the telephone.
www.popular-science.net /history/meucci_bell.html   (471 words)

  
 US Congress Resolution on Antonio Meucci
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 affil-iate 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 Meucci died in October 1889, the Bell patent ex-pired 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
www.dickran.net /history/meucci_congress_resolution.html   (458 words)

  
 Garibaldi-Meucci Museum
The Monument to Antonio Meucci was erected in front of his former house in 1923.
In the heart of Rosebank is the historic home of Antonio Meucci, the true inventor of the telephone, and Giuseppe Garibaldi, a legendary hero who championed the unification of the Italian state.
Meucci’s home was built around 1840 in the Gothic-revival style.
statenislandusa.com /pages/garibaldi.html   (373 words)

  
 Order Sons of Italy in America
It is the first official government recognition of Meucci's contributions to the development of the telephone.
Unable to pay the patent fees and in poor health, Meucci was forced to abandon the project, which Alexander Graham Bell was given credit for nearly 20 years later in 1876.
The case was dropped with Meucci's death in 1889 and the expiration of Bell's patent in 1893.
www.osia.org /public/newsroom/pr07_18_02.asp   (436 words)

  
 Antonio Meucci is the inventor of telephone
Today it is demonstrated that Meucci is the only inventor of telephone.
Meucci just wrote an article in 1860 - nothing was ever built of his design.
You can bring all internet garbage you want, it was demonstrated that Meucci was the first to experiment with electric transmission of voice.
forum.cakewalk.com /tm.asp?m=417184   (2026 words)

  
 Meucci Pool Cues
What makes it unique Meucci cues are built with one priority in mind - give every player more power with less effort.
Using the proprietary Myth Destroyer testing robot Meucci builds shafts and butts that are more flexible causing less cue ball deflection.
Using the proprietary Myth Destroyer testing robot Meucci builds shafts and butts that are more flexible causing less cue ball deflectio...
www.fivestarbilliards.com /thestore/MeucciCues.html   (1330 words)

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