Hold the Line: The Life, Loves and Inventions of Antonio Meucci, Father of the Telephone
  Hold the Line: The Life, Loves and Inventions of Antonio Meucci, Father of the Telephone
Titolo Hold the Line: The Life, Loves and Inventions of Antonio Meucci, Father of the Telephone
AutoreFrancesca Valente
Prezzo€ 0,99
EditoreMentoris Project
LinguaTesto in
FormatoDRMFREE

Descrizione
The forgotten father of the telephone. More than an inventor, Antonio Meucci (1808–1889) was a man whose genius was shaped by love, resilience, and history itself. Born in Florence, he built his career as a theatrical engineer and later moved to Havana, Cuba, where he refined his mechanical skills and conducted early experiments in transmitting sound electrically. After settling in New York with his wife, Ester, Meucci's experiments took on a deeply personal purpose. When illness confined her to bed, he devised a way for his voice to carry into her room—an act of care that became the seed of the world's first telephone. His "telettrofono" could transmit speech over wires decades before Alexander Graham Bell's famous patent. During these years, his Staten Island home also became a haven for Giuseppe Garibaldi, the Italian revolutionary, cementing a friendship born of shared exile and ideals. Yet Meucci's brilliance was overshadowed by poverty and misfortune. Lacking the funds to secure a definitive patent, his work was vulnerable, and Bell's claim to the invention eclipsed him in history. Though his contributions went unrecognized in his lifetime, today Meucci is celebrated as a true pioneer of telecommunications—a man whose love, resilience, and ingenuity gave birth to one of humanity's most transformative inventions.