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This Day in Boston History
March 10th, 1876
Come Here Mr. Watson!
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On this day, Alexander
Graham Bell conducted the first successful experiment with the telephone.
This breakthrough, during which he uttered his famous directive to his
assistant, "Come here Mr. Watson, I want you." That same day,
an ebullient Bell wrote his father of his "great success"
and speculated that "the day is coming when telegraph [phone] wires
will be laid on to houses just like water and gas -- and friends converse
with each other without leaving home."
In 1915 transcontinental
telephone lines were completed. Invited to play a role in the formal
dedication of the line in New York, Bell used a duplicate of his 1876
telephone to speak to his former assistant, Thomas Watson, in San Francisco.
Echoing his famous words of Bell again commanded, "Mr. Watson,
come here, I want you." Watson replied that it would take him a
week to arrive.
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From the writers of iBoston.org |
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