Communications

Tools of communication have transformed American society time and again over the past two centuries. The Museum has preserved many instruments of these changes, from printing presses to personal digital assistants.

The collections include hundreds of artifacts from the printing trade and related fields, including papermaking equipment, wood and metal type collections, bookbinding tools, and typesetting machines. Benjamin Franklin is said to have used one of the printing presses in the collection in 1726.

More than 7,000 objects chart the evolution of electronic communications, including the original telegraph of Samuel Morse and Alexander Graham Bell's early telephones. Radios, televisions, tape recorders, and the tools of the computer age are part of the collections, along with wireless phones and a satellite tracking system.

Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1893
original artist
Jones, Hugh Bolton
Jones, Francis Coates
publisher
American Cereal Company
lithographer
Armstrong and Company
ID Number
2012.0093.15
accession number
2012.0093
catalog number
2012.0093.15
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1891
author
Perry, Walter Scott
ID Number
2014.0029.01
accession number
2014.0029
catalog number
2014.0029.01

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