Samuel F. B. Morse, Class of 1810, '46LLDHon (1791-1872). The
inspiration for Yale’s Morse College, Morse invented and successfully tested
both the first practical telegraph and an alphabet for transmitting messages in
the late 1830s. He put the telegraph into long-distance working operation on
May 24, 1844, when he sent the message “What hath God wrought” in Morse code
over an experimental line from Washington to Baltimore.
Morse, also a noted artist, was the first president of the National
Academy of Design (1826-1845), and—thanks to a daguerreotype camera he
purchased from its inventor in France—one of the first photographers in
America. He was commemorated in 1940 on a two-cent stamp.