'Cyrus West Field' (
November 30,
1819 –
July 12,
1892) was an
American businessman and financier who led the
Atlantic Telegraph Company, the company that successfully laid the first
telegraph cable across the
Atlantic Ocean in
1858. The cable broke three weeks afterward. In
1866, Field laid a new, more durable cable which provided almost instant communication across the Atlantic. On his return to Newfoundland, he grappled the previously snapped cable, reattached it to new wire, thus allowing for a second, backup wire for communication. In December
1884, the
Canadian Pacific Railway named the community of
Field,
British Columbia,
Canada in his honor. Bad investments left Field bankrupt at the end of his life.
Early life
He was born in
Stockbridge, Massachusetts to
David Dudley Field, a clergyman. He was the brother of
David Dudley Field,
Henry Martyn Field, and
Stephen Johnson Field. When he was 15 years old, he moved to
New York City, and after three years he returned to Stockbridge. He moved back to New York City around 1840. Profits from his business ventures permitted him to retire at the age 33 with a fortune of $250,000. He and his wife Mary Bryon Stone had 7 children.
Fiction
★
Stefan Zweig narrates the telegraph cable across the Atlantic Ocean story in ''
Sternstunden der Menschheit''.
See also
★
Transatlantic telegraph cable
External links
★
Cyrus Field Photographs, Portraits and Medals
★
atlantic-cable.com, a comprehensive history of Atlantic telegraph cables
★
PBS, American Experience: The Great Transatlantic Cable
★
History Channel, Modern Marvels: Transatlantic Cable: 2500 Miles of Copper
★
"Cable Ready" - Failure Magazine, December, 2002
★
Harper's Weekly feature cartoon about the first attempt to lay a transatlantic telegraph cable, May 16, 1857.
★
Descendants of Cyrus West Field by Diane Druin Gravlee
★
Cyrus West Field biography in Encyclopedia Britannica