Commercial Pacific Cable Company
Commercial Pacific Cable Company was founded in 1901, and ceased operations in October, 1951. It provided the first direct telegraph route from America to the Philippines, China, and Japan.
The company used cableships to lay its undersea cable across the Pacific Ocean from America's west coast. The cables extended a length of 6,912 miles and the project cost approximately $12 million. Before this, messages had to travel across the Atlantic to the Far East via Capetown and the Indian Ocean, or via London to Russia, then across the Russian landline to Vladivostock, then by submarine cable to Japan and the Philippines.
The first section of cable was laid in 1902 by the cableship Silvertown from Ocean Beach, adjacent to the famous Cliff House in San Francisco to Honolulu. It began operating in January 1, 1903. Later that year, cables were laid from Honolulu to Midway, then from Midway to Guam, and then from Guam to Manila. Using these cables, it was on July 3, 1903, that President Theodore Roosevelt was able to send the first message to ever travel around the globe. It took nine minutes for the message to travel worldwide.
In 1906 the Siemens Brothers made and laid the section from Guam to Borin Island in the Japanese archipelago. They also connected Manila to Shanghai by Silvertown.
By 1946, the cables were developing serious faults. Over one million dollars was spent on repairs, but the company was unable to maintain a viable service and stopped operating in 1951. It merged with American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T).
Referenced By
Prescott Bush | Prescott S. Bush | Prescott Sheldon Bush
|