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  2. Western Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Union

    Western Union Telegraph Building, lithograph. The Western Union Company is an American multinational financial services corporation headquartered in Denver, Colorado.. Founded in 1851 as the New York and Mississippi Valley Printing Telegraph Company in Rochester, New York, [3] the company changed its name to the Western Union Telegraph Company in 1856 after merging with several other telegraph ...

  3. Ezra Cornell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezra_Cornell

    Ezra Cornell (/ k ɔːr ˈ n ɛ l /; January 11, 1807 – December 9, 1874) was an American businessman, politician, academic, and philanthropist.He was the founder of Western Union and a co-founder of Cornell University.

  4. Hiram Sibley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiram_Sibley

    Sibley later served as first president of Western Union Telegraph Company. [3] In 1861, Jeptha Wade, founder of Western Union, joined forces with Benjamin Franklin Ficklin and Hiram Sibley to form the Pacific Telegraph Company. With it, the final link between the eastern and western coasts of the United States was made by telegraph.

  5. Jeptha Wade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeptha_Wade

    Jeptha Homer Wade (August 11, 1811 – August 9, 1890) was an American industrialist, philanthropist, and one of the founding members of Western Union Telegraph. Wade was born in Romulus, New York, the youngest of nine children of Jeptha and Sarah (Allen) Wade.

  6. Western Union Telegraph Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Union_Telegraph...

    The Western Union Building was originally designed by architect George B. Post and opened as the headquarters of Western Union in 1875. [8] [9] The Western Union Building was designed in the Neo-Grec style with Beaux-Arts influences, [10] [11] although at the time of its construction, the style was characterized as French Renaissance. [11]

  7. Jay Gould - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jay_Gould

    Jason Gould (/ ɡ uː l d /; May 27, 1836 – December 2, 1892) was an American railroad magnate and financial speculator who founded the Gould business dynasty. He is generally identified as one of the robber barons of the Gilded Age. His sharp and often unscrupulous business practices made him one of the wealthiest men of the late nineteenth ...

  8. Thomas Edison - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Edison

    Edison in 1861. Thomas Edison was born in 1847 in Milan, Ohio, but grew up in Port Huron, Michigan, after the family moved there in 1854. [8] He was the seventh and last child of Samuel Ogden Edison Jr. (1804–1896, born in Marshalltown, Nova Scotia) and Nancy Matthews Elliott (1810–1871, born in Chenango County, New York).

  9. Telegraphy in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telegraphy_in_the_United...

    Western Union instead attempted to launch a rival telephony system before settling a patent lawsuit with Bell and leaving the telephone business completely in 1879. Financier Jay Gould orchestrated a merger of the Atlantic and Pacific Telegraph Company with Western Union in 1881, giving him a controlling share of the merged company. [29]