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President
Lincoln would use the Telegraph Office (on the bottom floor of the
Department of War building right behind the
White House) as his strategy, and sometimes "escape-place" to get away
from the high-stress of the always full White House. In the War
Room, also called the Telegraph Office, he would receive instant
updates on battles, events and other topics through his
telegraphers. The White House did not have telegraphs within it,
and therefore all messages were sent and received from the War Room.
CLICK
HERE FOR A DESCRIPTION OF THE TELEGRAPH OFFICE If you get
interested in Civil War ciphering, read Chapters IV and V of David
Homer Bates' Lincoln in the Telegraph Office available for
sale or in a public library. It is available in the G.E.
classroom.
Actual Library of Congress
Presidential Telegraphs can be viewed
Here.
Click
here for
a description of the War (Telegraph) Room and the President.
Here
are
your questions:
1.
Communication on the battlefront before the Civil War was done by what
means (how)?
2.
Did the United States have telegraph lines everywhere, as we do phone
lines now? Why?
3.
Who was the Assistant Secretary of War that got the military telegraph
system started?
4.
A
war telegraph office was placed next to the White House. List
some of the men who were operators and managers of that first office.
5.
Who was a regular visitor of the telegraph office? Why did he
stay in it so much?
6.
What is
a cipher, and who designed the first cipher to be used with telegraph
messages over the military telegraph system?
7.
What was the name of the code used to send the ciphered messages?
8.
Why were military messages ciphered?
9.
Why was being a telegraph operator/ cipherer so dangerous?
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