- Patrick Bernard Delany
Patrick Bernard Delany (born 1845, date of death unknown) was an American electrician and inventor, born in
County Kings ,Ireland . He came early to the United States and learnedtelegraphy at Hartford, Conn.; gradually he worked up from office boy to be superintendent of lines. Later he was also a newspaper correspondent, editor, and writer. His inventions include more than 150 patents, covering anti-induction cables, synchronous multiplex telegraphy by means of which six messages may be sent simultaneously over one wire, automatic ocean-cable systems, and rapid-machine telegraphy for land lines. His automatic telegraph system was capable of transmitting and recording 3000 words a minute over a single wire. He was awarded gold medals at theInternational Invention Exhibition inLondon (1885), at thePanAmerican Exposition (1901), and at the St. Louis Exposition (1904), theElliottCresson gold medal twice, and theJohn Scott medal of theFranklin Institute . From 1893 to 1895 he was a vice president of theAmerican Institute of Electrical Engineers .
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