The first attempt to bring the
electrical telegraph to France was made by
Samuel Morse in 1838. He demonstrated his system to the
French Academy of Sciences and made a bid for the contract to install a telegraph along the line of the
Paris to
Saint-Germain railway. However, the French government decided that they did not want to entrust the construction of telegraph lines to private companies. Private operation of telegraph systems had been illegal in France since 1837 and all telegraph infrastructure was owned and operated by the state. Electrical telegraph could only start in France if the government sponsored it. France had the most extensive
optical telegraph system of any country, developed for military purposes by
Claude Chappe in the
revolutionary and
Napoleonic periods. There were strong arguments put forward for the superiority of optical telegraphs over electrical telegraphs. Chief amongst these reasons was that electrical systems were vulnerable to attack by
saboteurs. In an optical system, only the telegraph stations needed to be defended. An electrical system was impossible to defend over its many hundreds of miles of exposed wires. Alphonse Foy, the chief administrator of the French telegraphs, had a further objection to the Morse system. He believed that his illiterate telegraph operators would not easily be able to learn the Morse code. He did not, however, entirely reject the electrical telegraph. After the Morse system was rejected in 1839, Foy investigated the
Cooke–Wheatstone telegraph in use in
England. Foy realised that the
needle telegraph displays used by the Cooke–Wheatstone system could be adapted to display the symbols of the French optical telegraph. He asked
Louis-François-Clement Breguet to design such a system. It was first tested on the
Paris Saint-Cloud to
Versailles line in 1842. Funding for an electrical telegraph was approved in 1844. Foy specified that the new telegraph must show the same display as the Chappe telegraph so that there was no need for operator retraining. This required the display to have three moving parts; the Chappe telegraph had a pivoted crossbar (the regulator) with two moveable arms (the indicators), one at each end of the regulator. A design meeting this requirement was submitted by Pierre-Antoine Joseph Dujardin. Implemented as a
needle telegraph, the arrangement required three moving needles, which in turn required three signal wires. The wires were a significant part of the cost of installation; the Morse system, for instance, required only one wire. In May 1845, Foy ran a comparative test between the Dujardin, Breguet, and Cooke-Wheatstone systems on the Paris, Saint Germain to
Rouen line. Foy rejected the Dujardin system in favour of the one by Breguet, even though the Dujardin system more fully mimicked the Chappe system than Breguet's. The Breguet design required only two signal wires, but at the expense of having only two moveable needles. These represented the indicators of the Chappe system. The regulator was simply a marking on the face of the instrument, not a moving part—it was permanently in the horizontal position. The disadvantage of doing this is that it drastically reduced the available
codespace which in turn impacted the speed a message could be transmitted. The rejection was perhaps due to the economic reason, or perhaps because Breguet was better acquainted with Foy. Breguet had a long history of working with the French telegraph. His grandfather,
Abraham-Louis Breguet, a
watchmaker, had worked with Chappe on the design of the optical telegraph and Louis inherited the business. The Chappe system used a large
codebook with thousands of predetermined phrases and sentences. 92
codepoints were used to specify the line and page of the codebook (see ). There were some early attempts to use a reduced codebook on the Foy–Breguet system, but this was soon dropped in favour of a purely alphabetic code.
France compared to other countries Many other
European countries installed optical telegraphs.
Napoleon extended the Chappe system into conquered territories. Other countries developed their own systems, but none of them were as extensive as that in France. Only the system of
Abraham Niclas Edelcrantz in Sweden even came close. Consequently, other nations did not have such a strong desire for
backward compatibility as France and were able to move to the electrical telegraph sooner. France was unique in requiring the electrical telegraph to mimic the optical telegraph. ==Operation==