Before it became a megaphone, the
bull horn or
cow horn or
steer horn was a
signaling device or
bugle used from antiquity. The initial inventor of the speaking trumpet is a subject of historical controversy. There have been references to speakers in
Ancient Greece (5th Century B.C.) wearing masks with cones protruding from the mouth in order to amplify their voices in theatres. Hellenic architects may have also consciously utilized acoustic physics in their design of theatre amphitheaters. A drawing by
Louis Nicolas (right) on page 14 of the
Codex canadensis, circa 1675 to 1682, shows a
Native American chief named Iscouakité using a megaphone made of birch bark. The text of the illustration says that he is addressing his soldiers through a birch bark tube. Both
Samuel Morland and
Athanasius Kircher have been credited with inventing megaphones around the same time in the 17th century. Morland, in a work published in 1672, wrote about his experimentation with different horns. His largest megaphone consisted of over 6 m of copper tube and could reportedly project a person's voice a mile and a half. More than twenty years earlier, Kircher had described a device that could be used as both a megaphone and for "overhearing" people speaking outside a house. His coiled horn would be mounted into the side of a building, with a narrow end inside that could be either spoken into or listened to, and the wide mouth projecting through the outside wall. Morland favored a straight, tube-shaped speaking device. Kircher's horn, on the other hand, utilized a "cochleate" design, where the horn was twisted and coiled to make it more compact. A later,
papier-mâché trumpet of special design was the Sengerphone. Additionally, in ruins of
Tiwanaku are stones around the central place with holes shaped in a megaphone's profile. Their purpose is today unknown, but as local guards can show, it is possible to amplify a human voice loud enough to hear it across a large area. The term 'megaphone' was first associated with
Thomas Edison's instrument 200 years later. In 1878, Edison developed a device similar to the speaking trumpet in hopes of benefiting the deaf and hard of hearing. His variation included three separate funnels lined up in a row. The two outer funnels, which were 2,030 mm long, were made of paper and connected to a tube inserted in each ear. The middle funnel was similar to Morland's speaking trumpet, but had a larger slot to insert a user's mouth. With Edison's megaphone, a low whisper could be heard a 300 m away, while a normal tone of voice could be heard roughly 3 km away. On the listening end, the receiver could hear a low whisper at 300 m. However the apparatus was much too large to be portable, limiting its use. George Prescott wrote: "The principal drawback at present is the large size of the apparatus." Prior to the invention of the electric microphone, some early pop singers, such as
Rudy Vallée, sang with a megaphone as their quieter voices, the hallmark of a "crooner", were often not loud enough for live performances. Since the 1960s, acoustic megaphones have generally been replaced by electric versions
(below), although the cheap, light, rugged acoustic megaphone is still used in a few venues, like cheering at sporting events and
cheerleading, and by
lifeguards at pools and beaches where the moisture could damage the electronics of electric megaphones. File:Codex canadensis, p. 14.jpg|Page from the
Codex canadensis, by
Louis Nicolas, circa 1675 to 1682, showing a native North-American chief using a megaphone made of bark File:Fotothek df tg 0008336 Akustik ^ Schall ^ Sprachrohr ^ Ordensliteratur.jpg|Drawing by
Athanasius Kircher, 1684, shows man
(left) using megaphone to communicate over distance File:MOHAI - firefighter's speaking trumpet 01A.jpg|A late 19th-century speaking trumpet used by
firefighters File:Bundesarchiv Bild 102-10044, Reichswehr-Manöver.jpg|German soldier using a megaphone to command troops, 1930 File:"Getting em up" at U.S.Naval Training Camp, Seattle, Washington. Webster & Stevens. - NARA - 533698.tif|A sailor using a megaphone to amplify the sound of a
bugle to wake recruits at an American training camp in 1947 File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-H0729-0035-001, Berlin, Freibad Pankow, Bademeister.jpg|
East German lifeguard with megaphone, 1969 File:Riverside Stompers - Wolfgang Straka 2007 e.jpg|
Austrian jazz singer using megaphone, 2007 ==Electric megaphone==