Too poor to receive more than a country education, Sibley started training as a shoemaker's apprentice, but, unhappy with the career, went to
Lima, New York, at age 17 to work in a cotton factory. The following year he became a
wool carder in a shop where future president
Millard Fillmore then worked. Ten years later, the business was successful enough for him to sell and afford to move to Rochester, where he was elected
Sheriff of Monroe County from 1844 to 1846. Sibley later served as first president of
Western Union Telegraph Company. 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. In conjunction with
Perry Collins, Sibley later hoped to build a telegraph line from
Alaska to
Russia through the
Bering Strait, the so-called
Russian American Telegraph. However, this dream collapsed with the establishment of a cross-
Atlantic line to Europe. ==Personal life==