Ronalds was conducting electrical experiments by 1810: those on
atmospheric electricity were outlined in
George Singer's text
Elements of Electricity and Electro-Chemistry (1814). He published his first papers in the
Philosophical Magazine in 1814 on the properties of the
dry pile, a form of battery that his mentor
Jean-André Deluc helped to develop. The next year he described the first
electric clock. Other inventions in this early period included an
electrograph to record variations in atmospheric electricity through the day; an
influence machine that generated electricity with minimal manual intervention; and new forms of electrical insulation, one of which was announced by Singer. of electrical books and managing his collection with perhaps the first practical
card catalogue. His theoretical contributions included an early
delineation of the parameters now known as electromotive force and current; an appreciation of the mechanism by which dry piles
generated electricity; and the first description of the effects of induction in
retarding electric signal transmission in insulated cables.
Electric telegraph Ronalds' most remembered work today is the
electric telegraph he created at the age of 28. He established that electrical signals could be transmitted over large distances with of iron wire strung on insulators on his mother's lawn in Hammersmith. He found that the signal travelled immeasurably fast from one end to the other (but still believed the speed was finite). He complemented his vision with a working telegraph system built in and under his mother's garden at Hammersmith. It was infamously rejected on 5 August 1816 by
Sir John Barrow, Secretary at the
Admiralty, as being "wholly unnecessary". Commercialisation of the telegraph only began two decades later in the UK, led by
William Fothergill Cooke and
Charles Wheatstone, who both had links to Ronalds' earlier work. ==Grand Tour==