California State Telegraph Company
On
2 May 1852, Oliver C. Allen and Clark Burnham of
New York formed the California State Telegraph Company, originally California Telegraph Company,
after they were granted a franchise by the
California Legislature for a term of fifteen years.
Prior to the established telegraph line, the means of communication between
California and the outside states was by a
hazardous journey over the plains, across [the Panama] Isthmus or around the Horn.
In its early stages, the project experienced
misfortunes
as it faced disastrous fires and shortage of funding. The project faced further problems
when, on the day the telegraph poles were to be erected, the crew involved abandoned
the project. Shortly after, the company reorganized and its new president, W. B. Ranson,
assumed control over it in
1853.
The company continued under this name until June 1867 when it was again reorganized and subsumed as the Pacific Division of the Western
Union Telegraph Company.
- 1. Alice L. Bates, The History of Telegraph in California, Annual Publication of the Historical Society of Southern California, vol.9, no.3, (1914), p.181-182.
- 2. Ibid.
- 3. Head to Fortescue, 14 May 1864, 4601, CO 305/24, p.187; Layard to Rogers, 20 October 1864, 9765, CO 305/24, p. 89.
- 4. California State Telegraph Company. Toll House Station (Ashland, Oregon) records,
1865 March - 1868 November, Archives West: Orbis Cascade Alliance.