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Edison phonographs
The phonograph was developed as a result of Thomas Edison's work on two other inventions,
the telegraph and the telephone. In 1877, Edison was working on a machine that would
transcribe telegraphic messages through indentations on paper tape, which could
later be sent over the telegraph repeatedly. This development led Edison to speculate
that a telephone message could also be recorded in a similar fashion. He experimented
with a diaphragm which had an embossing point and was held against rapidly-moving
paraffin paper. The speaking vibrations made indentations in the paper. Edison later
changed the paper to a metal cylinder with tin foil wrapped around it. The machine
had two diaphragm-and-needle units, one for recording, and one for playback. When
one would speak into a mouthpiece, the sound vibrations would be indented onto the
cylinder by the recording needle in a vertical (or hill and dale) groove pattern.
Edison gave a sketch of the machine to his mechanic, John Kruesi, to build, which
Kruesi supposedly did within 30 hours. Edison immediately tested the machine by
speaking the nursery rhyme into the mouthpiece, "Mary had a little lamb." To his
amazement, the machine played his words back to him.