J-38 Keys
Descriptions of a common telegraph key used by the U.S. Army Signal Corps.
Insulator And Telegraph Information and Collectors Site
Insulator pictures with cd number to help identify. Lists 100`s of telegraph company names. Pics of 70+ telegrams and related paper items.
The Telegraph
An assortment of telegraph instrument images compiled from several early physics apparatus collections by Professor Thomas Greenslade Jr. of Kenyon College.
W1TP Telegraph & Scientific Instrument Museums
The Telegraph Museum on this site contains hundreds of images of American and foreign telegraph instruments from different eras. Presented by Tom Perera, W1TP.
Telegraph Key Collection
Online personal museum from Italy of telegraph keys and related items.
Telegraph Lore
Site covers all aspects of Morse telegraphy and telegraph instrument collecting.
Telegraph
A colorful presentation of a wide assortment of telegraph instruments.
The Vibroplex Collector's Page
Extensive information about identifying and dating Vibroplex Bugs. (Semi-automatic telegraph keys used by telegraphers and radio operators to send Morse code.)
N1FN Key Collection Pages
An assortment of telegraph keys from the personal collection of Marshall Emm, N1FN.
KA2MGE Telegraph Museum
Online museum including photographs of telegraph apparatus, and advertising signs.
The Old Telegraph Station
The personal Vibroplex and telegraph collection of Frank O. Remington.
SV1EDY Homepage
A telegraph instrument collecting site located in Greece by ham radio operator, Apostolos Bourousis, SV1EDT.
Early Telegraph Apparatus
Early telegraph instruments from the John Jenkins Spark Museum collection.
The Telegraph Office
A resource for wire and wireless telegraph instrument collectors and historians. Several images of instruments are viewable in the photo galleries.
Canadian Railway Telegraph History
Site dedicated to Canada's railway telegraph, agents, operators, and railway.
The Sparks Telegraph Key Review
Informational and photo display site on telegraph keys. Extensive information about instruments used during the spark-era of radio. By Russ Kleinmann, WA5Y.
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