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FEATURED YEAR
• 02. "HOT EVENTS"
• 03. THANK YOU
NBS STUDY "K"
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"Hottest RF Events of

"1860 to 1869"

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1860-NBS
1861-War
1865-Squi
1865-ITU
1866-Civil

"Hot Events of the Year"

FOLLOW THE MONEY WITH PEOPLE AND EVENTS

TIMELINE HOME PAGE
TimeLine - Begins
1860 - The Pony Express opens for business, pledging to 'deliver the goods in 10 days or less'.
1860 - Born: Nathan Beverly Stubblefield (1860-1928), on November 22, in Murray, Calloway County, Kentucky.
1861 - American Civil War (1861-1865) NORTH AND SOUTH
1861 - Capt. Billy's Civil War diary Oct. 1861-Sept. 1862
1864 - Born: Ada Manervie Buchanan (Mrs. N. B. Stubblefield, 1864-1937)

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 1865 - Born: George O. Squier (1865-1934). Squier was a noted soldier and scientist. He graduated from West Point in 1887
1865 - The International Telecommunication Union (ITU).
1866 - The Statue of Liberty, the work of French scultpor Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi was donated in 1886, by the Union the French people, to the United States
1866 - Civil Rights Act
1869 - Died: Victoria Francis Stubblefield, first wife of William Jefferson Stubblefield (Capt.Billy)
1869 - Nathan Stubblefield, (Nine years old)

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01. Feature Story /1860 - 1869 / TC

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1860-0403 - The Pony Express opens for business, pledging to 'deliver the goods in 10 days or less'. Its first route carries mail between St. Joseph, Missouri and San Francisco, California.
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1860s - Born: Nathan Beverly Stubblefield (1860-1928), on November 22, in Murray, Calloway County, Kentucky. Ky Historical Society: "Location: Murray State Univ., US 641 & KY 94. Description: Nathan Stubblefield was born near here in 1860.
" Heir to a legacy of a well-to-do family of tobacco growers, Nathan grew up in a strict Southern Baptist environment on the 85 acres, north-east of 16th and Main Street, Murray, Kentucky, now the campus of Murray State University, with a student body of over 10,000. Nathan was the second of four sons of lawyer, William "Capt. Billy" Stubblefield (1830-1874) and Victoria Bowman Stubblefield (died 1869). Stubblefield lived in Murray, Kentucky. He was orphaned in 1874. Stubblefield was tutored by a governess and later attended the "Male and Female Institute" until his father died. He also educated himself by reading whatever publications were available in Murray, such as The Scientific American and Electrical World. He married Ada Mae Buchanan in 1881. They had nine children, three of whom died in infancy. His son Bernard was his primary assistant in the wireless telephone experiments. From 1907 to 1911, Stubblefield operated a home school called "The Nathan Stubblefield Industrial School," or "Teléph-on-délgreen" on land that is now the campus of Murray State University. (Lochte)
MORE TIMELINE ON FAMILY AND BIG SIX MEMBERS.
1860s - School Shut Down - The Calloway County Male and Female Institute and Company, later called the Seminary was shut down in 1860 and was not reopened until after the close of the Civil War. The school was purchased in 1871 by W. J. Stubblefield (Capt. Billy), and opened to students in 1872.
1861 - Abraham Lincoln: Sixteenth U.S. President, 1861-1865. (b. Feb. 12, 1809, d. April 15, 1865). Wife, Mary Todd Lincoln.
1861 - American Civil War (1861-1865) was a sectional conflict in the United States between the federal government (the "Union") and 11 Southern slave states that declared their secession and formed the Confederate States of America, led by President Jefferson Davis. The "Union," led by President Abraham Lincoln and the Republican Party which opposed expansion of slavery, rejected any right of secession.
1861s - Capt. Billy's Civil War diary Oct. 1861 - Sept. 1862.
1861s - Capt. Billy's fellow Civil War fighters near Corinth were: Capt. Gray Campbell, Capt. Warren, Elisha Hopkins, A. C. Mcdonald, Reuben Thomas, W. H. Mallory, G. Garner, Lt. S. S. Nix, Sgt. W. H. Roberts, J. Ferguson, M. W. Martin, Dr. Humphreys, Capt. Hale, Col. Wickliffe, Col. A. P. Thompson, school fellow and later his law partner, C. W. Jetton, Capt. Morgan, Capt. C. C. Bowman, James H. Bowman, Capt. Holt, Maj. Hale, Lt. Hardison, Lt. Ashley, Col. Crossland, James Mahan, Capt. J. L. Nolin.
1861s - Convention was held in Mayfield, Ky. with representatives from Calloway County to seriously debate the issue of seceding from the Union in 1861 that portion of the state known as the Purchase. (The Jackson Purchase land in Kentucky was the only one in which Indians were compensated in this state.)
1861s - W. J. Stubblefield (Capt. Billy) entered Confederate Army (7th Company) for one year, Oct. 10th, 1861 to Oct. 5th 1862.
• 1861 - After Confederate mobs in Maryland destroy railroad lines, Carnegie assists Thomas Scott in supervising repairs. While working on the railroad, Carnegie notices that telegraph lines have also been cut and stops to repair them. When Carnegie arrives in Washington, he joins Scott in organizing the railroad and telegraph lines to Virginia. Carnegie invests in oil. Using money from his investment in the Woodruff Sleeping Car Company, Carnegie invests $11,000 in an oil company in Titusville, Pennsylvania. He receives a return of $17,868 after only one year.
1861 - Carnegie works for Union Army.
1861 - Charles Darwin's "On the Origin of Species" is published. The book's influence will be felt not only in science, but also in business and society at large.
1861 - Civil War begins. Rockefeller, like some other northern businessmen, hires substitutes to avoid fighting. The war at first disrupts industry, but ultimately it will accelerate economic development in the North, contributing to Rockefeller's meteoric ascent. --
1862s - W. J. Stubblefield (Capt. Billy) 1830 -1874, returned to Murray from Civil War Oct. 5, two years before the War ended, "Capt. Billy" -- returned home to Kentucky to recuperate from the tragedies of war. His war and post war diaries (1860 to 1873), relate to the differences of opinions, truths, and the reconstruction of the many lives "jinxed" by the misery of losing the Civil War. He stated that if it wasn't the musical tea pot, the biblical support, the 'Blitzableiter,' and for the love and attention he received from Victoria, Clarissa his four boys, and his new school project, his life could have never been extended -- here on earth.
1862t - Tesla attends elementary school in Smiljan and Gospic, from 1862-1866.
1862 - John Pierpont Morgan was taught about international banking from a young age and that personal integrity was a major key to success in banking. J.P. Morgan, as he became known, graduated from the University of Gottingen, Germany, and opened his own investment firm in 1862. J.P. Morgan joined the Drexel firm to form Drexel, J.P. Morgan and Co.
1863 - Giovanni Caselli receives U.S. patent for a fax machine called the 'pantelegraph' based on Alexander Bain's 1840 idea of synchronized pendulums. Service between Paris and Lyons France begins between 1865-1870, ending with the Franco-Prussian War.
1863 - About half of Carnegie's salary comes from his investment in oil and only $2400 from his salary at the railroad. Additional investments in the Piper and Schiffler Company, the Adams Express Company and the Central Transportation Company contribute over $13,000.
1863 - At 24, Rockefeller gets involved in the oil business, along with partners Maurice Clark and Samuel Andrews. Andrews, Clark & Co. builds a refinery in The Flats, Cleveland's burgeoning industrial area, which will soon be linked to the East Coast hubs by the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad.
1863 - Carnegie's income is $42,000 per year.
1863 - Rockefeller marries Laura Celestia ("Cettie") Spelman in a small, private ceremony, following a nine-year courtship.
1864 - James C. Maxwell develops Maxwell's Equations and Ether Theory. They were an extension and mathematical formulation of Faraday's theories of electricity and magnetic lines of force.

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1864 - Carnegie is drafted into the Union Army. His options are to pay the federal government $300 or find a suitable replacement. Carnegie feels he has done his patriotic duty by supervising telegraph communications in 1861 and decides to pay a replacement $850 to serve in his place.
1864s - Born: Ada Manervie Buchanan (Mrs. N. B. Stubblefield, 1864-1937).
1864s - Died: General A. P. Thompson, 3rd Ky. Brigade, fell at Paducah, March 25, 1864, age 35. He was the former law partner of William Jefferson (Capt. Billy) Stubblefield. They started their law partnership practice eight years before, in 1856. Thompson's final resting place is in the Bowman Cemetery, in Murray, Ky. where Capt. Billy is also buried. Note: ... "in camp I met my Col. A. P. Thompson, my school fellow, Preceptor-in-law, Partner-in-law and brother-in-law by his first marriage (he having been married three times." (Excerpts of Capt. Billy's Civil War Diary 1861-62).
1864s - Kentucky, a neutral state in the first years of the Civil War, was not included in Lincoln's emancipation Proclamation. All slaves were legally set free with the adoption of the 13th amendment on Dec. 18. Legally or otherwise, slaves were granted their freedom in Colloway County upon the President's proclamation two years before the adoption of the 13th amendment. "The Story of Calloway County," Published by Kerby and Dorothy Jennings.
1865 - Andrew Johnson: Seventeenth U.S. President, 1865-1869. (b. December 29, 1808 in Raleigh, North Carolina, d. July 31, 1875 in Carter's Station, Tennessee.
1865 - At 25, Rockefeller buys out his partners and founds Rockefeller & Andrews, Cleveland's largest refinery.
1865 - Carnegie and several associates reorganize the Piper and Schiffler Company to found the Keystone Bridge Company. They envision building bridges with iron rather than wood, to make the bridges more durable. Thomas Scott loans Carnegie half of the $80,000 he needs for his investment.
1865 - Carnegie retires from the railroad.
1865 - Born: George O. Squier (1865-1934). Squier was a noted soldier and scientist. He graduated from West Point in 1887. Stationed at Fort McHenry in Baltimore, and a student of physics at Johns Hopkins University, he first met Nathan B. Stubblefield at the 1902 Wireless Demonstrations in Philadelphia and in Washington D.C. In 1903 he graduated with a degree in Doctor of Philosophy. He was still Chief Signal Officer in the U.S. Army when he was elected to the National Academy of Science in 1919. His invention in 1910 of "multiplexing" allowed telephone wires to carry multiple messages for the first time; the carrier frequency principle involved was later adapted to other types of transmission, including FM radio."
1865 - Died: Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), 16th U.S. President, on April 15. Lincoln died the morning after being shot at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. by John Wilkes Booth, an actor.
1865 - Mahlon Loomis transmits wireless telegraph messages between two mountains in Virginia. Loomis used two kites flown 18 miles apart, each carrying a wire that reached to the ground. When he interrupted the flow of electricity from the atmosphere, through the wire, to an earth ground, a galvanometer on the other kite's wire measured a change in current. He obtained a patent for this system in 1872, but never obtained financial backing to develop his idea.
1865 0517 - The International Telecommunication Union (ITU). On 17 May 1865, after two and a half months of arduous negotiation, the first International Telegraph Convention was signed in Paris by the 20 founding members, and the International Telegraph Union (ITU) was established to facilitate subsequent amendments to this initial agreement. Today, some 135 years later, the reasons which led to the establishment of ITU still apply, and the fundamental objectives of the organization remain basically unchanged.
••• Its main tasks include standardization, allocation of the radio spectrum, and organizing interconnection arrangements between different countries to allow international phone calls -- in which regard it performs for telecommunications a similar function to what the UPU performs for postal services.
••• It is one of the specialized agencies of the United Nations, and has its headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, next to the main United Nations campus.
1865do - Telephone: Amos Emerson Dolbear (1837-10) invented the first telephone receiver with a permanent magnet in 1865, 11 years before Alexander Graham Bell patented his model.
1866 - The Statue of Liberty, the work of French scultpor Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi was donated in 1886 by the Union Franco-Americaine (Franco-American Union), to the United States as a gift from the French to the American people in honor of the centennial of American independence, symbol of our freedom. The face of the Statue of Liberty is said to be that of Bartholdi's mother. Before starting his commission, Bartholdi traveled to the United States to personally select New York Harbor as the site for the statue. In 1879, Bartholdi was awarded design patent U.S. Patent D11,023 for the Statue of Liberty. This patent covered the sale of small copies of the statute. Proceeds from the sale of the statues helped raise money to build the full statue. statue of Liberty
1865s - Born: William Victor, Stubblefield (1865-1892), brother of inventor, N.B. Stubblefield.
1866 - Civil Rights Act. In March 1866, the Republican United States Congress passed the Civil Rights Act Of 1866, which gave further rights to the freed slaves after the end of the American Civil War. This act was the Republicans' counterattack against the Black Codes in the South. Included in these were the rights to: make contracts, sue, witness in court, and own private property. President Andrew Johnson vetoed the bill, saying that blacks were not qualified for United States citizenship and that the bill would "operate in favor of the colored and against the white race." The Republicans in Congress overrode the presidential veto on April 9, 1866. The act declared that all persons born in the United States were now citizens, without regard to race, color, or previous condition, excluding Indians not taxed. As citizens they could make and enforce contracts, sue and be sued, give evidence in court, and inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property. Persons who denied these rights to former slaves were guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction faced a fine not exceeding $1,000, or imprisonment not exceeding one year, or both.
1866 - Thomas A. Edison lived in Louisville, Kentucky, 1866-67. Moved to N. J. where he perfected the incandescent light. Edison returned to Louisville in 1883 for opening of Southern Exposition, where 4600 of his lights were on display. Thomas Edison Butchertown House - Edison-rented a room in this house. As a young man he conducted experiments, often all night, then walked to his job as a telegraph operator at 58 West Main Street. Experimenting at work, he spilled acid and was fired. He left Louisville and later developed over 1000 patents for such devices as phonograph and microphone. Over.
1866do - Dolbear from 1866-1867 was instructor of chemistry at the University of Michigan.
1866t -1870 - Tesla attends junior high school in Gospic.
1867 - Died: Michael Faraday (1791-1867), on August 25. English chemist and physicist, or natural philosopher in the terminology of that time.
1867 - Born: Marie Curie, on November 7, in Warsaw, Poland; Curie (1867-1934) was a Polish-French physicist and chemist. She was a pioneer in the early field of radioactivity, later becoming the first two-time Nobel laureate and the only person with Nobel Prizes in two different fields of science (physics in 1903 and chemistry in 1911).
1867do - Dolbear, from 1867-1868 was assistant professor of natural sciences at the University of Kentucky in Lexington
1867 - Carnegie establishes the Keystone Telegraph Company with several associates from the railroad. The company receives permission from the Pennsylvania Railroad to string telegraph wire across the railroad's poles, which stretch across the entire state. This is such a valuable asset that Keystone is able to merge almost immediately with the Pacific and Atlantic Telegraph Company, allowing Keystone's investors to triple their return.
1868 - Edison invents the stock ticker.
1868do - Dolbear from 1868-1874 was professor of natural sciences in Bethany College, W. Virginia, and mayor of that city during 1871-72. In 1876 perfected and patented his magneto electric telephone, and the static telephone in 1879. He published "The Art of Projecting," (Boston, 1876); "The Speaking Telephone" (1877); and "Sound and its Phenomena" (1885). Dolbear also worked on converting sound waves into electrical impulses.
1868s - Died: James Buchanan (1791-1868), June 1, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. 5th U.S. • 1869s - Died: Victoria Francis Stubblefield (born Bowman) 1837-1869, in Calloway County, Kentucky. Wife of William Jefferson Stubblefield (Capt. Billy) and mother of inventor, Nathan B. Stubblefield who was 9-years-old when she passed away. Victoria Francis Bowman Stubblefield, died after contacting Scarlet fever. The next 3 years proved tough on the family, especially for the young children. They were growing up to be like the Mississippi River Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn possibilities described in Mark Twain's novels.

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1868 - Carnegie writes himself a letter which outlines his plans for the future. He determines to resign from business at age 35 and live on an income of $50,000 per year, devoting the remainder of his money to philanthropic causes and most of his time to his education.
1868 - Rockefeller strikes a major deal with a railroad, guaranteeing a certain volume of shipments in exchange for rebates. The first of many, this deal was made with Jay Gould, owner of the Erie Railroad.
1869s - Died: Victoria Francis Stubblefield, first wife of William Jefferson Stubblefield (Capt.Billy) died of scarlet fever at the age of 32. Mother of inventor, Nathan B. Stubblefield.
1869s - Nathan Stubblefield, (Nine years old); Early Years - 1860-1869 - No Electricity - No Telephone - No Wi-Fi. During the five year period after the war ended in 1864, before hitting the age of 9, Nathan started to distinguish himself differently from his brothers. While they were interested in helping mother provide foodstuffs, he was melding himself into the footsteps of his father, tagging along, imitating his actions and ideas on how to provide the energy from the soils grounded blitzableiters to keep the home fires burning. As time went on, the tow-headed side-kick of "Capt. Billy," Nathan considered himself part of his father's legal practice, meeting his friends, impressing his clients, and the Mason fraternal crowd. Unknowingly at the time, six of these Kentuckians were going to be part of Nathan's "Big Six" team of investors that were being primed to bring electricity, the telephone and Wireless telephony, and education to Kentucky.
1870 - In the 1870s, the only electrical communication system in Kentucky was the mechanical wired telephony, telegraphy. There were no packets of instant cocoa laying around, where all Capt. Billy had to do was add hot water, turn the electric switch on and 'poof' . . . But as the story goes, it was a period in which Stubblefield claimed he has learned as a youth, from his father the secrets of energizing the soil to achieve better tobacco or watermelon product.

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03. Editors Note / Free Use of TimeLine Material
Excerpts found on this page are from: "Nathan B. Stubblefield, the Radio Boy" & "The SMART-DAAF BOYS"™©1992 and "Disappointments Are Great, Follow the Money, The Internet - D-diaries - ©2006 - Published and Authored by TVI Publishing and Troy and Josie Cory-Stubblefield • ISBN 1-883644-34-8 • Library of Congress Catalog # TX 5-967-411
FREE USE OF CONTENTS: This Web page is about saying thanks to all of our Yes90 blogger team who have helped us put the Smart-Daaf Boy, Yes90 TimeLine together. The use of the contents on this page can be used at no cost to Web users for Educational and Historical purposes under Yes90/109 Authority and TVI Magazine, Publisher/Editor. Credits For Use should read: "Smart-Daaf Boy Data or NBS100.COM TeleCom Study" - Thanks Again. - MORE ABOUT: Content Clearance

ThankYou with a *NBSWiTel™©AFact - Denotes an Authorized NBS Wireless Telephone™ © ® Fact or Event Since 1892-2008.
••  Notice to all major Wireless Telephone Companies and Wi-Fi Broadcasters. The Next Century of the Wireless Telephone™ is waiting for you. WiFi, Digital RF spectrums and Satellite land-line VoIP is here!
•• Get Ready for 2007-2008 -- the 100th year of the Registration of the Wireless Telephone™ patent, and its copyrighted trademark name, drawings, and specifications for stationary, mobile vehicular and floating telephone broadcasting and receiving system. - MORE ABOUT: Content Clearance

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* Photos courtesy of Special Collections and Archives of the Stubblefield Wireless Trust and Murray State University. The Wireless Telephone and other marks © ® and ™ by the Stubblefield Family Fund. www.nbstubblefield.com / www.wirelesstelephone.org / www.nbs100.com

* The Smart-Daaf Boys: The Inventors of the Radio Frequency and Spectrums (RF) as Defined by the FCC
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