The following is a chronological listing of significant events in the development of the field of Information Technology during the 1800s. For other time periods see:
- Chronology of Events - Pre-1700
- Chronology of Events - 1700s
- Chronology of Events - 1900-1930s
- Chronology of Events - 1940s
- Chronology of Events - 1950s
- Chronology of Events - 1960s
- Chronology of Events - 1970s
- Chronology of Events - 1980s
- Chronology of Events - 1990s
- Chronology of Events - 2000s
- Chronology of Events - 2010s
1801[]
- Joseph-Marie Jacquard makes an improvement to the textile loom that used a series of punched cards as a template to allow his loom to weave intricate patterns automatically. Punched cards are used later by Charles Babbage (1791-1871) in his plans for the Analytical Engine.
1803[]
- Joseph-Marie Jacquard receives a patent for the loom that uses punch cards.
1808[]
- The first working typewriter is built by Pellegrino Turri for his visually impaired friend, the Countess Carolina Fantoni da Fivizzono.
1809[]
- Samuel Thomas Soemmering invents the electrical telegraph.
1811-1813[]
- The Luddite Movement in England (November 11, 1811 – January 12, 1813) results in the destruction of machinery by workers and craftsmen concerned about the loss of their jobs due to mechanization in the workplace.
1820[]
- Charles Xavier Thomas de Colmar creates the "arithometer," the first commercially successful calculating machine.
- Electromagnetism discovered.
1822[]
- Charles Babbage designs the Difference Engine, the first automatic computing engine capable of computing several sets of numbers and making hard copies of the results.
1831[]
February 3, 1831 — The first general revision of U.S. copyright law is enacted. The author's exclusive rights are extended from 14 years to 28 years, with a potential 14-year extension.
1832[]
- Semen Korsakov uses punch cards to store and search for information.
- Samuel Morse conceives the idea of a electromagnetic telegraph.
- A Russian, Baron Schilling, invents the electromagnetic telegraph.
1833[]
- Carl Friedrich Gauss and Wilhelm Weber invent their own telegraphic code to communicate over a distance.
1834[]
- In Wheaton v. Peters, the U.S. Supreme Court holds that the protection of copyright is not perpetual, but is limited to promote the creation of new works.
- Louis Braille develops the Braille Code to allow the blind to read.
1837[]
July 24, 1837 — Sir Charles Wheatstone and William Fothergill Cooke patent the telegraph.
- Charles Babbage conceptualizes and designs a fully programmable mechanical computer that he calls the Analytical Engine.
- Samuel F. B. Morse invents a practical form of electromagnetic telegraph using an early version of his "Morse code."
- A law gives the French kingdom a monopoly of communications.
1841[]
- In Folsom v. Marsh, the U.S. Supreme Court establishes the fair use doctrine.
1842[]
- Facsimile transmission is developed and patented by Alexander Bain as the "chemical telegraph."
1843[]
- Per and Georg Scheutz construct the first working Difference Engine based on Babbage's design in Stockholm.
- William Henry Fox Talbot receives a patent on the first optical photocopier (a "magnifying apparatus").
1844[]
May 24, 1844 — Samuel Morse transmits the first message "What hath God wrought?" by "Morse code" between New York and Philadelphia.
1845[]
- The transatlantic cable is proposed.
1846[]
- Sir William Fotherhill Cooke and Joseph Lewis Ricardo found the Electric Telegraph Company in the U.K.
1847[]
- Frederick Collier Bakewell develops a procedure for telecopying (a forerunner of the fax machine).
1848[]
- George Boole invents Boolean algebra.
1850[]
- A telegraph line laid between England and France across the English Channel.
1851[]
- Western Union is founded.
1853[]
Nov. 30, 1853 — George Boole publishes a book titled An Investigation on the Laws of Thought on symbolic logic.
- A tabulating machine is invented by Per Georg Scheutz and his son Edvard.
1854[]
- The Playfair cipher is invented by Sir Charles Wheatstone.
1855[]
- Antonio Meucci establishes a telephone link inside an apartment in New York City.
1856[]
July 10, 1856 — Nikola Tesla is born.
1857[]
March 25, 1857 — The phonautograph (phonograph) is patented by Frenchman Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville.
- Sir Charles Wheatstone uses paper tape for the preparation, storage, and transmission of data.
- The Treaty of the Six Nations establishes a telegraph service cartel, dividing the countries into six sections and assigning each section to one firm.
1858[]
August 16, 1858 — The first transatlantic cable is successfully completed. It runs from Ireland to Newfoundland. It only remained in service a few days before failing. [Subsequent cables laid in 1866 were successful.]
1861[]
March 4, 1861 — The new Government Printing Office opens its doors on the same day Abraham Lincoln is inaugurated as the 16th President.
- Western Union completes its first transcontinental telegraph line, mainly along railroad rights-of-way.
1865[]
- The "International Telegraph Union" (now the International Telecommunication Union) (ITU) is founded in Paris by the International Telegraph Convention.
- A telegraphic message is transmitted 18 miles by radio.
1866[]
- Transatlantic cables laid in 1866 between Valentia (Ireland) and Newfoundland is successful and remains in use for almost 100 years.
1868[]
July 14, 1868 — Christopher Sholes patents a typewriter with the QWERTY layout keyboard.
1869[]
- William Stanley Jevons designs a practical logic machine.
1870[]
July 8, 1870 — In the second major revision of copyright law, U.S. Congress centralizes copyright activities (including registration and deposit within the Library of Congress.
- French telegraph engineer Émile Baudot invented the Baudot Code.
1872[]
- Western Electric Manufacturing Company is established.
1873[]
- The QWERTY keyboard is invented by Christopher Sholes. Commercial production of typewriters begins.
1875[]
May 17, 1865 — The International Telegraph Convention was signed by 20 States.
1876[]
February 27, 1876 — Thomas Sanders, Gardiner G. Hubbard and Alexander Graham Bell found the Bell Patent Association.
March 10, 1876 — Alexander Graham Bell patents the telephone (U.S. Patent No. 174,465; "Improvements in Transmitters and Receivers for Electric Telegraph") (full-text).
1877[]
July 9, 1877 — Bell Telephone Company is organized in Boston, Massachusetts.
November 21, 1877 — Thomas Edison and announces the first phonograph capable of recording and replaying sounds.
- The microphone is invented by Emile Berliner.
1878[]
- Ramon Verea invents a fast calculator with an internal multiplication table.
- The American Speaking Telephone Company is created by Western Union to compete with the Bell Telephone Company.
- The French Ministry of Posts and Telegraphs is created.
1879[]
February 17, 1879 — The National Telephone Company is formed to provide telephone service throughout the United States, based on Elisha Gray's patents. It will be dissolved by a court order in 1903.
1880[]
April 1, 1880 — Alexander Graham Bell and his assistant Charles Summer Tainter transmit the first wireless telephone message 213 meters on a beam of light (the "light-beam photophone").
1881[]
- The first telephone Yellow Pages directory is published.
1882[]
February 1882 — Western Electric and American Bell enter an agreement where Western Electric becomes the exclusive supplier to American Bell.
- Bell Telephone acquires Western Electric Company.
1884[]
- Hermann Hollerith files a patent application on electromechanical tabulation.
- Dorr E. Felt develops the Comptometer, which is operated by pressing keys.
- The IEEE is founded.
1885[]
April 3, 1885 — American Telephone and Telegraph Corporation (AT&T) is established to create a commercially viable, nationwide long-distance network. The Ministry of Communications is esablished in Japan.
1886[]
September 9, 1886 — The Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, an international copyright treaty is ratified in Berne, Switzerland.
1887[]
- Heinrich Hertz discovers electromagnetic waves.
- The phonograph player is patented.
- The gramophone record is invented.
1888[]
1889[]
- Herman Hollerith is awarded three patents (U.S. Patent Nos. 395,781, 395,782, and 395,783) for an electromechanical machine for tabulating information stored on punched cards.
- The North American Phonograph Company begins selling brown wax cylinders. While they were intended primarily for office dictation, they are also used for entertainment and home recording.
1890[]
- Herman Hollerith uses an automated punch card machine, manufactured by the Computing Tabulating Recording Corporation, for the U.S. census. Hollerith's firm merges with several other companies to become IBM in 1924.
- Telephone service begins in Japan.
- Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis publish their landmark law review article titled "The Right to Privacy" in volume 4 of the Harvard Law Review.
1891[]
- The first dial phone is installed.
1893[]
- The original Bell telephone patent expires.
- Nikolai Tesla successfully transmits radio waves wirelessly.
- U.S. Gramophone Co. begins selling mass-produced flat disc recordings for home entertainment.
1895[]
- U.S. Congress mandates that U.S. government works are not subject to copyright protection.
- Guglielmo Marconi makes a wireless transmission.
1896[]
December 3, 1896 — Hermann Hollerith's business is incorporated as the Tabulating Machine Company (TMC). The company develops an automatic punch card sorter.
- Marconi makes the first long-distance wireless transmission (the "radio").
1897[]
February 19, 1897 — The U.S. Copyright Office is established as a separate department of the Library of Congress. The position of Register of Copyrights is established.
1898[]
- Nikola Tesla invents the remote control.
1899[]
- The Wireless Telegraph Company of America is created by Guglielmo Marconi.