American Morse Code — also known as Railroad Morse — is the latter-day name for the Morse Code specification originally developed, in the mid-1830s, by Samuel Morse and Alfred Vail for their electric telegraph. The "American" qualifier was added because, after most of the rest of the world adopted "International Morse", the companies that continued to use the original Morse Code were mainly located in the United States. American Morse is now nearly extinct — it is most frequently seen in railroad museums and U.S. civil war re-enactments — and "Morse Code" today virtually always means the International Morse which supplanted American Morse.
In its original implementation, the Morse Code specification included the following:
Various other companies and countries soon developed their own variations of the original Morse Code. Of special importance was one standard, originally created in Germany in 1848, which was simpler -- it eliminated the long intra-character spaces and the two long dashes -- but also included changes in the sequences for eleven of the letters and most of the numerals. The modified version was adopted as the European standard in 1865, and was known at first as "Continental Morse", although as its use spread it also became known as "International Morse". At this point the original Morse Code started to be called American Morse, to differentiate between the two main standards.
In the late 1890s, radio communication -- initially known as "wireless telegraphy" -- was invented, and at first radio was mostly limited to dot-and-dash transmissions. Initially, a majority of radio operators used the version of the Code that they were most familiar with -- the original Morse Code in the United States, and Continental throughout Europe. However, because of the long range of radio signals, there was a need for a single international standard, especially for seagoing vessels. And at the 1912 Radiotelegraphic Convention, meeting in London, the section of the Convention covering "Transmission of Radiograms" included the statement that "The signals to be employed are those of Morse International Code".
However, even after this, the original Morse Code continued to be used throughout much of the United States. American Morse remained the standard for U.S. landline telegraph companies, including the dominant company, Western Union, in part because the original code, with fewer dashes, could be sent about 5% faster than International Morse. American Morse also was commonly used for radio transmissions on the Great Lakes, and along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. However, International Morse predominated for ocean-going vessels, and many U.S. shipboard operators became skilled in transmitting both versions of the Code as needed.
| Letter | International Code | American Morse | Letter | International Code | American Morse |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| · - | · - | - · | - · | ||
| - · · · | - · · · | - - - | . _ . † | ||
| - · - · | · · _ · † | · - - · | · · · · · | ||
| - · · | - · · | - - · - | · · - · | ||
| · | · | · - · | · _ · · † | ||
| · · - · | · - · | · · · | · · · | ||
| - - · | - - · | - | - | ||
| · · · · | · · · · | · · - | · · - | ||
| · · | · · | · · · - | · · · - | ||
| · - - - | - · - · | · - - | · - - | ||
| - · - | - · - | - · · - | · - · · | ||
| · - · · | — † | - · - - | · · _ · · † | ||
| - - | - - | - - · · | · · · _ · † |
| International code | American Morse | |
|---|---|---|
| †
| |
| ·--·
| |
··---
| ··-··
| |
···--
| ···-·
| |
····-
| ····-
| |
·····
|
| |
-····
| ······
| |
--···
| --··
| |
---··
| -····
| |
| -··-
|
| International code | American Morse | |
|---|---|---|
| Period * | · - · - · - | · · - - · · |
| Comma * | - - · · - - | · - · - |
| Question mark * | · · - - · · | - · · - · |
| Apostrophe * | · - - - - · | |
| Exclamation mark * | - · - · - - | |
| Slash * | - · · - · | |
| Parentheses ( ) | - · - - · - | |
| Ampersand * | · ··· | |
| Colon * | - - - · · · | |
| Semicolon * | - · - · - · | |
| Double dash * | - · · · - | |
| Fraction bar | - · · - · | |
| Hyphen * | - · · · · - | |
| Underscore * | · · - - · - | |
| Quotation mark * | · - · · - · | |
| "@" (commat) | · - - · - · |
The "@" symbol was added in 2004, and combines A and C into one character.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"American Morse code".
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