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Giant 'telescope' links London, New York
A giant 'telescope' has appeared near Tower Bridge in London and the Brooklyn Bridge in New York.
But all is not what it seems...
In all its optical brilliance and brass and wood, there stood the Telectroscope: an 11.2-meter-(37 feet) long by 3.3-meter-(11 feet) tall dream of a device allowing people on one side of the Atlantic to look into its person-size lens and, in real time, see those on the other side via a recently completed tunnel running under the ocean. (Think 19th-century Webcam. Or maybe Victorian-age video phone.)
And all the credit goes to British artist Paul St. George. If he had not been rummaging through great-grandpa Alexander's personal effects a few years ago, the Telectroscope might still exist only on paper, hidden away deep inside some old box.
But fortunately, St. George could not bear that thought and thus decided he should be the one to finish what his great-grandfather had started. It was quite simply the right thing to do. Plus, it would make a pretty cool public art exhibit.
During the twilight hours Tuesday, massive dirt-covered metal drill bits miraculously emerged -- one by the Thames near the Tower Bridge and the other on Fulton Ferry Landing by the Brooklyn Bridge in New York -- completing the final sections of great-grandfather Alexander's transatlantic tunnel.
The drills were removed Wednesday night and replaced with identical Telectroscopes at both ends, allowing Londoners and New Yorkers to wake up Thursday, look over to the far and distant shore and stare at each other for a while (the telescope-like contraption permits visual but not vocal communication).
Of course, only part of this story is true.
St. George is an artist in Britain who does have a grandfather -- minus the great prefix -- named Alexander.
And the trans-Atlantic tunnel is really a trans-Atlantic broadband network rounded off on each end with HD cameras, according to Tiscali, an Italian Internet provider handling the technical side of the project.
As for the Telectroscope, well, it was a fanciful idea that, according to St. George, came about from a typo made by a 19th-century reporter who misspelled Electroscope, a device used to measure electrostatic charges - as Telectroscope.
"The journalist also misunderstood what it was about and wrote in the article that it was a device for the suppression of absence," St. George said. "The accidental hope captured their imagination, and lots of people at the end of the 19th century thought it was a great idea."
Crowd Power
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Amy Judd
Vancouver, Canada -
jamesmurrayharrison
Asheville, North Carolina, United States






Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (4)
at 22:23 on May 23rd, 2008
amyjudd, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 03:59 on May 24th, 2008
No..Amyjudd. CNN is definitely wrong. I watched the artist at the site, digging away for months and you could see he went so far into the earth that you could no longer see or hear him, and when he came back up, he definitely spoke with a New York accent. So that proves beyond all possible doubt that the link-up is by telescope going right through the earth and joining up at both ends!!
Gerry
PS: Whenever I see things written in black and white, I know they are true!
at 10:06 on May 24th, 2008
Ha! Everything on the Internet is true too! I believe it!
at 05:29 on May 24th, 2008
What I love about this is that Mr. St. George created a whole entertainment experience using art- plot, back-story, and a physical artifact. Brilliant.