The Telectroscope

Some years ago an artist by the name of Paul St George happened upon a packet of dusty papers in a trunk in his grandmother’s attic. On further inspection he discovered that they had been the property of his great-grandfather, an eccentric Victorian engineer, Alexander Stanhope St George.

Paul began to read through the papers and discovered a veritable treasure trove: diaries, diagrams, correspondence, scribbled calculations, and even one or two photographs. At first, Paul felt a detached interest in this first hand account of social and cultural history. But as he read on, he became more and more absorbed, until, with a sudden thrill, he realised that these papers could have a greater significance than was at first apparent.

The notebooks were full of intricate drawings and passages of writing describing a strange machine. This device looked like an enormous telescope with a strange bee-hive shaped cowl at one end containing a complex configuration of mirrors and lenses. Alexander seemed to be suggesting that this invention, which he called a Telectroscope, would act as a visual amplifier, allowing people to see through a tunnel of immense length… a tunnel, the drawings implied, stretching from one side of the world to the other.




  1. Klippoth says:

    Hoax…but real technology…

    http://tinyurl.com/5943le

    [Please use TinyUrl.com for overly long URLs. – ed.]

  2. comhcinc says:

    not a hoax. everyone knows that it isn’t what it seems. kinda like saying that a movie is just a hoax

  3. Miguel says:

    It looks like a really cool – and simple – idea.

  4. jccalhoun hates the spam filter says:

    Here’s the real story on cnn’s website http://is.gd/khR

    The Alameda-Weehawken Burrito Tunnel is, however, absolutely real. http://is.gd/l3T

  5. Pembina says:

    Its an amazing tale – with an amazing amount of resources from other readers coming out of the woodwork
    It wonder what the inventor would say to today’s technology – rather with high speed broadband lines , the internet, high def cameras or even webcams
    The “Dick Tracey ” watches are with us today
    So are ubiquitous cell phones with cameras
    Instead of what the world’s fairs predicted as telephones with video we have kids with MSN , Skype , Yahoo or any other of the ICQ derived chat services
    It is always amazing and interesting to see how a purposeful idea is born , yet the technology at the time does not afford it – and yet the functional idea arrives later with different technology and often as well in a form never thought of or dreamed of before

    Pembina

  6. anon coward says:

    Couldn’t you do this with fiber optics?

  7. Daniel says:

    #6: One article I read says that’s just how it’s done. Two HD cameras connected by fiber optics. Still the website and most things I read pass it off as a realisation of the original plans. Not an art piece. or media installation. As if they finished the tunnel and really built such a device.

  8. Ah_Yea says:

    This inventor was brilliantly insane. Yes, it could work if not for the fact that it could never be built. Yes, you could build a tower to the heavens as well, using his reasoning.


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