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In August 1858, when the first transatlantic telegraph cable failed after just three weeks, most people saw disaster. Charles Lewis Tiffany saw opportunity. With no formal business education, the Manhattan fancy goods store owner acquired 20 miles of the defunct cable and transformed technological failure into one of history's most brilliant marketing campaigns.
Tiffany cut the cable into four-inch souvenirs, mounted them with brass collars stamped "Atlantic Telegraph Cable—Guaranteed by Tiffany & Company," and sold them for just 50 cents. The crowds were so great that police had to be called. These humble cable segments—not diamonds or luxury goods—made Tiffany & Co. a household name across America. Today, those same souvenirs fetch premium prices at auction, but only if they bear the Tiffany name.
This is the story of how a Connecticut cotton mill owner with entrepreneurial instincts turned a failed 19th-century technology into brand immortality, establishing marketing principles that Tiffany & Company still uses today.
Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays. Every hometown has a story—what's yours?
The Story: When the first transatlantic telegraph cable failed in September 1858 after only three weeks of operation, Charles Lewis Tiffany saw what others missed: a marketing opportunity. The Manhattan store owner acquired 20 miles of the defunct cable and transformed it into one of American history's most successful product launches.
Key Moments in This Episode:
Key Figures:
The Marketing Innovation:
Tiffany's strategy was revolutionary for its time:
Legacy & Modern Value:
Today, Tiffany telegraph cable souvenirs surface regularly at auctions. According to Manhattan antique dealer George Glazer: "People want the Tiffany name." Cable segments without the Tiffany brass collar have significantly lower value, even when provably authentic. The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History maintains a collection of these souvenirs as important artifacts of 19th-century marketing history.
Historical Context:
The transatlantic telegraph represented a massive technological leap—the "internet moment" of its era. When it succeeded on August 5, 1858, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow called it "the greatest news of the hour, the year, the century." New York went "cable mad" with parades and celebrations. The cable's subsequent failure after three weeks undermined public confidence, but Tiffany had already secured his marketing masterstroke.
Sources for This Episode:
Primary research courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution and New York Historical Society archives.
By Shane Waters4.5
138138 ratings
In August 1858, when the first transatlantic telegraph cable failed after just three weeks, most people saw disaster. Charles Lewis Tiffany saw opportunity. With no formal business education, the Manhattan fancy goods store owner acquired 20 miles of the defunct cable and transformed technological failure into one of history's most brilliant marketing campaigns.
Tiffany cut the cable into four-inch souvenirs, mounted them with brass collars stamped "Atlantic Telegraph Cable—Guaranteed by Tiffany & Company," and sold them for just 50 cents. The crowds were so great that police had to be called. These humble cable segments—not diamonds or luxury goods—made Tiffany & Co. a household name across America. Today, those same souvenirs fetch premium prices at auction, but only if they bear the Tiffany name.
This is the story of how a Connecticut cotton mill owner with entrepreneurial instincts turned a failed 19th-century technology into brand immortality, establishing marketing principles that Tiffany & Company still uses today.
Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays. Every hometown has a story—what's yours?
The Story: When the first transatlantic telegraph cable failed in September 1858 after only three weeks of operation, Charles Lewis Tiffany saw what others missed: a marketing opportunity. The Manhattan store owner acquired 20 miles of the defunct cable and transformed it into one of American history's most successful product launches.
Key Moments in This Episode:
Key Figures:
The Marketing Innovation:
Tiffany's strategy was revolutionary for its time:
Legacy & Modern Value:
Today, Tiffany telegraph cable souvenirs surface regularly at auctions. According to Manhattan antique dealer George Glazer: "People want the Tiffany name." Cable segments without the Tiffany brass collar have significantly lower value, even when provably authentic. The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History maintains a collection of these souvenirs as important artifacts of 19th-century marketing history.
Historical Context:
The transatlantic telegraph represented a massive technological leap—the "internet moment" of its era. When it succeeded on August 5, 1858, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow called it "the greatest news of the hour, the year, the century." New York went "cable mad" with parades and celebrations. The cable's subsequent failure after three weeks undermined public confidence, but Tiffany had already secured his marketing masterstroke.
Sources for This Episode:
Primary research courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution and New York Historical Society archives.

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