Back in the day, brokers would get to know price movements through pageboys who would run to and fro between the #stockexchange and the offices of brokers. 2/n
Enter Calahan. A school dropout, he was employed as a telegraph operator with #WesternUnion and had a lot of tech-savvy. 3/n
He rigged up a simple yet elegant solution - a #telegraph machine to print stock quotes on strips of paper tape. Voila! The markets were transformed. 4/n
The invention was a revelation in the late 19th century. Investors and brokers were thrilled. They now had access to information a lot quicker than before. 5/n
It soon attracted the attention of that giant among inventors, #ThomasAlvaEdison. He improved on this invention and patented his own four years later. 6/n
Fast forward 20 years. France 🇫🇷 had gifted the USA this massive statue that was put together by the likes of #GustaveEiffel 🗽 7/n
The dedication of the Statue of Liberty 🗽 was a grand affair. #NewYorkers stepped out in droves to witness the occasion. 8/n
Soon enough, someone else came up with another inventive thought. Why not celebrate such events with confetti showers? That’s how the “ticker-tape” parade was born. 9/n #tickertapeparade
It soon became a thing. NYC has held more than 200 ticker-tape parades in more than 100 years. At the end of World War II, when #Armstrong, #Aldrin and #Collins returned from the Moon and so on... 🌘 10/n
The ticker even found its way into art. The artist #DorothyWrightLiebes, the “mother of weaving”, used ticker tapes in her textiles 11/n
To reduce the amount of info on a tape ticker, symbols were soon introduced. Using just K for #Kellogg made more sense 12/n
Companies began to think innovatively. #HarleyDavidson has the clever symbol HOG 13/n
#Onthisday in 1958, Russian poet and novelist, Boris Pasternak, won the @NobelPrize for Literature. The award, which proved to be a double-edged sword, had to be refused by the writer. Read on to find out why! (1/6)
Following the Swedish Academy announcing him as 1958’s winner, Pasternak sent them the following telegram: “Immensely thankful, touched, proud, astonished, abashed.” But as luck would have it, he was forced to send them another telegram rejecting the honour just days later. (2/6)
Pasternak won for his achievements in contemporary poetry and great Russian narrative tradition. The narrative in question was his novel Doctor Zhivago. A tragic love story rather critical of the Bolshevik Revolution, it did not sit well with the government. (3/6)
#Onthisday 80 years ago, Edson Arantes do Nascimento was born in Minas Gerais, Brazil. Named after the American inventor Thomas Edison, he was nicknamed Dico by his family. But you might better know him as the greatest footballer of all time, Pelé! (1/11)
The name Pelé, a mispronunciation of Bilé, his father’s teammate’s name, was originally used by classmates to taunt little Edson. As fate would have it, a nickname that he once insisted was rubbish, is now celebrated across the world by millions of fans. (2/11)
Growing up in poverty, Pelé picked up football on the streets of Bauru, where a rolled up sock stuffed with rags was often his only gear. Coached by Waldemar de Brito, who is often credited with discovering football’s God, Pelé joined Santos at age 15. (3/11)
Very few can claim to be an entire generation’s heroine. And who better fits the bill than Carrie Fisher? Known to many around the world as Princess Leia, today we celebrate the American actor who was born #Onthisday in 1956. (1/13)
With Hollywood bigwigs Debbie Reynolds and Eddie Fisher for parents, some might say Fisher was destined for the showbiz. Check out this photo of young Carrie watching her mother perform! (2/13)
This was followed by her film debut alongside Warren Beatty in the comedy-drama Shampoo (1975). And it wasn't long before she captured our hearts in 1977 as Princess Leia in George Lucas’ epic @starwars . (3/13)
The makers of the #Madagascar series, consulted the paintings of artist #HenriRousseau for inspiration for the movie's sprawling jungles and leavy trees. Here is a #funwithfundas thread on this strange French painter who died #OnThisDay in 1910. (1/n)
Henri Julien Félix Rousseau was born in 1844 in Laval, a market town in northwest France. His work is said to belong to the Naïve or Primitive style. The 1870s and 80s saw an #Impressionist wave in Europe. Rousseau's #art moves in a new brisk direction from impressionist roots.
Rousseau took painting pretty later on in his life, in his forties. At 49, he retired from his job as a customs clerk on the outskirts of the city to paint full-time. He was known by the nickname Le Douanier or customs officer for the same reason.
Happy Independence Day! We are 73 years removed from August 15, 1947, and may not be familiar with the days leading up to that fateful day, and its aftermath. Here is a thread on the events of August 1947. #Freedom#India
The date of August 15 marked two years to the day when Japan had surrendered, ending World War II. Lord Mountbatten, long known in the British Admiralty as the 'Master of Disaster', served as Supreme Allied Commander, South East Asia Command, at the time.
Mountbatten's meeting with the man he replaced, Lord Wavell, has been mythologised. According to a (disputed) account, Wavell reportedly handed him a file containing the British exit plan, which tellingly was named 'Operation Madhouse'. (No such file was ever found)
#OnThisDay in 1919 was born Vikram Sarabhai, the father of India's space programme. But Sarabhai was much more than just a scientist, living an extraordinarily full life. Read on to learn more about him! #VikramSarabhai#ISRO#India#history#funwithfundas (1/23)
According to a popular (unconfirmed) story, Rabindranath Tagore, a part-time phrenologist, seeing the baby Sarabhai's large and unusually shaped forehead, pronounced that "this boy will achieve great things". #tagore (2/23)
For those wondering, phrenology is a pseudoscientific study of the shape and bumps on the skull to predict a person's character and traits. It was very popular in the 19th century. (3/23)