The queue grew longer as the
day wore on outside the Central Telegraph Office in the city that gave birth to
the telegram service in India about 163 years ago.
The rush of
people wanting to live the last moments of a facility sliding, by the minute,
into history continued well into the late evening hours of Sunday. The office
“was not expected to close for the day before midnight by when the numbers
could have touched 350,” said chief superintendent, Subrata Kumar Das. Only a
fraction of the employees was present to serve those choosing to send a
telegram on its final day of existence. This was the result of a mass protest
against the decision to terminate the services.
For
customers using the service “on this historical day,” as one put it, the
messages sent were the stuff that memories are made of. But the numerical
shortcuts for set occasions — 16 was for “May heaven’s choicest blessings be
showered on the young couple” and 100 for “Our deepest condolences” — were not
of much use on Sunday. There was no code that stood for the telegram’s own
demise.
“The day
they stopped the telegram. One of the last ones to be sent. Keep it well.” This
is what Aman Malik, in his twenties, wrote in what was his first telegram to
his grandmother Naseem Malik in Agra.
“Today is
the last day. I can tell you how much I love you through the telegram,” Kajari
Bhattacharya said in another — meant for his two-year-old daughter in the city.
Septuagenarian
Santosh Ghosh, who has done extensive research on the telegram service, does
not, however, look at July 14, 2013 as the day the telegram died. “It will live
on though in another form — a part of a memory….What is interesting about the
telegram is how a mode a communication is so intrinsically associated with our
history. Like our history, the memories of the telegram need to be cherished,”
he said.
Mr. Ghosh’s
book, The
Sepoy Mutiny From Telegram Messages, is
a historical account of India’s First War of Independence through the telegraph
messages sent between 1857 and 1858.
“It was Sir
William Brooke O’Shaughnessy, a physician at the Calcutta Medical College, who
went to Lord Dalhousie and spoke about the necessity of telegram services in
1848. The work to lay telegraph lines started in November 1850 between Alipore
Telecom Factory in the city and the Diamond Harbour Post Office,” he said.
The CTO
building was earlier a Red Cross hospital and was converted to a telegraph
office in 1906. Sitting in his office there, surrounded by equipment used to
send telegrams in the past, is Mr. Das.
“True that
this mode of communication has lost its economic viability; but the telegram
had its undeniable advantage too – that of speed. The queues outside the
counter have dwindled with time; the one today comprises those who will become
a part of history,” he said.
“It is like
the end of an era. But we always knew the day will come,” said Gour
Chakraborty, who has been collecting telegrams over the past few decades and
was one of those to have queued up. “In a few years from now, like philately is
for stamps, the study and collection of telegrams would emerge as a distinct
sphere of interest”, he added. He shot off six messages. “The contents are not
as important as the date they are being sent on.”
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