Note that this is in stark contrast to the first transatlantic tele_graph_ cable, which did not really have a ground line and consisted of seven copper wires covered with three coats of gutta-percha (natural latex rubber) and then hemp and tar. Many breaks and failures later, the first messages were sent in August 1858. The bandwidth was such that Queen Victoria's message to the US president, James Buchanan, that contained 98 words took 16 hours to send. It ultimately died during a famous dispute between William Thomson – later Lord Kelvin – yes, _that_ Kelvin – and the project's main engineer that ultimately ended in disaster (when the engineer put 2k VDC on the cable, destroying the insulation, against Thomson's advice) and a famous court case that basically saw the role of "the scientist" (the physicist!) as a competition professional for the first time.

It's all fascinating history. By the time of Bell Labs, an awful _lot_ had already been learned from previous failures.

Yeah, trying to build a thousands of km long undersea cable without a good theory of transmission lines is gonna be a painful experience (a lot of this theory was developed to fix these problems!)