Talk:John Tawell

Latest comment: 15 years ago by Tabletop in topic Why no letter "Q"?

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Talk:John Tawell John Tawell pleaded guilty at the Old Bailey in February 1814 for having in his possession a forged banknote (not for forgery) and was accordingly sentenced to fourteen years transportation. Although he had in fact been attempting to commit forgery, the timely discovery of the forged note saved him from the gallows. He was transported to New South Wales, arriving in Sydney in January 1815 where he served part of his sentence before receiving a ticket-of-leave and later a conditional pardon. He established the first retail pharmacy in New South Wales in 1820 then gradually invested in importing and exporting. He made a number of journeys backwards and forwards to England before his final departure from New South Wales in 1838. [Further corrections and additional information will be provided at a later date.] CarolBax 08:24, 9 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Why no letter "Q"?

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Telegraph received shown pointing to letter "G".

Because the five needle telegraph devised by Cooke and Wheatstone, could only handle 20 letters, D-J-Q-U-X-Z were left out. "Q" could easily be substituted by "KW".[1] Tabletop (talk) 08:42, 21 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

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