Hello, peoples! You know, back in the "Olden Days," before telephones and television, before Las Vegas was part of America (Aka pre-Civil War,) we had the industrial North and the antebellion South. Getting messages to other people was a dangerous and difficult task, and in the end, a mail man may be robbed, so your Aunt Suzy would never get your letter about finding work. This all changed because of Samuel Morse's creation, the telegraph. This thing exploded in the North. Telegraph poles were set up everywhere, but the South was just like, "Eh," and went back to their cotton gins. The North got Samuel Mose and his Telegraph, and the south got Eli Whitney and hid cotton gin. Anyway, to communicate to others, the telegraph used a series of dots and dashes that Morse called, get this, Morse code! Wow, what a beautiful and creative name! Actually, Morse didn't invent morse code. (I know, whaaaat?) It was his assistant, Alfred Vail. Anyway, morse code today can be communicated with a light (on short,off , on long, which is A,) by typing or writing it down(-.-., which is C,) with speach (dit, dah, dit, dit, which is L,) or by tapping on something (Short, long, short, which is R.) Also, if you were to write it out, the words would be seperated by a /. So here you go, a chart with all the letters for morse code.
Key: . = Dit, short, or on short. - = Dah, long, or on long.