Telegraphy originated in the 1830s and 40s and flourished in the following
decades, but with a patchwork of electrical standards. Electromotive force was
for the most part measured in units of the predominant Daniell cell. Each
company had their own resistance standard. In 1862 the British Association for
the Advancement of Science formed a committee to address this situation. By
1873 they had given definition to the electromagnetic system of units (emu) and
defined the practical units of the ohm as 109 emu units of resistance and
the volt as 108 emu units of electromotive force. These recommendations
were ratified and expanded upon in a series of international congresses held
between 1881 and 1904. A proposal by Giovanni Giorgi in 1901 took advantage of
a coincidence between the conversion of the units of energy in the emu system
(the erg) and in the practical system (the joule) in that the same conversion
factor existed between the cgs based emu system and a theretofore undefined MKS
system. By introducing another unit, X (where X could be any of the practical
electrical units), Giorgi demonstrated that a self consistent MKSX system was
tenable without the need for multiplying factors. Ultimately the ampere was
selected as the fourth unit. It took nearly 60 years, but in 1960 Giorgi's
proposal was incorporated as the core of the newly inaugurated International
System of Units (SI). This article surveys the physics, physicists and events
that contributed to those developments.Comment: 7 pages, 1 table. Date of most recent CGPM conference updated from
that recorded in published pape