"In... 1821... Fresnel announced his conclusion that the observed facts in regard to the interference of polarised light could be explained only by the hypothesis of transverse vibrations. He showed how a medium consisting of "molecules " connected by central forces might be expected to execute such vibrations and to transmit waves of the required type. Before the time of Young and Fresnel such examples of transverse waves as were known—waves on water, transverse vibrations of strings, bars, membranes and plates—were in no case examples of waves transmitted through a medium; and neither the supporters nor the opponents of the undulatory theory of light appear to have conceived of light waves otherwise than as "longitudinal " waves of condensation and rarefaction, of the type rendered familiar by the transmission of sound."
January 1, 1970
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/A_Treatise_on_the_Mathematical_Theory_of_Elasticity