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Old September 25th 05, 12:23 PM
puns
 
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I wish you would write it as a novel.
I enjoy reading about radio during WW2.

"Walter Maxwell" wrote in message
...
I'm aware that this post is off-topic, except that it is the basis for
my
two previous posts that were on topic to antennas. I believe it is time to
reexamine the contributions hams and commercial radio ops made to the WW2
effort
as they were the operating personnel of the FCC's Radio Intelligence
Division.
This is their story.
With the War already raging in Europe in 1939, people at the State
Department knew they were missing vital war intelligence being exchanged
by
radio, especially that going between Germany and South America. They
queried the
FCC Field Division in early 1940 about monitoring to intercept the
information.
The Field Division operated the original primary monitoring stations,
performing
regulatory and enforcement duties. However, at that time the Field
Division
personnel had their hands full just monitoring domestic operations, and
had no
time for intelligence monitoring.
Congress was alerted to the need for additional personnel and
equipment for
the FCC to monitor intelligence, and it approved funds for establishing a
new
section, the National Defense Operating section, NDO. The NDO began
operations
September 3, 1940, and was later upgraded to a division, becoming the
Radio
Intelligence Division, RID. To head the NDO, the late George E. Sterling
(W1AE/W3DF) was elevated from Ass't Chief Engineer, FCC, to Chief, NDO
Section,
and later to Chief, RID. To obtain personnel for the new section he
instructed
one of his assistants, the late Harriette Koster, to search through the
file
cards containing the information on licensed amateur and commercial
operators.
She selected more than 500 operators from the file cards, and over T.J.
Slowie's
signature, she sent telegrams to those selected, offering them positions
of
Radio Operator, Ass't Monitoring Officer, and Monitoring Officer. The
entire
personnel for the new NDO Section, including myself, were obtained from
response
to those telegrams. (Harrriette later became my wife, and mother of my
four
children, W2WM, WB4GNR, K4JRM, and KC4UBZ (Sue's license now expired). The
Congressional funding also supported building many new secondary
monitoring
stations throughout the country, each equipped with Hallicrafters SX-28
and S-27
receivers, and Adcock (sky-wave) direction finders. In addition, Hudson
automobiles equipped with the receivers and a loop direction finder were a
part
of each secondary station, used for mobile close-in surveillance.
Immediately following Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941, the FCC RID
mobilized
a group from both primary and secondary monitoring stations to go to the
Hawaiian Islands to set up eight new secondary stations, one each on Oahu,
Molokai, Kauai, Maui, and Lanai, and three on the big island of Hawaii.
NDO
Chief Sterling accompanied the group, of which I was a member from the
primary
station at Allegan, Michigan.
Extensive 24/7 mobile monitoring around the shoreline of all the
islands
was pursued, with the intention of finding clandestine radio operation
between
local Japanese loyal to Japan and Jap submarines cruising off shore. No
such
operations were found to occur, and no Hawaiians of Japanese descent were
found
to be disloyal to the U.S. During my stay on the Islands I worked at
stations on
Oahu, Kauai, Molokai and Hawaii.
With Adcock direction finders at all eight secondary stations, plus
the one
at the primary station in Honolulu, the FCC saved the lives of thousands
of
military personnel and more than 600 military aircraft flying the Pacific
between the Mainland and the Islands during WW2, after becoming lost due
to
errors in navigation with limited fuel supply. Details on how this task
was
performed, and how the Beverage antenna was used to receive broadcasts
from JOAK
Tokyo, were the subjects of my two previous posts.
Within the next few months I'll be relating some of the 'real
intelligence'
work involving RID operations that had a significant effect on shortening
WW2.

Walter Maxwell, W2DU