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![]() "Doug Smith W9WI" wrote in message ... Lelannie wrote: I am very interested in the history of radio ,and i was wondering if any one in your group knew where the first radio station in the united states was located.Thank you for your time and help. The answer depends on a number of definitions. Most references will tell you the answer is Pittsburgh, where KDKA is located. Most references, and the industry itself, has designated KDKA as the first radio broadcaster. This is in part due to your note that KDKA's management was the first to have deliberately intended to broadcast to the surrounding population (in fact, KDKA's first general manager, whose name I've forgotten, is considered to have coined the word "broadcast"). I'll admit that I'm biased - I used to work for the old girl. But while the industry designates KDKA as the first, they also do recognise the other pioneers who showed Westinghouse Electric that broadcasting was a viable industry, since they were, accidently or otherwise, also broadcasting to their own regions. There were radio stations for other purposes before any of these broadcast stations came along. Hams; stations on ships (and the shore stations that communicated with them); military stations; and scientific experimenters all predated broadcasting. It has been suggested Nathan B. Stubblefield of Murray, Kentucky was the first to experiment with radio in the U.S.. I would by no means rule out the possibility someone beat Stubblefield to it though. Since licenses weren't required until 1912 (and occasionally not bothered with even after that date) records are incomplete. Stubblefield, I hold, wasn't using "radio" per se. He was using the electromagetic spectrum, unmodulated, more as an induced audio-range EM field...I'll give him that. Because of the nature of his method, it would never have been practical, even if one were to have unlimited amounts of power, since only one such transmitter would be possible in any given area (with more than one, the overlapping audio-rate EM fields would be worse than the co-channel interference AM radio has today). -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- If there's nothing that offends you in your community, then you know you're not living in a free society. Kim Campbell - ex-Prime Minister of Canada - 2004 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- For direct replies, take out the contents between the hyphens. -Really!- .. |
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