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#1
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![]() Jay Davis: Listening to history speak (March 24): This column first appeared in the March 16, 2005 edition of the VillageSoup Citizen. "Eighty years ago this week Belfast (in Waldo County) was at the heart of an international technological breakthrough. An RCA long-wave station located near the present Belfast Armory received the first live radio signal beamed across the Atlantic and passed it on to a New York radio station that then broadcast the first live sound from Europe. The Belfast Museum has developed a full file on the historic event that includes a tape of the actual transmission, newspaper articles from the time, and physical remains of the cutting-edge technology, including copper wire, concrete blocks that anchored the guy wires for the 10 miles of posts and wires that made up a Beverage antenna and photographs from the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C. Belfast Historical Society President Megan Pinette assembled the memorabilia with the help of volunteer Bruce Clark, a HAM radio operator and electronic technician who will conduct an archaeological dig at the site this summer. The story Pinette and Clark tell should warm the hearts of all who know Belfast isn't just a disconnected outpost on the edge of the tundra. During the early years of the 20th century, companies like RCA, AT&T, International Telephone and Telegraph and GE conducted far-reaching experiments in broadcast technology. Belfast was the home to several installations that received Morse code messages from ships at sea and Europe because of its elevated location near the Atlantic. A BBC contest to find the best reception site in the U.S. for transatlantic messages was won by HAM operator Earl White of Searsport Avenue in 1923 or '24. The RCA offices were in a wooden building near the present airport where signals were received from a 10-mile Beverage antenna that stretched from Belfast to Moody Mountain in Searsmont along a rigidly straight route. The station used long-wave technology, which was soon superseded by short-wave, ending its usefulness in 1929. But for a few brief years, Belfast was on the cutting edge of broadcasting. In 1921, Gen. David Sarnoff, head of RCA and one of America's best-known entrepreneurs, visited with his wife to check out the local operation, staying at the downtown Windsor Hotel. In 1926 RCA constructed a modern brick building to house a permanent installation in Belfast. It remains today as the main office of the Belfast Armory. Plans were made for additional Beverage antennas that would run perpendicular to the Moody Mountain line. On March 14, 1925, the big day arrived. A broadcast that originated from the Savoy Hotel ballroom in London was sent over land wires to a high-power station at the English coast, in Chelmsford. From there the signals were transferred to a 20,000-watt transmitter and beamed across the Atlantic to Belfast, where they were received by a super-heterodyne receiver attached to the 10-mile antenna. Re-amplified, the signals were fed into a short-wave transmitter and sent to the RCA station at Van Cortlandt Park in New York, then to the land-wire system of station WJX, which broadcast them live. That description comes from a publication called World Wide Wireless, which should know whereof it speaks. It said the message reached the ears of American radio listeners in one-fiftieth of a second, a bit faster than it was heard by the audience in London. The transmission interrupted existing programming on the popular station, and the introductory message noted the Belfast connection. It was through such experiments that international broadcasting was born. Alas, the city's involvement was short-lived. The RCA staff was sent to Long Island in 1929, along with some of the equipment, and the buildings were abandoned until the Armory took over in 1941. The Belfast Museum is becoming an increasingly intriguing place under the energetic leadership of Pinette and a hardy band of volunteers. George Squibb showed me last week how records are being catalogued and preserved in archival correctness; I'll have more to write about that in the near future. The RCA adventure might well have slipped beneath the local radar if not for Pinette and Bruce Clark. The legacy of Capt. Albert Stevens, now the namesake for the new Belfast elementary school, might have, too. The Historical Society and the Museum deserve our great thanks. It's a place where history speaks to us, literally. http://waldo.villagesoup.com/opinion...m?StoryID=2839 |
#2
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Interesting, Mike. But just like to point out that Chelmsford is not on
the coast - must be 30 miles away. What's more it's 30 miles or so from the North Sea coast, not the Atlantic coast. Chelmsford became the home of the Marconi company (later GEC-Marconi) at the Writtle Road site. Rod Walker "Mike Terry" wrote in message ... Jay Davis: Listening to history speak (March 24): This column first appeared in the March 16, 2005 edition of the VillageSoup Citizen. "Eighty years ago this week Belfast (in Waldo County) was at the heart of an international technological breakthrough. An RCA long-wave station located near the present Belfast Armory received the first live radio signal beamed across the Atlantic and passed it on to a New York radio station that then broadcast the first live sound from Europe. The Belfast Museum has developed a full file on the historic event that includes a tape of the actual transmission, newspaper articles from the time, and physical remains of the cutting-edge technology, including copper wire, concrete blocks that anchored the guy wires for the 10 miles of posts and wires that made up a Beverage antenna and photographs from the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C. Belfast Historical Society President Megan Pinette assembled the memorabilia with the help of volunteer Bruce Clark, a HAM radio operator and electronic technician who will conduct an archaeological dig at the site this summer. The story Pinette and Clark tell should warm the hearts of all who know Belfast isn't just a disconnected outpost on the edge of the tundra. During the early years of the 20th century, companies like RCA, AT&T, International Telephone and Telegraph and GE conducted far-reaching experiments in broadcast technology. Belfast was the home to several installations that received Morse code messages from ships at sea and Europe because of its elevated location near the Atlantic. A BBC contest to find the best reception site in the U.S. for transatlantic messages was won by HAM operator Earl White of Searsport Avenue in 1923 or '24. The RCA offices were in a wooden building near the present airport where signals were received from a 10-mile Beverage antenna that stretched from Belfast to Moody Mountain in Searsmont along a rigidly straight route. The station used long-wave technology, which was soon superseded by short-wave, ending its usefulness in 1929. But for a few brief years, Belfast was on the cutting edge of broadcasting. In 1921, Gen. David Sarnoff, head of RCA and one of America's best-known entrepreneurs, visited with his wife to check out the local operation, staying at the downtown Windsor Hotel. In 1926 RCA constructed a modern brick building to house a permanent installation in Belfast. It remains today as the main office of the Belfast Armory. Plans were made for additional Beverage antennas that would run perpendicular to the Moody Mountain line. On March 14, 1925, the big day arrived. A broadcast that originated from the Savoy Hotel ballroom in London was sent over land wires to a high-power station at the English coast, in Chelmsford. From there the signals were transferred to a 20,000-watt transmitter and beamed across the Atlantic to Belfast, where they were received by a super-heterodyne receiver attached to the 10-mile antenna. Re-amplified, the signals were fed into a short-wave transmitter and sent to the RCA station at Van Cortlandt Park in New York, then to the land-wire system of station WJX, which broadcast them live. That description comes from a publication called World Wide Wireless, which should know whereof it speaks. It said the message reached the ears of American radio listeners in one-fiftieth of a second, a bit faster than it was heard by the audience in London. The transmission interrupted existing programming on the popular station, and the introductory message noted the Belfast connection. It was through such experiments that international broadcasting was born. Alas, the city's involvement was short-lived. The RCA staff was sent to Long Island in 1929, along with some of the equipment, and the buildings were abandoned until the Armory took over in 1941. The Belfast Museum is becoming an increasingly intriguing place under the energetic leadership of Pinette and a hardy band of volunteers. George Squibb showed me last week how records are being catalogued and preserved in archival correctness; I'll have more to write about that in the near future. The RCA adventure might well have slipped beneath the local radar if not for Pinette and Bruce Clark. The legacy of Capt. Albert Stevens, now the namesake for the new Belfast elementary school, might have, too. The Historical Society and the Museum deserve our great thanks. It's a place where history speaks to us, literally. http://waldo.villagesoup.com/opinion...m?StoryID=2839 |
#3
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The "first" was a signal for broadcast, but not the first radio signal from
Europe. On 12 December 1901, Guglielmo Marconi succeeded in broadcasting the first radio signal, the letter 'S', from a station at Poldhu in Cornwall to St. John's on the island of Newfoundland, Canada. Mike Terry wrote: Jay Davis: Listening to history speak (March 24): This column first appeared in the March 16, 2005 edition of the VillageSoup Citizen. "Eighty years ago this week Belfast (in Waldo County) was at the heart of an international technological breakthrough. An RCA long-wave station located near the present Belfast Armory received the first live radio signal beamed across the Atlantic and passed it on to a New York radio station that then broadcast the first live sound from Europe. The Belfast Museum has developed a full file on the historic event that includes a tape of the actual transmission, newspaper articles from the time, and physical remains of the cutting-edge technology, including copper wire, concrete blocks that anchored the guy wires for the 10 miles of posts and wires that made up a Beverage antenna and photographs from the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C. Belfast Historical Society President Megan Pinette assembled the memorabilia with the help of volunteer Bruce Clark, a HAM radio operator and electronic technician who will conduct an archaeological dig at the site this summer. The story Pinette and Clark tell should warm the hearts of all who know Belfast isn't just a disconnected outpost on the edge of the tundra. During the early years of the 20th century, companies like RCA, AT&T, International Telephone and Telegraph and GE conducted far-reaching experiments in broadcast technology. Belfast was the home to several installations that received Morse code messages from ships at sea and Europe because of its elevated location near the Atlantic. A BBC contest to find the best reception site in the U.S. for transatlantic messages was won by HAM operator Earl White of Searsport Avenue in 1923 or '24. The RCA offices were in a wooden building near the present airport where signals were received from a 10-mile Beverage antenna that stretched from Belfast to Moody Mountain in Searsmont along a rigidly straight route. The station used long-wave technology, which was soon superseded by short-wave, ending its usefulness in 1929. But for a few brief years, Belfast was on the cutting edge of broadcasting. In 1921, Gen. David Sarnoff, head of RCA and one of America's best-known entrepreneurs, visited with his wife to check out the local operation, staying at the downtown Windsor Hotel. In 1926 RCA constructed a modern brick building to house a permanent installation in Belfast. It remains today as the main office of the Belfast Armory. Plans were made for additional Beverage antennas that would run perpendicular to the Moody Mountain line. On March 14, 1925, the big day arrived. A broadcast that originated from the Savoy Hotel ballroom in London was sent over land wires to a high-power station at the English coast, in Chelmsford. From there the signals were transferred to a 20,000-watt transmitter and beamed across the Atlantic to Belfast, where they were received by a super-heterodyne receiver attached to the 10-mile antenna. Re-amplified, the signals were fed into a short-wave transmitter and sent to the RCA station at Van Cortlandt Park in New York, then to the land-wire system of station WJX, which broadcast them live. That description comes from a publication called World Wide Wireless, which should know whereof it speaks. It said the message reached the ears of American radio listeners in one-fiftieth of a second, a bit faster than it was heard by the audience in London. The transmission interrupted existing programming on the popular station, and the introductory message noted the Belfast connection. It was through such experiments that international broadcasting was born. Alas, the city's involvement was short-lived. The RCA staff was sent to Long Island in 1929, along with some of the equipment, and the buildings were abandoned until the Armory took over in 1941. The Belfast Museum is becoming an increasingly intriguing place under the energetic leadership of Pinette and a hardy band of volunteers. George Squibb showed me last week how records are being catalogued and preserved in archival correctness; I'll have more to write about that in the near future. The RCA adventure might well have slipped beneath the local radar if not for Pinette and Bruce Clark. The legacy of Capt. Albert Stevens, now the namesake for the new Belfast elementary school, might have, too. The Historical Society and the Museum deserve our great thanks. It's a place where history speaks to us, literally. http://waldo.villagesoup.com/opinion...m?StoryID=2839 |
#4
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Mike Terry wrote:
snip Belfast is a colorful community. Reminds me of the TV show "Northern Exposure". A friend has an aunt who seems to be the town social director. Wish I knew this bit of history last time I was up there. |
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