Historic Pelham

Presenting the rich history of Pelham, NY in Westchester County: current historical research, descriptions of how to research Pelham history online and genealogy discussions of Pelham families.

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Fascinating QSL Card Sent by Killian Van Rensselaer Langsingh of Elderwood Avenue in 1924


The nearly one hundred year old QSL Card depicted below reads like a coded message which, in a way, it was.  Killian Van Rensselaer Lansingh of 226 Elderwood Avenue in Pelham Heights mailed the card shortly after a significant event on December 21, 1924.  It reads, in part:

"This crd fm 2ATF Dec. 21, 1924 . . . 
Wud appreciate a QSL on my sigs if QRB is over 1,000 miles, or if u r outside the continental U.S.A.  Vy best 73's"

An image of the QSL Card appears immediately below.


QSL Card Sent by 2ATF (Killian Van Rensselaer Lansingh)
Shortly After December 21, 1924.  NOTE:  Click on Image
to Enlarge.

This is an early QSL Card that says a great deal about the history of the little Town of Pelham.  A QSL Card is a postcard mailed to confirm "either a two-way radio communication between two amateur radio stations or a one-way reception of a signal from an AM radio, FM radio, television or shortwave broadcasting station," among other things.  See "QSL Card" in Wikipedia - The Free Encyclopedia (visited Oct. 15, 2018).  Indeed, according to one source:

"During the early days of radio broadcasting, the ability for a radio set to receive distant signals was a source of pride for many consumers and hobbyists. Listeners would mail "reception reports" to radio broadcasting stations in hopes of getting a written letter to officially verify they had heard a distant station. As the volume of reception reports increased, stations took to sending post cards containing a brief form that acknowledged reception. Collecting these cards became popular with radio listeners in the 1920s and 1930s, and reception reports were often used by early broadcasters to gauge the effectiveness of their transmissions."  Source:  Id. 

This QSL Card was prepared by Pelham Ham Radio Operator Killian Van Rensselaer Lansingh of Pelham Heights.  At the time he sent this QSL Card, Lansingh was a college student attending the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts.  He was home on Winter Break.

According to the Bureau of Navigation Radio Service, U.S. Department of Commerce and its "Amateur Radio Stations of the U.S. 1924-26," Killian V. R. Lansingh had a 500-Watt Ham Radio Broadcasting station at his home (actually, that of his parents), as indicated on the QSL Card, at 226 Elderwood Avenue in Pelham.  See Department of Commerce Bureau of Navigation Radio Service, Amateur Radio Stations of the United States -- Edition June 30, 1924, pp. 40 & 58 (Washington, D.C.:  Government Printing Office, 1924).   

With this QSL card, Lansingh was acknowledging receipt of a signal from a station the call signal of which was 3BDO.  That station was owned by Russel U. Waite of North West Avenue, Vineland, N. J.  Waite owned a small 25-Watts Ham Radio Broadcast Station at that location.  See id., pp. 69 & 89.  Lansingh noted that he received the signal from Waite's station, about 140 miles away, at 2105 Greenwich Mean Time on December 21, 1924 (5:05 p.m. Eastern on Sunday, December 21, 1924).  

The card itself is fascinating.  At first blush, it seems to be a card printed for use by two stations with the call signals of 2ATF of Pelham, New York (Killian V. R. Lansingh) and 1BAN of Wellesley, Massachusetts.  The latter call signal might seem to belong to a friend or acquaintance of Lansingh who shared the cost of printing the card.  That, however, was not the case.  Lansingh actually operated a second less powerful 100-Watts Ham Radio Station from a second location in Massachusetts.  According to the same Department of Commerce source cited above, Lansingh operated the station at  245 Bellevue Street (actually the address blacked out on the QSL Card) in Newtown, Massachusetts.  See id., pp. 9 & 28.  The card, with the blacked-out 245 Bellevue Street address, indicates the station as located at 18 Abbott Street (about 11 miles away).  

The logo design at the top of the card shows that Lansingh was a member of ARRL (American Radio Relay League, a worldwide organization of amateur radio operators founded in 1914).  Beneath the log is the reference "QRK?"  Posed as a question, this is a reference to the "QRK" signal reporting codes for use in Morse Code / wireless telegraphy.  It is, in effect, the question "What is the intelligibility of my signals?"

Oddly, although the Federal Government listed Lansingh's Pelham station as 500 Watts, on the QSL Card he lists it as 200 Watts within the following reference:

"Receiver:  3 circuit eso step AF.
Transmitter:  200 watts input, CW [struck out] es
ICW, in Coup. Hart circuit.  
Usual QRH abt 75 m."

Lansingh closes his communication in two places with the reference "73's".  The number "73" in Morse Code is an old telegraph code that means "best regards" and is a regular part of the language of Ham Radio.  

This QSL Card provides a fascinating glimpse of an important time in the history of Pelham.  The Roaring Twenties were well underway.  Affluent Pelhamites were fascinated with the relatively new technology of radio broadcasting that was beginning to gain broad consumer acceptance.  Indeed, I have written about Pelham's fascination at the time with the new technology.  See:

Mon., May 22, 2017:  Early Radio in Pelham:  Pelham Firefighters and Business at Pelham Picture House Installed "Radiophone" in 1922.  

Thu., May 22, 2014:  The Earliest Days of Radio in the Town of Pelham

Wed., Jan. 22, 2014:  Pelham Becomes Enthralled with the New-Fangled Entertainment Medium of Radio.

Killian Van Rensselaer Lansingh, of course, went well beyond installing a simple radio receiver in his home.  He built two Ham Radio broadcast stations -- one in Pelham and one in Massachusetts.  He clearly was an early and avid Ham Radio enthusiast.  He was born in Chicago on April 3, 1902, a son of Van Rensselaer Killianse Lansingh and Marian Love Miner Lansingh.  He married Velma A. Ahlstrom on November 8, 1930.  They had three children.  He died at the age of 71 on May 16, 1973 in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico of cardiac arrest during a bout of hypostatic pneumonia and is buried at Panteon Colonias, Zapopan, Jalisco, Mexico.

Interestingly, only a few months after Lansingh sent this QSL Card, his Ham Radio station became somewhat controversial in the Town of Pelham.  At the time, radio receiver aficionados who were trying to listen to radio broadcasts were experiencing radio interference that made it difficult for them to pick up broadcasts on their expensive radio receivers.  Pelhamites began to point the finger at the Ham Radio broadcast station maintained by Lansingh on Elderwood Avenue.

By February, Lansingh had had enough of the accusations and wrote a letter to the Editor of The Pelham Sun.  Shortly thereafter, the newspaper published an article on the first page of its February 27, 1925 issue entitled "Radio Trouble In Pelham Not Due To Lansingh."  It turned out that shortly after Lansingh sent this QSL Card, he had returned to college as of January 4, 1925.  His transmitter had sat unused since that time while he was away at school, as the article explained.  The article further noted:

"Mr. Lansingh claims he suffers the same interference the others do in Pelham.  He suggests he would be glad to help any who believe they suffer due to undue interference if they will call him up when he is in Pelham.  Owners of single circuit receivers in Lansingh's opinion, not only have not done their share in getting rid of interference by using a sharp tuning receiver, but are causing a large share of the interference from which the other broadcast listeners suffer."


Recent Photograph of the Home at 226 Elderwood, Built in
1910, Where Killian Van Rensselaer Lansingh Maintained
Ham Radio Station 2ATF During the Mid-1920s.  NOTE:
Click on Image to Enlarge.

*          *          *          *          *

"Radio Trouble In Pelham Not Due To Lansingh
-----
Transmitting Station On Elderwood Avenue Has Same Interference As Other Pelham Radio Operators
-----

Killian V. R. Lansingh of 226 Elderwood Avenue, Pelham, in a letter to the Pelham Sun, denies he is responsible for the large part of the interference suffered by Pelham radio broadcast listeners.  He has a radio transmitting station at his home, but tells us he has been away at college since January 4th, and his station was inoperative from that date until February 23rd.  

Mr. Lansingh claims he suffers the same interference the others do in Pelham.  He suggests he would be glad to help any who believe they suffer due to undue interference if they will call him up when he is in Pelham.

Owners of single circuit receivers in Lansingh's opinion, not only have not done their share in getting rid of interference by using a sharp tuning receiver, but are causing a large share of the interference from which the other broadcast listeners suffer."

Source:  Radio Trouble In Pelham Not Due To Lansingh -- Transmitting Station On Elderwood Avenue Has Same Interference As Other Pelham Radio Operators, The Pelham Sun, Feb. 27, 1925, Vol. 15, No. 52, p. 1, col. 3.  

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Monday, May 22, 2017

Early Radio in Pelham: Pelham Firefighters and Business at Pelham Picture House Installed "Radiophone" in 1922


By the time of the Roaring Twenties, the medium of "wireless telegraphy" had evolved into the broadcast entertainment medium we know as radio.  Between about 1919 and the early 1920s, crystal radio sets were beginning to gain attention and the infant audio broadcasting industry was toddling along. Crude battery-powered radios came into use in the Town of Pelham. 

I have written of the earliest days of radio entertainment in the Town of Pelham on a couple of occasions.  See:

Thu., May 22, 2014:  The Earliest Days of Radio in the Town of Pelham.  

Wed., Jan. 22, 2014:  Pelham Becomes Enthralled with the New-Fangled Entertainment Medium of Radio.  

By early 1922, "a large part of the people of Pelham" had installed early, crude radio sets in their homes.  The Pelham Sun reported on April 7, 1922:  "Judging by the number of aerials [i.e., antennae] seen in the Pelhams, a large part of the people of this community are daily enjoying the concerts, speeches, etc., that are being broadcasted by the large number of radio phone broadcasting stations now in operation throughout the country."  (See full transcript of article below.)  It appears that as early as March 24, 1922, as many as seventy-five Pelham homes had installed radio sets with aerials.  (See below.)  

Not everyone wanted (or could afford) to install the rather complex radios of the day.  The equipment often included a range of necessities such as electric "storage batteries," a receiver, a power amplifier, an audio amplifying horn like those on old-fashioned phonographs, an aerial (antenna) typically installed on the roof of the home, and the wiring necessary to complete the system.  The more complex systems also could be difficult to operate optimally.  Consequently, local organizations and businesses began to make "radiophone" broadcasts available to their members, their customers, and their prospective customers.  

Thus, the Village of North Pelham firefighters were among the earliest adopters of the new medium of radio in the Town of Pelham.  In a meeting of the firefighters held on the evening of Monday, March 6, 1922, the firemen decided to authorize local radio dealer Scooler and Lynch to install a Magnavox "Radiophone outfit" in the firemen's hall at the North Pelham firehouse.  Scooler and Lynch was tasked with installing the radiophone and a connected aerial on the firehouse roof.

The local newspaper reported that "[w]hen the radiophone is installed, the firemen will be able to listen in on the concerts sent broadcast by the Westinghouse station at Newark.  Baseball scores will be received as the games are played.  Election returns, decisions of important sporting events, etc. will all be at the disposal of the firemen."  The planned work reportedly was expected to cost $350.00 (about $5,125 in today's dollars).

Scooler and Lynch was located at 513 Third Avenue in North Pelham in 1922.  According to its advertisements (see below), it sold and installed "Radio Apparatus and Radio Accessories of All Descriptions."  

The Magnavox Radiophone selected by the North Pelham firemen for purchase from, and installation by, Scooler and Lynch was a fascinating piece of equipment.  Its name was a combination of the concepts of radio and "wireless telephony" -- hence "Radiophone."  It consisted of a receiving set with a large amplifying horn like that of a phonograph attached to it.  Known as a "reproducer with the movable coil," there were at least two models:  (1) the R-2 with "very great amplifying power, yet requir[ing] only .6 of an ampere for the field" with an attached horn 18 inches in diameter; and (2) the smaller R-3 with slightly less amplifying power, requiring only one ampere field current from the filament batter, and sold with an attached horn 14 inches in diameter.  

Magnavox also sold the Model C "power amplifier," saying:  "The Magnavox Power Amplifiers insure getting the largest possible power input for your Magnavox Radio.  They can be used with any 'B' battery voltage the power tube may require for best amplification."

Advertisements for such Magnavox equipment even likened the technology to the well-known phonograph invented in the 19th century.  One example said:  "Attached to any commercial receiving set, the Magnavox Radio makes it possible for you to hear all that is in the air as if it were being played by your phonograph."  



1922 Magnavox Radio Advertisement from the August, 1922
Issue of Radio News, p. 293.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.



Detail from the Above Magnavox Radio Advertisement
Depicting a Family Listening to a Magnavox Radiophone
in 1922.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

At about the same time North Pelham Firemen were deciding to install a Magnavox Radiophone in their firehouse, the new Pelham Picture House announced that it would offer special events in connection with movie presentations where ticket holders could listen to radio broadcasts via a Magnavox Radiophone installed courtesy of Jerry's Electrical Service Company.

It appears from at least one advertisement (see below) that Jerry's Electrical Service Company had some form of office space at the Pelham Picture House in 1922.  "Jerry's" competed with Scooler and Lynch in the sale and installation of radio equipment.  Jerry's installed a Magnavox Radiophone in the Pelham Picture House theater to receive radio broadcasts on the evenings of Friday, April 7 1922 and Saturday, April 8, 1922 before showings of the silent films "The Flower of the North" with Henry B. Walthall and Pauline Stark (Friday evening) and "The Night Horseman" with Tom Mix (Saturday evening).  Jerry's also offered "Radiophone Concerts on the Hour" in its business at the Picture House.

In early 1922, Pelham clearly was in the midst of a radio "craze."  A regular column entitled "Local Radio News" began appearing in The Pelham Sun reporting on local developments concerning radio installations and radio technology.  The newspaper also began reporting on significant upcoming radio broadcasts in which its readers might be interested.  The new medium of radio was taking root in the small Town of Pelham.  

*          *          *          *          *


March 10, 1922 Scooter and Lynch Advertisement.
Source:  Radiophones [Advertisement], The Pelham
Sun, Mar. 10, 1922, p. 7, col. 4.  NOTE:  Click on
Image to Enlarge.  Text Transcribed Immediately Below.

"Radiophones

Radiophone broadcasting stations are now in operation at important centers all over the country.

You can easily receive these interesting daily programs with any of the standard Radiophone Receiving Sets that we sell.  These sets will also be completely installed by us.

We specialize in Westinghouse, De Forest, Clapp Eastham, Tuska, Grebe and Radio Corporation of America Radio Apparatus.

Sets $15.00 and up

Don't take a chance on second hand radio apparatus.  Pay a few cents more and buy it new from a dealer.

SCOOLER & LYNCH

Radio Apparatus and Radio Accessories of All Descriptions

Telephones:  Pelham 4876, 1568-R
513 Third Ave. North Pelham
Go a Bit Off the Beaten Path For Better Values"



March 31, 1922 Scooler and Lynch Advertisement.
Source:  RADIO PHONES [Advertisement], The
Pelham Sun, Mar. 31, 1922, p. 3, col. 6.  NOTE:
Click on Image to Enlarge.  Text Transcribed
Immediately Below.

"RADIO PHONES
GET IN THE RADIO GAME NOW
We can supply you with Radio Phone Receiving Sets and Radio-Phone Accessories of all descriptions, including DeForest, Westinghouse, Radio Corporation, Etc.
GET IN TOUCH WITH US NOW
Radio Apparatus and Radio Accessories of All Descriptions
Complete Installations -- Aerials Rigged
SCOOLER and LYNCH
513 THIRD AVENUE, NORTH PELHAM, N. Y.
Phones:  Pelham 1568-R, 4576
We Are the Only EXPERIENCED RADIO DEALERS in The Pelhams"



May 5, 1922 Scooler & Lynch Advertisement.
Source:  RADIOPHONES [Advertisement],
The Pelham Sun, May 5, 1922, p. 6, col. 5.
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.  Text
Transcribed Immediately Below.

"RADIOPHONES
RADIO STORAGE BATTERIES
RADIO SETS
RADIO APPARATUS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS
WE RECHARGE ANY MAKE AND ANY SIZE STORAGE BATTERY.  RADIO ACCESSORIES OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS
SCOOLER & LYNCH
Pelham 1568-R, 457"



April 21, 1922 "JERRY'S" Advertisement.  Source:
APPARATUS? [Advertisement], The Pelham Sun,
Apr. 21, 1922, p. 11, cols. 4-6.  NOTE:  Click on
Image to Enlarge. Text Transcribed Immediately Below.

"WHY GO TO NEW YORK
-- for --
RADIO SETS AND APPARATUS?
Tell 'JERRY'S' Your Wants
Electric Service
Questions Answered and Sets Installed By Competent Radio Men
RADIOPHONE CONCERTS ON THE HOUR
PELHAM PICTURE HOUSE"

*          *          *          *         *

"Radiophone To Be Installed In North Pelham Firehouse
-----
Scooler and Lynch Will Place a Magnavox Instrument Which Will Enable Radio Concerts to Be Heard Any Place In Concert Hall of Firehouse -- Westinghouse Concerts Will Be a Feature.
-----

North Pelham firemen are nothing if not up to date.  At a meeting of the members of the fire companies last Monday it was decided to install a radiophone outfit of the very latest design.  The work of installing the new wonder phone will be carried out by Scooler and Lynch, the North Pelham radio firm.  Specifications call for a magnavox [sic] instrument which will amplify the sound so that whatever is being broadcast the phone will be loud enough to be heard all over the big hall.

When the radiophone is installed, the firemen will be able to listen in on the concerts sent broadcast by the Westinghouse station at Newark.  Baseball scores will be received as the games are played.  Election returns, decisions of important sporting events, etc. will all be at the disposal of the firemen.

Scooler and Lynch will install the aerial on the roof of the firehouse.  The entire outfit will cost in the neighborhood of $350.00 and the work will be carried out at once."

Source:  Radiophone To Be Installed In North Pelham Firehouse -- Scooler and Lynch Will Place a Magnavox Instrument Which Will Enable Radio Concerts to Be Heard Any Place In Concert Hall of Firehouse -- Westinghouse Concerts Will Be a Feature, The Pelham Sun, Mar. 10, 1922, Vol. 13, No. 2, p. 7, cols. 3-4.  

"Picture House Will Have Radiophone
-----

Manager Clint Woodward, of the Pelham Picture House, has arranged a special treat for the patrons of the Picture House tonight and Saturday night.  A radiophone will be installed for the two performances each evening.  Through a Magnavox loud speaking attachment the program broadcasted from the various stations in this section will be heard from every seat in the theatre.  The instrument will be installed through the courtesy of Jerry's Electrical Service Company.

The picture for the evening's program will be James Oliver Curwood's thrilling story of the Canadian Northwest, 'The Flower of the North,' with Henry B. Walthall and Pauline Stark, as the leading artists.  The stories from the pen of James Oliver Curwood have interested many readers, and they will be afforded a real opportunity of seeing the stories enacted through productions such as the 'Flower of the North.'

Tomorrow's feature will be Tom Mix in 'The Night Horseman,' a thrilling western drama, and Larry Semon in 'The Show.'  An interesting program of new weeklies and comedies will make up the rest of the bill."

Source:  Picture House Will Have Radiophone, The Pelham Sun, Apr. 7, 1922, p. 8, col. 4.  

"LOCAL RADIO NEWS
-----

The people of Pelham are becoming more interested in the Radiophone every day.  They read the programs in the papers and are realizing what pleasure can be had from getting first hand the latest news, sport news, weather reports, correct Eastern standard time, and to hear concerts in which world famous artists take part.

It is the opinion of many that radio is not the case [sic].  Anybody can operate is not the case.  [sic]  Anybody can operate the simpler sets which many companies are now putting on the market.  There are among the residents of the Pelhams about seventy-five persons who have radio outfits.  In the comparatively short time that radio has been public this is a good showing.  The novelty of having radio shows has become quite popular.

All of those who were lucky enough to hear Ed Wynn's radio production, of 'The Perfect Fool,' are anxiously waiting for the broadcast of another such sterling production.

Don't worry, there will be another soon."

Source:  LOCAL RADIO NEWS, The Pelham Sun, Mar. 24, 1922, p. 5, col. 3.  

"LOCAL RADIO NEWS
-----

Judging by the number of aerials seen in the Pelhams, a large part of the people of this community are daily enjoying the concerts, speeches, etc., that are being broadcasted by the large number of radio phone broadcasting stations now in operation throughout the country.  Those who have not heard a concert over the 'wireless' are yet to have the real treat of their lives.  On Sundays, church sermons and good choir music are broadcasted by several stations.  Throughout the week fine, thoroughly enjoyable concerts are broadcasted.

Don't think that you will be unable to operate a 'set.'  Anyone can operate some of the simple sets now on the market.  If you want to be kept up to date in baseball scores, etc., radio will do it for you as soon as the season begins."

Source:  LOCAL RADIO NEWS, The Pelham Sun, Apr. 7, 1922, p. 8, col. 4.  

"LOCAL RADIO NEWS
-----

Through this column we wish to help and encourage the amateur in radio.  Of course, the most help that we will be able to give, will be to the beginners in radio.  First of all, a radio amateur should be careful as to what kind of a set is purchased.  Many of the so-called radiophones, just brought out, since the radio 'craze' has been so widely adopted, are not as good as they might be ,nor as good as money can buy.  Find out what set is best adapted to the conditions of your home before you make a purchase.  Any questions of general interest to radio fans will be gladly answered through this column."

Source:  LOCAL RADIO NEWSThe Pelham Sun, May 5, 2017, p. 6, col. 5.  

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Monday, September 14, 2015

The Martian Invasion of 1938! How Did Pelham React to The War of the Worlds Broadcast by Orson Welles?


The headlines the next day in The New York Times said it all:  "Radio Listeners in Panic" and "Many Flee Homes to Escape 'Gas Raid From Mars'" and "Phone Calls Swamp Police."  For a time on the evening of Sunday, October 30, 1938, some Americans believed a Martian invasion had begun.



Detail from Cover of Classics Illustrated Edition of
The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells (No. 124).
NOTE:  Click Image to Enlarge.

The cause of the supposed "panic," of course, was "The Mercury Theatre on the Air" radio drama "The War of the Worlds" that aired as a Halloween episode of the series on October 30, 1938 via the Columbia Broadcasting System radio network.  The narrator and co-producer was Orson Welles.  His co-producer was John Houseman. To listen to an MP3 file of the broadcast via MercuryTheatre.info, see The Mercury Theatre on the Air:  The War of the Worlds (Oct. 30, 1938) (visited Sep. 6, 2015).  

Orson Welles was a 23-year-old performer when the radio drama aired.  Early in the broadcast, dramatic "news bulletins" announced that an observatory had detected explosions on the planet Mars and that a large metallic cylinder had crash landed near Grovers Mills, New Jersey.  Further bulletins included a supposed reporter at the crash site describing the opening of the cylinder and tentacled creatures crawling from the craft.  Soon reports described the erection of walking war machines that fired "heat-ray" weapons at humans and fought with National Guardsmen.  Other cylinders soon were reported as landing in Chicago and St. Louis.

In New Jersey, some people climbed into cars and fled the area.  Phone calls flooded into some police stations.  A few reported telephone traffic 40% higher than usual.  Some callers reportedly asked for gas masks to save them from toxic gas.  According to one famous anecdote, a woman ran into the evening church services at an Indianapolis church screaming "New York has been destroyed!  It's the end of the world!  Go home and prepare to die!"

Years of research regarding what happened that eve before Halloween in 1938 suggests, however, that despite more than 12,500 sensational newspaper reports, there was no panic in the United States.  Even many of the anecdotes contained in news reports that followed the radio broadcast have been debunked.  Despite news stories to the contrary, there were no hospital admissions for "shock."  There were no verified heart attacks brought on by the radio broadcast.  There was no widespread panic, nor any "mass hysteria."  In short, research suggests that few people were listening to the broadcast and most who heard the broadcast understood it to be fiction and a prank.  See, generally Campbell, W. Joseph, Getting It Wrong:  Ten of the Greatest Misreported Stories in American Journalism, pp. 26-44 (Berkeley, CA:  University of California Press, 2010).  



Orson Welles, Besieged by Reporters in a News Conference
on October 31, 1938, the Day After The War of The Worlds
Radio Broadcast.  NOTE:  Click Image to Enlarge.

Pelham, it seems, was no different from the rest of America.  The reportedly momentous radio broadcast and the events that followed merited a tiny reference in the Town's local newspaper, The Pelham Sun, on the following Friday.  As that item made clear, "[a]pparently Pelham was listening in to other things or knows its radio well enough to realize that the 'invasion' was only a part of a radio script."

Below is the text of the brief article that appeared in the November 4, 1938 issue of The Pelham Sun.  

"No Alarm Felt In Pelham On Report Of 'Mars Invasion'
-----

While radio listeners throughout the rest of the country were scared out of their wits by the realistic 'invasion from Mars,' which was broadcast by Orson Welles, young radio director, Pelham appeared to be unaffected by it all.  Local police departments had no calls from frenzied radio listeners.  Apparently Pelham was listening in to other things or knows its radio well enough to realize that the 'invasion' was only a part of a radio script."

Source:  No Alarm Felt In Pelham On Report Of "Mars Invasion," The Pelham Sun, Nov. 4, 1938, Vol. 28, No. 31, p. 1, col. 2.  



1906 Illustration by Alvim Correa for Limited
Edition of The War of The Worlds Published
by L. Vandamme.  NOTE:  Click Image to Enlarge.



1906 Illustration by Alvim Correa for Limited
Edition of The War of The Worlds Published
by L. Vandamme.  NOTE:  Click Image to Enlarge.



1906 Illustration by Alvim Correa for Limited
Edition of The War of The Worlds Published
by L. Vandamme.  NOTE:  Click Image to Enlarge.


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Thursday, May 22, 2014

The Earliest Days of Radio in the Town of Pelham



With the rise of the Internet and the Web, few seem to give the medium of open-air broadcast radio a second thought today.  The broadcasts of radio stations located around the world are available via live streams with the click of a mouse or the swipe of a finger via computers and mobile devices.  Digital satellite radio streams devoted to hundreds of niche music genres and subject matter interests are directed to digital receivers in vehicles, businesses, and residences.  

There was a time, however, when broadcast radio was the latest technology fad -- an expensive entertainment alternative that graced few homes in Pelham. I have written before of the rise of the medium of radio in the Town of Pelham.  See Wed., Jan. 22, 2014:  Pelham Becomes Enthralled with the New-Fangled Entertainment Medium of Radio.

Today's Historic Pelham Blog posting hearkens back to a simpler time when broadcast radio was still an unproved medium.  In 1922 and 1923, virtually no one in Pelham owned a radio.  Few commercial broadcast radio stations existed.  Those that existed broadcast signals that were so weak that they were hard to receive in many areas, including Pelham.  That did not stop the local newspaper, The Pelham Sun, from jumping onto the radio bandwagon quite early.  

In 1922, The Pelham Sun installed a radio receiver in its office on Wolfs Lane and connected it to a loudspeaker to broadcast the announcement of the baseball World Series.  In that series, the New York Giants (whose manager, John McGraw, lived on Edgewood Avenue in Pelham Manor) beat the New York Yankees in five games:  four games to none with one tie.  The following year, The Pelham Sun worked with a local electrical supply company and installed a radio receiver again on September 14, 1923.  Pelhamites gathered at the newspaper's office to listen to the announcement of an historic heavyweight title boxing match between Jack Dempsey and Latin American fighter Luis Ángel Firpo.  

Eighty thousand boxing fans paid to see the fight live at the Polo Grounds in New York City only a short distance away from Pelham.  A large crowd also gathered inside and outside the offices of The Pelham Sun on Wolfs Lane.  The crowd was so large that it spilled into the street.  The fight was not broadcast live.  Its results were announced via broadcast radio.  Yet, the crowd greeted the broadcast announcements "with wild acclaim."

The fight is considered one of Jack Dempsey's "defining fights."  He had held the heavyweight title since 1919, but was fighting the man known as "El Toro de las Pampas" ("The Bull of the Pampas").  At the beginning of the first round, Firpo dropped Dempsey with a right.  Dempsey dropped to one knee but stood immediately to return to the battle.  Firpo knocked Dempsey out of the ring late in the first round and Dempsey suffered a severe cut on the back of his head.  Some believe the count was a slow count that allowed Dempsey to return to the ring with assistance that some claimed was illegal and should have led to a declaration of a knockout by Firpo.  There is a famous photograph as well as a well-known painting of the moment Firpo knocked Dempsey out of the ring (see below).  


 "Dempsey and Firpo," Oil on Canvas 
Painted June 1924 by George Bellows.
Source:  Wikimedia Commons.


"Argentinian Boxer Luis Ángel Firpo throwing 
Jack Dempsey out the ring. September 14, 1923"
Source:  Wikimedia Commons.

Transcribed immediately below is a brief article that appeared on the front page of The Pelham Sun a week later on September 21, 1923, describing the radio event hosted at the newspaper's offices the previous Friday.  

"Fight Returns By Radio Brought Big Crowd to Sun Office
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Loud Cheering Followed Announcement of Dempsey's Victory -- Much Excitement
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Pelham boxing fans came out in swarms last Friday night to listen to the radio service installed at the Sun office.  They filled the office and overflowed into the street.  The radio set installed by the courtesy of Mandel Osserman of the O.K. Auto and Electrical Supply Co. gave the result of the big bout clearly and distinctly and the news of Dempsey's vicotry was greeted with wild acclaim.

A special loud speaker will be installed in the Sun office for the announcement of the World Series, the same as was done last year.  The Sun came in for many compliments for its enterprise in relaying the news of the championship battle last Friday night."

Source:  Fight Returns By Radio Brought Big Crowd to Sun Office, The Pelham Sun, Sep. 21, 1923, p. 1, col. 6.  

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Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Pelham Becomes Enthralled with the New-Fangled Entertainment Medium of Radio

By the time of the Roaring Twenties, the medium of "wireless telegraphy" had evolved into the broadcast entertainment medium we know as radio.  Between about 1919 and the early 1920s, crystal radio sets were beginning to gain attention and the infant audio broadcasting industry was born.  Crude battery-powered radios came into use.  

During the mid-1920s, amplifying "vacuum tubes" revolutionized radio receivers and transmitters in the United States.  Licensed commercial radio stations were beginning to pop up across the country.  AM radio stations such as KDKA in Pittsburgh began broadcasting to the public.  (KDKA's first broadcast reported the presidential election results on November 2, 1920.)  Early stations in the Pelham area included 2ZK, broadcasting from New Rochelle.  

By the mid-1920s, the Town of Pelham hungered for the new entertainment medium.  Some residents of the affluent little Town owned radios, but the Town was in the middle of a radio "dead spot" that deprived its citizens of the music and entertainment programs that they longed to hear.  That began to change in 1927.

That year, the local newspaper excitedly reported that increased power in local broadcasting stations was beginning to provide radio coverage throughout Pelham.  Pelhamites quickly fell in love with a local AM radio station (FM had not yet been invented) known as WEAF, a now-defunct predecessor to WNBC.  WEAF signed on for the first time on March 2, 1922.  It is considered the first commercial radio station that broadcast in the New York Metropolitan area.  The same year, the station broadcast what it later claimed to be the first radio advertisement.  In 1926, WEAF was purchased by the Radio Corporation of America (RCA), making it a so-called "sister station" to WJZ (now WABC).  RCA next formed the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) which began operating the two radio stations. 

A lengthy article about improved radio reception appeared in the December 16, 1927 issue of The Pelham Sun.  It provides a fascinatingly-quaint window into the lives of Pelham citizens at the dawn of the new broadcast medium in our little town.  The article is quoted in its entirety below, followed by a citation to its source.

"Reception Improvements Assure The Pelhams Of A Merry Radio Christmas
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Many Epochial [sic] Achievements Of Radio During the Last Year Will Provide Pelhamites With Best Of Entertainment Over Ether Waves.  No Longer Is Pelham Submerged In Dead Spot
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By Morrel T. Crawford
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This surely ought to be a very Merry Radio Christmas for the Pelhams.  Never before in the radio history of Pelham, has the general outlook been so bright.  The flood of beautiful melodies that used to pass high over Pelham, like a flock of geese, giving us only a discordant honking, as evidence of their presence, now alights in our midst as a flock of song birds in spring.  

Our local reception has been so greatly improved by the increased power of the broadcasting stations and the reallocation of wave lengths, that the air is just full of delightful things that one can't really afford to miss.  

We need no longer envy New Jersey with her early records of excellent reception.  We now have the advantage of being far enough away from the big stations to avoid a warped perspective of the ether; and although none of the big fellows jam the air for us, we are near enough to receive with great volume.

This permits us to adjust our sets so that the ordinary and unavoidable electrical disturbances are quite inaudible.

We are particularly fortunate in having our electric light current supplied by so enterprising and public spirited an organization as the Westchester Lighting Co.  We wonder how many people realize the great work that has been done by them in cleaning up the static situation for us.

They maintain a department under the direction of a specially trained radio man of long experience in all phases of the radio game, whose title might well be that of Static Detective.  His job is to hunt down these mysterious buzzes and clicks that are caused by electrical sparks of all kinds as well as trifling power leaks.  

The lighting company, at great expense, has run special heavy wires known as tree wires, along many of our streets bordered by trees.  The insulation of ordinary wire is easily worn through by the gentle rubbing of the branches; and then, tiny little leaks occur which are of no consequence as a power loss, but which make a buzzing noise in the radios over a considerable area.  

And, of course, the greatest joy to many of us, is the fact that the broadcasting station that won the right to become our favorite, by the unusually high quality of its programs no longer casts a feeble and flickering shadow over the Pelhams, but shines down upon us with the intensity of a powerful search light from its new home on Long Island.  

The former 'Will O' the Wisp, WEAF' is now one of our most dependable sources of enjoyment with its generous program starting with the reveille calling us to our 'Setting Up' exercises and our good will message from Cheerio, to brighten the breakfast hour these dark mornings, and ending late at night with the finest of jazz and slumber music.  

The way the Chicago stations have been pounding through, the last few nights, makes us feel that one of these crisp, cold nights, we are going to hear the coast on our loud speaker.  

The perfection of the electric or batteryless [sic] radio that plugs right into your light socket, has brought with it an advantage that is not yet fully appreciated.  Not only does one have nothing to replace except an occasional bulb, but because of the greatly increased power of the electric radio, one is able to get great depth of tone combined with clear articulation.  

You can now dust off the old phonograph and use the turn table to play the new life-like orthophonic records through your radio amplifier and cone speaker.  By means of the volume control provided, the twirl of a knob will swell the music from the softest tinkle of a tiny music box to the full rich tones of a mighty organ or the roar of a symphony orchestra, or an over zealous voice may be tamed to the softest whisper.

As evidence of the appreciativeness of the Pelham audience and its discriminating taste in the selection of their radios, is the unusually high class agencies established by the local dealers.  

In such a small town as Pelham, it is most unusual to find authorized dealers for the manufacturers of such high grade sets as, The Victor, Stromberg-Carlson, Brunswick, Fada, Crosley, Radiola, Atwater Kent, Amrad and many others; practically all the really worth while [sic] in radio.

This would also indicate that we Pelhamites have learned the advantages of buying such an important part of one's home life, from our local dealers; perhaps, after the bitter experience in finding that true saving lies not in the first cost, but in the last."

Source:  Crawford, Morrel T., Reception Improvements Assure The Pelhams Of A Merry Radio Christmas, The Pelham Sun, Dec. 16, 1927, pg. 15, col. 1.  

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