Twenty years after the telephone was invented and music was first sent down a telephone line, Guglielmo Marconi sent radio signals.
Marconi (1874-1937) was born in Italy and studied at the University
of Bologna. He was fascinated by Heinrich Hertz’s earlier discovery of
radio waves and realized that it can be used for sending and receiving
telegraph messages, referring to it as “wireless telegraphs.”
Signals only
But Marconi’s wireless telegraph transmitted only signals. Voice over
the air, as we know radio today, came only in 1921. Marconi went on to
introduce short wave transmission in 1922.
Marconi was not the first to invent the radio, however. Four years
before Marconi started experimenting with wireless telegraph, Nikola Tesla,
a Serb who moved to the USA in 1884, invented the theoretical model for
radio. Tesla tried unsuccessful to obtain a court injunction against
Marconi in 1915. In 1943 the US Supreme Court reviewed the decision.
Tesla became acknowledged as the inventor of the radio – even though he
did not build a working radio.
Who then, tell me?!
There are other claims to the throne of radio inventor.
Indian scientist J.C. Bose demonstrated the radio
transmission in 1896 in Calcutta in front of the British Governor
General. The transmission was over a distance of three miles from the
Presidency College and Science College in Calcutta. The instruments
(‘Mercuri Coherer with a telephone detector’) are still there in the
science museum of the Calcutta University. Thus writes contributor Dipak
Basu, referencing the Proceedings of the IEEE, January, 1998.
Bose repeated his demonstration in the Royal Society in London in
1899 in the presence of Lord Rayleigh (Nobel prize winner in Physics,
1904), J.A. Fleming (Professor at London university and later an advisor
to the Marconi company), and Lord Lister (President of the Royal
Society). As a result he was offered Professorship in Cambridge, but
declined.
Bose had solved the problem of the Hertz not being able to penetrate
walls, mountains or water. Marconi was present in the meeting of the
Royal Society and it is thought that he stole the notebook of Bose that
included the drawing of the ‘Mercuri Coherer with a telephone detector’.
Marconi’s Coherer, which he used in 1901, was the exact copy of that of
Bose. Apparently Marconi was unable to explain how he got to the
design. He said that an Italian Navy engineer called Solari had
developed it, but Solari later denied it. Marconi then said that Italian
Professor Timasina did, which later was exposed as a lie by another
Italian professor, Angelo Banti, who claimed that the design was
invented by signalman Paolo Castelli.
Bose did not apply for a patent on his design because he believed in
the free flow of inventions in science. But under pressure from American
friends, he applied for the patent in September 1901. He was awarded
the US patent for the invention of the radio in 1904. By that time
Marconi had received his patent and international recognition.
“Hello Rainey!”
It is reputed that Nathan B. Stubblefield, a farmer
from Murray, Kentucky, made a voice transmission four years before
Marconi transmitted radio signals. In 1892, Stubblefield handed his
friend Rainey T. Wells a box and told him to walk away some distance.
Wells said later: “I had hardly reached my post.. when I heard I heard
HELLO RAINEY come booming out of the receiver.”
Stubblefield demonstrated his invention to the press in 1902 but,
being afraid that his invention will be stolen, never marketed his
wireless radio. When he was found dead in 1929, his radio equipment was
gone.
Nikola Tesla remains acknowledged as the inventor of the radio.
Radio everywhere
Today, there are more than 33,000 radio stations around the world, with
more than 12,000 in the US alone. Worldwide there are more than 2
billion radio sets in use, or about one radio for every 3 persons; proof
that video never killed the radio star.
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