RALEIGH, NC December 24, 2013 – On December 24, 1902,
Reginald Fessenden, who had previously engaged in experiments on the
Outer Banks, made the first intentional wireless radio broadcast,
playing his violin and reading a passage from the Bible.
Fessenden came to North Carolina in 1900 under the auspices of the
United States Weather Bureau to conduct experiments in wireless
telegraphy on Roanoke Island. His two years’ work attracted considerable
publicity. While in North Carolina, he transmitted the first varying
musical notes. The 1902 transmissions were said to have been “very loud
and plain” and as easy to understand as hearing sounds over an ordinary
telephone. Relayed from Buxton,
the broadcasts were received 48 miles north on Roanoke Island. The
experiment station at Buxton no longer stands but the foundations for a
tower used by Fessenden do remain.
A prolific inventor, Fessenden patented more than 500 ideas, mostly
in the field of radio. He is recognized as the originator of the
continuous wave principle in wireless transmission.
Fessenden died in 1932. The inventor’s papers, an enormous and varied
collection spanning much of his working life, are housed in the State
Archives of North Carolina.
text taken from...
http://beachcarolina.com/2013/12/24/r-a-fessenden-on-the-outer-banks-the-beginnings-of-radio/
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