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UPDATED WITH PODCAST -[film] Did you know the first Alabama radio broadcast made to Thomas Edison from Auburn University?

First Radio in Alabama

The state of Alabama did not have a licensed radio station until 1922. The first Alabama’s radio broadcast was made to Thomas Edison from Auburn University.   Continued below

Montgomery Light and Power got a license to broadcast with the call letters WGH on February 2, 1922. It was one of the first 100 companies to request. One month later, on March 29, 1922, Alabama Power got it’s license and on April 24, 1922, WSY, started broadcasting. WSY was the 127th radio stations in the United States, but these two stations were not the first radio broadcast in Alabama. That honor goes to Auburn University.

Dr. Miller Reese Hutchison, radio pioneer

It all started when Dr. Miller Reese Hutchison, a native of Montrose, Alabama and a graduate of Alabama Polytechnic Institute in 1897 donated wireless equipment to his Alma Mater in 1911.

Dr. Miller Reese Hutchison  is almost unheard of in Alabama today, but he was a famous American inventor born in Alabama. Hutchison caught the eye of Thomas Edison and was employed by him. After several successful inventions, including a hearing-aid personally fitted for Queen Alexandria, the consort of Edward VII of England, Hutchison donated radio equipment to his Alma Mata in 1912.

brounhallpic1

 First transmission was to Thomas Edison

Hutchinson came down in June of 1913 to assist in the installation. The radio equipment was connected to a “150-feet steel pipe placed on the east end of Broun Hall running from a second floor room where the radio set was humming.” The first message (below) was sent out from Auburn to his boss in New Jersey, Thomas Edison:

This wireless formally christens the two-and-a-half kilowatt apparatus which I have this day presented to the Alabama Polytechnic Institute in commemoration of the first homecoming of the alumni. The president, the faculty, the alumni, and the student body join me in expressing love and esteem to the father of electrical development.”

Dr. Miller Reese Huchison’s voice can be heard in the film below which was recorded on October 21, 1915, when a group of Thomas Edison’s friends and business associates played a recording in the library of the Edison Laboratory in West Orange, New Jersey and transmitted it to Edison at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, California via the American Telephone and Telegraph Company’s newly completed transcontinental telephone line.

Dr. Miller Reese Hutchison’s is speaking. He was the Chief Engineer, Engineering Department of Thomas A. Edison, Incorporated.

Radio was banned during war years

During WWI, non-military radio was banned by the government due to a concern about spies, but it was continued again in 1919. Victor Caryl McIlvaine, a native of Florida, first became interested in wireless at the age of fourteen. “As a teenager, he constructed his own wireless receiver and taught himself to translate code. During WWI he contributed to the war effort by teaching wireless telegraphy to military personnel at the Alabama Polytechnic Institute.

After the war, he decided to matriculate as a student at the University and constructed a new wireless telegraph station for the school partly by using his own equipment. He was the founding member and president of the Radio Club, I Tappa Key. When the Department of Commerce granted a license, the broadcasters at Auburn requested a license with the name 5XA and two years later their first radio station was built and called WMAV (Making A Voice). Then a donation of $2500 by Birmingham News publisher, Victor Hanson, was donated to the Alabama Extension Service to establish a radio station to provide educational information to farmers.

tappa key radio

P. O. Davis of the Extension Service was assigned the task of establishing the radio station. However, it didn’t immediately materialize due to insufficient funding. During the first year, WMAV mainly provided play-by-play action of Auburn’s football games.

P. O. Davis stated in an interview, “We pecked and struggled as best we could with the equipment that was almost obsolete by the time it was installed.” After acquiring entirely new equipment, Davis moved the facility to Comer Hall and was instrumental in working with agents to organize radio listening parties for audiences throughout the state — a practice that would foreshadow video-conferencing techniques common today.

Davis worked with Alabama Extension agents throughout the state to organize radio listening sessions with farmers and their families. Extension Home Demonstration Agent Thalia Bell operates a radio at the Sandy Creek-East View Club, Tallapoosa County, Feb. 4, 1926.

P. O. Davis and listening stations

 Montgomery Light and Water Power

In 1922, WGH of Montgomery Light and Water Power Company was located on 111 Dexter Ave., Montgomery, Ala.  The radio station broadcast daily 11:05 a. m. and 5:05 p. m., weather forecasts; Sunday, 8:30-9:30, address or sermon and sacred music; Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, 8:30-9:30 p. m., educational matters, farm bulletins, crop statistics, stock quotations and concert. The following anecdote about the radio station was found in Radio-Digest April 15, 1922 issue:

Montgomery, Alabama— Blind Bob Taylor, who sells candy and chewing gum on the streets of Montgomery, had quite an unusual experience Tuesday night at the radio station of the Montgomery Light and Water Power Company.

He was permitted to “listen in” and during the period he was listening a lively musical air was played in Pittsburg which he heard distinctly during the time he danced a lively jig.

Around the same time, a 500-Watt AM radio station was started by Alabama Power Company to help keep in touch with line crews in isolated areas.

Alabama Power steam plant on Powell Avenue

Alabama Power steam plant on Powell Avenue

 WSY radio

“The station was launched from a studio at 1921 Powell Avenue, adjacent to its steam plant. They utilized a “wired wireless” means of transmitting their signal from high-tension power lines in order to communicate to isolated steam plants and rural work crews.”WSY_logo

“Not long after, the company began receiving letters from residents across the state thanking them for broadcasting things like weather reports and making programming suggestions. The utility responded by adding interviews, stock quotes, an orchestra composed of Alabama Power employees, a show featuring a Tuskegee Institute quartet, and five Birmingham church services to their programming. As one of the country’s earliest radio stations, WSY had the ability to reach people as far away as Canada and Cuba and was hailed as the most popular radio station in the Eastern United States.”

WSY Display at The Don Kresge Memorial Museum located in Birmingham

in the Alabama Power building

WSY Display at The Don Kresge Memorial Museum located in Birmingham

WSY Radio was too successful

The station’s studio was moved to the radio department in the top floor of the Loveman, Joseph & Loeb Department Store in Birmingham with the antenna strung between two rooftop towers. The success of WSY forced Alabama Power to decide if they should hire additional employees devoted solely to the radio station and update equipment or get out of the radio business altogether.

WAPI radio

Ultimately, Alabama Power station’s equipment and license was sold to Alabama Polytechnic Institute.  The two stations were merged in 1925 and became known as WAPI.  The call letters “WAPI” stand for the Alabama Polytechnic Institute at Auburn. (API).

“Three years later, in 1928 WAPI moved back to Birmingham to provide a big city market for the two-year-old NBC Radio Network. The City of Birmingham agreed to pay half the operating costs for the station.  P. O. Davis negotiated with other state universities interesting in radio broadcasting, and from 1929 to 1932 WAPI was jointly-owned by Auburn (39%), the University of Alabama (39%), and the Alabama College for Women in Montevallo.”wapi

On November 11, 1929 the FRC approved a power increase to 5,000 Watts, and the new WAPI began broadcasting red and blue network NBC programming from studios on the 14th floor of the Protective Life Building downtown on December 31, 1929. The funding from the city of Birmingham was withdrawn during the Great Depression era so the station began accepting local commercial programming for the first time as it struggled to stay afloat.  In 1932 WAPI became a private business, with W. O. Pape forming the WAPI Broadcasting Company to lease the station. WAPI not only provided the three institutions with a broadcast presence but also ensured a “nice annual return on their investments” from about 1922 to 1961.

There is a museum on WSY in the Alabama Power Company Building located in Birmingham, Alabama at 600 N. 18th Street.

Radio has been a part of our lives so long that it is hard to remember there were days without it. When the radio was first invented people complained and threatened lawsuits. They said that the electrical waves were passing through their bodies, destroying their nerves and making it impossible for them to sleep. Today some people also claim that the very low-frequency field from overhead power cables near their homes has affected their health, although this has not been reliably proven.

(Some people believe that large doses of radio waves cause cancer, leukemia and other disorders.  This belief has been around since its invention and still continues today with waves emitted by cell phones. What do you believe?)

Related stories:

Inventor, Marconi, and how he was threatened with death/

Hear this amazing recording of the first transmission of the Morse Code!

SOURCES

  1. Radio’s Hidden Voice: The Origins of Public Broadcasting in the United States By Hugh Richard Slotten University of Illinois Press, 2009
  2. Wikipedia
  3. Alabama Historical Radio Society
  4. The Don Kresge Memorial Museum
  5. Radio April 1922 Pacific Radio Publishing Company, 1922
  6. The War Eagle Reader

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18 comments

  1. And it was sent to the man who did not invent the radio………………

    1. But…I live in Alabama…all my life..and I love it !

  2. Call letters were WAPI with is now a talk radio station in Birmingham

  3. I believe this was about 2004…’RTR’

  4. Some people were also afraid of electricity taking on a life of it’s own, coming out of the walls and killing them. There were early horror movies made of this.

  5. My father did the radio at Auburn about 1952

  6. I believe that would be alabama polytechnic institute….

  7. What did they say “War Eagle”

  8. Rex Free…I thought you might find this interesting in your line of work. ☺

  9. Yes, I can imagine! A much simpler life in many ways….hard but simpler!

  10. Bill Barron, Bill Lawson, Orlando Beavers, Rob Conrad…

  11. 4 yrs before WLAC began broadcasting from Nashville, interesting.

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