In July 1921, radio manufacturer Powel Crosley Jr. began 20-watt tests from his College Hill home, broadcasting "Song of India" continuously under the call sign 8CR. Powell already owned a number of enterprises, including the Crosmobile and a refrigerator-freezer company, and for many years, he held ownership of the Cincinnati Reds baseball club. Powell was innovative, personally inventing or funding the development of many then–cutting-edge technological advances in all his ventures. On March 22, 1922, Crosley and his Crosley Broadcasting Corporation began broadcasting with the new call sign WLW and 50 watts of power. Crosley was a fanatic about the new broadcasting technology, and continually increased his station's capability. The pow...
The Breeze is the student newspaper of James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia
Louis Parker (January 1 1906 - June 21 1993) invented the television receiver, Patent Number(s) 2,44...
Thesis (M.A., History) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2010.Between the end of World War...
A close-up photograph of a radio microphone shows the station's call letters "WLW." In 1933 the sta...
The photograph is a picture of the radio antenna for WLW, a Cincinnati radio station. The 831 foot a...
This is a picture taken at night of the WLW radio antenna. The antenna is located in Mason, Ohio, n...
This image shows the Blaw-Knox Antenna in Mason, Ohio. In 1922, during the infancy of broadcast rad...
Reverse reads: "Federal Radio Group. Dayton Ohio." On March 22, 1922, Crosley Broadcasting Corpora...
Modern radio came into being November 2, 1920, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The nation’s first feder...
The U.S. lagged behind Europe and Australia in radio astronomy until the late 1950s, when Caltech er...
It was early 1923, and hundreds of entrepreneurs who had been bitten by the radio bug were setting u...
The commonly accepted history of FM radio is one of the twentieth century’s iconic sagas of inventio...
Did you ever wonder what happened to the great Top 40 radio stations of the 1950s and 1960s? Those f...
Powel Crosley Jr. of Cincinnati, pictured with the wireless crystal radio set that he perfected and ...
Born June 8, 1921, in Paris, Texas, Gordon McLendon served as an interpreter in the U.S. Navy during...
The Breeze is the student newspaper of James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia
Louis Parker (January 1 1906 - June 21 1993) invented the television receiver, Patent Number(s) 2,44...
Thesis (M.A., History) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2010.Between the end of World War...
A close-up photograph of a radio microphone shows the station's call letters "WLW." In 1933 the sta...
The photograph is a picture of the radio antenna for WLW, a Cincinnati radio station. The 831 foot a...
This is a picture taken at night of the WLW radio antenna. The antenna is located in Mason, Ohio, n...
This image shows the Blaw-Knox Antenna in Mason, Ohio. In 1922, during the infancy of broadcast rad...
Reverse reads: "Federal Radio Group. Dayton Ohio." On March 22, 1922, Crosley Broadcasting Corpora...
Modern radio came into being November 2, 1920, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The nation’s first feder...
The U.S. lagged behind Europe and Australia in radio astronomy until the late 1950s, when Caltech er...
It was early 1923, and hundreds of entrepreneurs who had been bitten by the radio bug were setting u...
The commonly accepted history of FM radio is one of the twentieth century’s iconic sagas of inventio...
Did you ever wonder what happened to the great Top 40 radio stations of the 1950s and 1960s? Those f...
Powel Crosley Jr. of Cincinnati, pictured with the wireless crystal radio set that he perfected and ...
Born June 8, 1921, in Paris, Texas, Gordon McLendon served as an interpreter in the U.S. Navy during...
The Breeze is the student newspaper of James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia
Louis Parker (January 1 1906 - June 21 1993) invented the television receiver, Patent Number(s) 2,44...
Thesis (M.A., History) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2010.Between the end of World War...