Color postcard of Gilfilan Brothers of Los Angeles cathedral style home broadcast radio receiver. Written on back of postcard, "In the early 1920's, 'wireless' devices used by amateurs were wires and circuitry attached to a wood base, called a 'breadboard.' As radios became popular, the equipment was contained within elegant wooden cases.
Photograph of a large, wooden radio. It probably dates from the 1930s. It is sitting on a metal stan...
• by 1910-- modern newspapers firmly developed • 1920s-- commercial radio gets goin
Radio receiver in wooden casing - from the The Betty Smithers Design Collection at Staffordshire Uni...
Photograph of new Falck table model radio, Southern California, 1930. "Falck" -- on radio
Victor Talking Machine Company (1901–1929) was an American corporation, the leading American produce...
Photograph of radio chassis, Southern California, 1931. "Licensed Under Patents of Radio Corporation...
Designed by Clyde Shuler, this one of the finest catherdral radios ever made. Introduced in 1932 to ...
It was early 1923, and hundreds of entrepreneurs who had been bitten by the radio bug were setting u...
Title and other information transcribed from caption card and item.In album: Washington, D.C., 1922,...
Photograph of table radio, Southern California, 1940. "Standard Broadcast, RCA Victor; 54, 58, 62, 6...
Lee De Forest, a pioneer of wireless communication, served as a faculty member at Lewis Institute du...
Lee Deforest and Eric Berndt with antique camera, circa 1960. DeForest [1873-1961] was an American i...
Wooden radio receiver with golden coloured mesh over receiver. Instructions printed on back, togethe...
Photography of Edwin Lewis (left) and Lee de Forest (right). Lewis was a faculty member at the Lewis...
The first real wireless communication system was developed by a collection of scientists. Samuel Mor...
Photograph of a large, wooden radio. It probably dates from the 1930s. It is sitting on a metal stan...
• by 1910-- modern newspapers firmly developed • 1920s-- commercial radio gets goin
Radio receiver in wooden casing - from the The Betty Smithers Design Collection at Staffordshire Uni...
Photograph of new Falck table model radio, Southern California, 1930. "Falck" -- on radio
Victor Talking Machine Company (1901–1929) was an American corporation, the leading American produce...
Photograph of radio chassis, Southern California, 1931. "Licensed Under Patents of Radio Corporation...
Designed by Clyde Shuler, this one of the finest catherdral radios ever made. Introduced in 1932 to ...
It was early 1923, and hundreds of entrepreneurs who had been bitten by the radio bug were setting u...
Title and other information transcribed from caption card and item.In album: Washington, D.C., 1922,...
Photograph of table radio, Southern California, 1940. "Standard Broadcast, RCA Victor; 54, 58, 62, 6...
Lee De Forest, a pioneer of wireless communication, served as a faculty member at Lewis Institute du...
Lee Deforest and Eric Berndt with antique camera, circa 1960. DeForest [1873-1961] was an American i...
Wooden radio receiver with golden coloured mesh over receiver. Instructions printed on back, togethe...
Photography of Edwin Lewis (left) and Lee de Forest (right). Lewis was a faculty member at the Lewis...
The first real wireless communication system was developed by a collection of scientists. Samuel Mor...
Photograph of a large, wooden radio. It probably dates from the 1930s. It is sitting on a metal stan...
• by 1910-- modern newspapers firmly developed • 1920s-- commercial radio gets goin
Radio receiver in wooden casing - from the The Betty Smithers Design Collection at Staffordshire Uni...