AVS 56th International Symposium & Exhibition | |
History Session: Centennials of Wireless Broadcasting | Monday Sessions |
Session HI-MoM |
Session: | History Session: Centennials of Wireless Broadcasting |
Presenter: | M.H. Adams, San Jose State University |
Correspondent: | Click to Email |
The Charles Herrold story was almost lost in history. It began in 1958 with San Jose State University Professor Gordon Greb's class project to identify and honor a pioneer in broadcasting. Professor Greb accidentally uncovered the Herrold information at a local museum, research was done, and an event introducing the story was sponsored by the university and KCBS, the direct descendant of Herrold’s original 1909 work. Greb then wrote a 1959 journal article, “The Golden Anniversary of Broadcasting” in the Journal of Broadcasting, based on collected family papers, oral histories/interviews of eyewitnesses, and other evidence.
It was the first time a national academic audience heard about Charles Herrold. Most just assumed that broadcasting began in 1920 with KDKA. San Jose State University Professor Mike Adams joined Greb in 1988 to revive the Herrold story. Adams believed that the Herrold evidence, while based on eyewitnesses and original family documents, remained a local story, not taken seriously by anyone beyond the Bay Area. A PBS documentary, “Broadcasting’s Forgotten Father: The Charles Herrold Story” resulted. Adams and Greb also knew that the only way for the Herrold story to gain national credibility was for a well-researched, scholarly book to be published. The authors made trips East, to the Clark papers at the Smithsonian Institution, the New York Public library, and the Antique Wireless Association archives in Rochester NY. Their goal was to find other examples of pre-1920 broadcasting similar to that carried out by Herrold in San Jose. The two found several important primary research documents showing Herrold broadcasting pre-1910, further evidence not in the original Herrold papers. Several major articles and the book, Charles Herrold, Inventor of Radio Broadcasting (Mcfarland Press 2003), resulted. The book presents the evidence of Herrold's first broadcasting station, and puts it into the context of other pre-1920 radiotelephone inventors.
Today, there is no real agreement as to a single “first station.” Most historians agree that KDKA gets credit for the first “commercial” license in 1920, de Forest for his 1916 broadcast of the Hughes-Wilson presidential election, and Herrold for broadcasting entertainment on a regularly-scheduled basis, pre-announced, to an audience, 1909-17. What is known and stated in the Herrold book is that the authors found first person, written evidence indicating that Herrold beginning in 1909 was the first to intentionally broadcast entertainment programming to a known audience.