Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
August 1955 | Volume 6, Issue 5
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
August 1955 | Volume 6, Issue 5
A long-time executive of the General Electric Company who became associated with its broadcasting activities just before the pioneer G. E. station, WGY, went on the air in February, 1922, Mr. Lang tells how he and his company got to know a young man named Sarnoff.
In the summer of 1920, I was assigned with an associate to audit the newly formed Radio Corporation of America.
I shall never forget that experience, because RCA was then a pretty small enterprise, and it seemed as though—and its budget for 1921 reflected that—its business for all time might be transoceanic communication, into which we had been brought via the Alexanderson alternator (they were then being installed in a number of stations). The business of transoceanic communication—then made really practical for the first time—seemed to be the real potential business for RCA.
Mr. David Sarnoff at that time was commercial manager. He decidedly gave the impression of tremendous energy. And of course, as a young man, just a little younger I guess than he, I was fascinated with the story of his life, with his coming here as a boy from Russia, the principal support of his mother and one or more other children.
I’m not sure at that precise moment that I could have predicted for him the things which he has achieved, but it was a privilege under those circumstances to have become acquainted with such a promising young man, and one who even up to then had acquired quite a reputation for himself, I suppose beginning with the time when, as a wireless operator, he took the famous SOS message; or was it then CQD? He was on the Wanamaker station the night the Titanic sank.
I was complimented by Mr. Sarnoff one day, when he asked me whether I wouldn’t like to have a job with RCA. At that time I was getting more and more enthusiastic about General Electric and therefore I thought I had better stay put—which I did and which of course I don’t regret, although I fancy a career in RCA might have been just as exciting.
After that I went on with my auditing activity and, in the latter part of 1921, helped Mr. Martin P. Rice, manager of the then Publication Bureau, to review the organization and the expenses of his group toward the end of reducing them because of the so-called depression of 1921.
Mr. Rice had vision. At the moment, as I soon learned, he was very deep in the business of trying to get a broadcasting station into operation for General Electric. No doubt that story has been told many times, and perhaps there is a little fiction in it, but at all events, he started up WGY very much on his own, out of an appropriation of $10,000 that had been given previously to establish a sort of experimental radiotelegraph communication