“Heard You Perfectly!” (August 1955 | Volume: 6, Issue: 5)

“Heard You Perfectly!”

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Authors: H. V. Kaltenborn

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August 1955 | Volume 6, Issue 5

Milwaukee-born Hans von Kaltenborn, Spanish War veteran, Harvard graduate and former tutor to Vincent Astor, describes his earliest experiences with the instrument that was to make him famous. He was at the time radio beckoned a member of the staff of the Brooklyn Eagle. Later Kaltenborn organized the Radio Pioneers, the club which launched the project of recording radio history through the reminiscences of the men and women who had developed radio.

 

The first radio talk I ever made was in 1921. I was a director of the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce and one of its officers. There was a good deal of talk about this new invention which made it possible to hear a human voice at a distance. I had developed a crystal receiving set in my own home and had experienced that marvelous thrill for the first time—to be able to pull sounds down out of the air.

I remember vividly the first evening when we got the cat’s whisker on the crystal and actually heard the sound of music. A wild shriek went through the house. Everyone was called up to the room on the top floor to listen to this miraculous instrument which enabled you to hear something that was just taken out of the empty air. It was early in 1921 when I had that first radio thrill.

The Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce got to talking about this new thing called radio or wireless and decided that for the annual banquet it would be a wonderful stunt if I should go over to New Jersey where WJZ was established as an experimental station in a factory building. From there I would deliver an address to the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce assembled for its banquet. A loud-speaker system was installed in the auditorium. I went over to New Jersey, delivered a brief address, and then hurried back to Brooklyn to see whether it had actually been received. As I came into the banquet room there was tremendous applause, and I was informed that the experiment had been a perfect success—they had heard every word. The miracle of radio had established itself with the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce.

My first analysis of news on the air was carried by an Army Signal Corps station on Bedloe’s Island in New York Harbor on April 4, 1922. That was the real beginning of my radio career.

In the summer of 1923, the Eagle arranged with WEAF, an experimental broadcast station established in the Telephone Building on Broadway by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, to carry my talks. The paper felt that the prestige created by these broadcasts justified them in paying me a $100 fee to do the talk. They got the radio time free in exchange for my services. The furnished studios at WEAF were much more pretentious than the unfurnished New Jersey studios of WJZ. The telephone company, which operated WEAF, had lots of money