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Wireless officer sending a message by Morse Code from on board a ship, 1916Wireless officer sending a message by morse code from on board a ship, 1916. Wireless telegraphy at sea was made possible by the type of sending
The New Magic: Sending Pictures by Wireless and the Unescapable Telephone, c1935. From Our Wonderful World, Volume II, edited by J.A. Hammerton. [The Amalgamated Press, Ltd. London]
McCarthy wireless 'phone, L.A. between c1910 and c1915. Creator: Bain News ServiceMcCarthy wireless 'phone, L.A. between c1910 and c1915
Bermocchi & his wireless "iconograph", between c1910 and c1915. Creator: Bain News ServiceFrancesco de Bernocchi & his wireless "iconograph", between c1910 and c1915. Wireless icongraph, a sort of early fax machine will transmit messages, sketches, autographs, shorthand
French field wireless, between c1915 and 1918. Creator: Bain News ServiceFrench field wireless, between c1915 and 1918. Wireless equipment in a truck in France during World War I
Wireless, Pratt Institute, Oct 1917. Creator: Bain News ServiceWireless, Pratt Institute, Oct 1917. Members of the U.S. Army Signal Corps in telegraph training at the Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, New York during World War I
U.S. Army - Motorized Anti-Aircraft Battery, 1910. Creator: Harris & Ewing. U.SU.S. Army - Motorized Anti-Aircraft Battery, 1910. [Signal corps in Cadillacs, men and boys look on]
Military Group, between 1909 and 1914. Creator: Harris & Ewing. Military Group, between 1909 and 1914Military Group, between 1909 and 1914. USA. North Western Military Academy Signal Corps; Wireless No. 9'. Murdock Wireless Apparatus in use, powered by Exide battery
Cordless microphone used by Rakim to record The 18th Letter, 1997. Creator: ShureA wireless microphone used by Rakim to record the album " The 18th Letter" (1997). The hand-held microphone has a circular silver mesh wire grill covering the foam interior of
Training in telecommunications, 1941. Creator: Charles BrownTraining in telecommunications, 1941. British RAF personnel in the classroom during the Second World War: Class work...in properly equipped rooms
A family listening to the results of the general election of 1923, (1935). Creator: UnknownA family listening to the results of the general election of 1923, (1935). Wireless brought the election results into the homes of the people
The wireless transmission room at Croydon Aerodrome, south London, 1928, (1935). Creator: UnknownThe wireless transmission room at Croydon Aerodrome, south London, 1928, (1935). A view of a wireless transmission room, whence contacts can be made with pilots in the air as to direction
One of the Wireless Cabins in a modern liner, 1936One of the Wireless Cabins in a modern liner, showing on the left the 2-kilowatts medium and long-wave telegraph transmitter, 1936. From Shipping Wonders of the World, Vol
Guglielmo Marconi (1874 - 1934), c. 1915 (b/w photo)
Twentieth Century Transportation, c. 1910Twentieth Century Transportation, pub. c.1910 (colour lithograph)
Micro-ray wireless station, 1938. Churchmans cigarette card, from a series titled Modern Wonders [WA & AC Churchman, Great Britain & Ireland, 1938]
Wireless Operator Inside Latest Type of Training Machine, 1940. From Our Air Force published by Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd. 1940
Operating a Portable Wireless Outstation, 1940. From Our Air Force published by Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd. 1940
Wirless Operator Mechanics Workshop, 1940. From Our Air Force published by Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd. 1940
Clapham and Dwyer, musical and radio humorists, 1935. A print from the photo album Popular Personalities, issued for Piccadilly Juniors Oval Photos, 1935
Guglielmo Marconi, Italian pioneer of wireless telegraphy, Signal Hall, Newfoundland, 1901 (1951). Marconi with the instruments with which he received the first transatlantic wireless signals on 12th
Advert for Western Electric Company wireless frame aerial sets, 1923. A print from The Magpie, 1923
RAF Coastal Command radio operator on board his aircraft, c1940 (1943). From Coastal Command. [His Majestys Stationery Office, London, 1943]
The first wireless photographs from America o England were sent on September 25th. - Dempsey v. TunnThe first wireless photographs sent from America to England, c1926-c1927 (1935). The World Heavyweight Championship boxing match between Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney fight
A Marconi wireless operator receiving wireless messages as the Empress of Britain crosses the Atlantic, c1934. Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937), an Italian physicist and inventor
Guglielmo Marchese Marconi, Italian electrical engineer, (c1924). Marconi (1874-1937) is known for the development of a practical wireless telegraphy system
Advertisement for French Radio National, 20th century
Interior of a Marconi radio transmitting station, 1915. Cigarette card showing transmitting apparatus, published in London in 1915
French citizens listening to a broadcast by Vichy deputy premier Admiral Darlan, 23 May, 1941French citizens listening to a broadcast by Vichy deputy premier Admiral Francois Darlan, 23 May, 1941
Long wave transmitter masts at a Marconi radio station at Berne, Switzerland, c1925
Opening of wireless telegraph link between Paris and Casablanca, 1907Opening of wireless telegraph link between Paris and Casablanca, showing men whose work made it possible, Edouard Branly (1844-1940) and Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937)
Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937), Italian physicist and radio pioneerGuglielmo Marconi, Italian physicist and radio pioneer. Marconi with typical apparatus, including 10-inch induction coil spark transmitter (right), morse inker and grasshopper key in centre