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Wireless Telegraphist Collection

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: Wireless officer sending a message by Morse Code from on board a ship, 1916

Wireless officer sending a message by Morse Code from on board a ship, 1916
Wireless 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

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: Sender of the S. O. S. Signal for Help, (April 20), 1912. Creator: Unknown

Sender of the S. O. S. Signal for Help, (April 20), 1912. Creator: Unknown
Sender of the " S. O. S." Signal for Help, (April 20), 1912. John George Phillips (nicknamed Jack, 1887-1912) was the ships senior wireless operator who tried to save the Titanic

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: The main telegraph office newly built in St. Petersburg and opened 14 October 1862, 1862

The main telegraph office newly built in St. Petersburg and opened 14 October 1862, 1862

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: Training in telecommunications, 1941. Creator: Charles Brown

Training in telecommunications, 1941. Creator: Charles Brown
Training in telecommunications, 1941. British RAF personnel in the classroom during the Second World War: Class work...in properly equipped rooms

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: Wireless operator... RMS Titanic, 1912, (1935). Creator: Unknown

Wireless operator... RMS Titanic, 1912, (1935). Creator: Unknown
Wireless operator Harold Bride being questioned about SOS messages sent during the sinking of RMS Titanic, 1912, (1935). The wireless operator is undergoing examination as to the time the SOS

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: The wireless transmission room at Croydon Aerodrome, south London, 1928, (1935). Creator: Unknown

The wireless transmission room at Croydon Aerodrome, south London, 1928, (1935). Creator: Unknown
The 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

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: The Ocean Grave of the Titanic, and photograph of Jack Phillips, April 20, 1912

The Ocean Grave of the Titanic, and photograph of Jack Phillips, April 20, 1912. Sender of the " S. O. S." Signal for Help : John George Phillips (nicknamed Jack)

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: A Wireless Cabin on an Atlantic Liner, 20 April, 1912. Creator: Unknown

A Wireless Cabin on an Atlantic Liner, 20 April, 1912. Creator: Unknown
A Wireless Cabin on an Atlantic Liner, 20 April, 1912. The White Star Line ship RMS Titanic struck an iceberg in thick fog off Newfoundland on 14 April 1912

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: The Ocean Grave of the Titanic, and photograph of a wireless operator, 20 April, 1912

The Ocean Grave of the Titanic, and photograph of a wireless operator, 20 April, 1912. Article about the disaster with an illustration: A Wireless Cabin on an Atlantic Liner

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: Wireless, 1941. Artist: Cecil Beaton

Wireless, 1941. Artist: Cecil Beaton
Wireless, 1941. A wireless operator in a command station. From Air of Glory, by Cecil Beaton. [His Majestys Stationery Office, London, 1941]

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: Titanic - Iceberg Telegram, 1912

Titanic - Iceberg Telegram, 1912. A telegram transmited from RMS Titanic (M.G.Y.) to the S.S. Birma, April 15, 1912, reading, We have struck iceberg sinking fast come to our assistance. Position Lat

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: Wireless Operator Inside Latest Type of Training Machine, 1940

Wireless Operator Inside Latest Type of Training Machine, 1940. From Our Air Force published by Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd. 1940

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: Operating a Portable Wireless Outstation, 1940

Operating a Portable Wireless Outstation, 1940. From Our Air Force published by Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd. 1940

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: Wirless Operator Mechanics Workshop, 1940

Wirless Operator Mechanics Workshop, 1940. From Our Air Force published by Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd. 1940

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: RAF Coastal Command radio operator on board his aircraft, c1940 (1943)

RAF Coastal Command radio operator on board his aircraft, c1940 (1943). From Coastal Command. [His Majestys Stationery Office, London, 1943]

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: A Marconi wireless operator receiving wireless messages as the Empress of Britain crosses the Atlan

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

Background imageWireless Telegraphist Collection: Heroic wireless operators, 1912

Heroic wireless operators, 1912. Top: sending SOS signals from the wireless room of the Titanic as the water rises. Bottom: the last minutes of the wireless operators during the Fez massacre


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