Situated on a barren and lonely headland of the coast of Galway, three miles from the town of Clifden, is the Irish station of the Marconi transatlantic wireless telegraph system. No less barren ...
The Wireless Telegraph and Signal Company ... sent approximately 250 Marconigrams to shore stations in the Marconi network. The young men, 22 and 24 respectively, worked long hours to service ...
For Marconi ... all radio stations, from the United States to Australia, observed two minutes of silence — an extraordinary tribute for the man who had invented wireless: not just radio ...
On April 14, 1912, the day the S.S. Titanic sank in the frozen North Atlantic, Sarnoff was working as a telegrapher at the Marconi Wireless station atop the Wanamaker Hardware building in New York.
On Dec. 12, 1901, Marconi made history when a wireless signal traveled 2,000 miles from a transmitting station in Poldhu, Cornwall, in the far southwestern corner of England, to a receiving ...
Therefore, in 1904 Guglielmo Marconi's wireless company announced the distress signal CQD would be used, signifying "Seeking you. Distress!" Or, "All stations. Distress!" However, while British ...
The date is the 4th of June 1903, and the inventor, Guglielmo Marconi, is about to demonstrate his new wireless system, which he claims can securely send messages over a long distance, without ...
WPSC is also the first radio station to broadcast live from the Marconi Museum, where the wireless radio was invented, in ...