CLICK
TO GO TO PRIOR PAGE Page 1900 - TIMELINE -
1905
to 1909
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CLICK
TO GO TO NEXT Page 1910 - TIMELINE - 1905
- Greenleaf Pickard invents the silicon
detector.
1905 - PATENT LAWS -
Revised (1905, STATUTE: SEC. 4886).
1905 - There are now 2,241,367 telephones in the
Bell Telephone System.
1905af
- Fleming developes the first diode known as the
Fleming Valve.
1905
- PATENT - Fleming's U.S. PATENT 803,684
"Instrument for Converting Alternating Electric
Currents Into Continuous Currents" Filed April 10,
1905, Granted November 7, 1905.
CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1905d - The De Forest Company in the USA introduced
a device called an Audion also known as the triode.
It used the same basic vacuum tube technology as
Fleming's diode, but a third electrode had been
added. This was called a grid because of the nature
of its construction. Initially the Audion vacuum
tube was only used for detection of signals, it
took another four years, in1910, before it was used
as an amplifier. He was granted over 300 patents in
the field of wireless, radio, telephone,
sound-on-film, picture transmission and TV.
1905d 02 - AUDION
PATENT FILED: De Forest's Audion Patent Number
One, #979,275, was Applied for on February 2, 1905,
Granted in 1906. "The Audion," did not transmit nor
detect articular voice or music, until it became
the property of AT&T, in 1914. Later on, it
became a tube part for radio telephony that relied
on the Tesla and Westinghouse AC Generator to
broadcast voice and music.
1905d 1204 - PATENT
FILED - Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 827,523
Patent Filed "Wireless Telegraph System" (separate
transmitting and receiving antennas), Filed Dec. 4,
1905, Granted July 31, 1906.
1905m - Marconi has been the recipient of honorary
doctorates of several universities and many other
international honors and awards. and was created
Chevalier of the Civil Order of Savoy in 1905. Many
other distinctions of this kind followed.
1905m
- Marconi, commercial transatlantic wire service
inaugurated between Glace Bay and Clifton
Ireland.
1905m - On 16 March 1905 Marconi married Beatrice
O'Brien, daughter of Edward Donough O'Brien, 14th
Baron Inchiquin, Ireland. They had three daughters
(one of whom lived only a few weeks), and one son.
Marconi and O'Brien later divorced.
1905m - PATENT:
Marconi patents his directive horizontal
antenna.
1905r - Reginald Fessenden broadcasts his first
program of speech and music transmitted by
utilizing his heterodyne system of radio.
1905r-1913 - Fessenden developed a completely
self-sustaining wireless system.
1905s - Murray High School built by architect and
builder, George Aycock who at the time of his death
in 1954, was the oldest member of Murray Masonic
Lodge 105.
1905 - John D. Rockefeller Sr. decides to build a
mansion at his Pocantico estate. It will take
numerous changes and revisions, and eight years of
construction, for Kykuit (Dutch for "lookout") to
be completed.
1906 - President Roosevelt's attacks on Rockefeller
and Standard Oil escalate. Rockefeller is singled
out as one of the "malefactors of great wealth."
Anti-Rockefeller sentiment is at an all-time
high.
906 - J.P. Morgan was a patron to photographer
Edward S. Curtis, offering Curtis $75,000 in 1906,
for a series on the Native Americans. Curtis
eventually published a 20-volume work entitled "The
North American Indian."
1906 - Rockefeller and Carnegie are perceived by
the press as being locked in competition over the
extent of their philanthropic giving.
1905s
0507 - Born: William Tesla Stubblefield
(1905-1906), on May 7, in Murray, Kentucky. Son of
inventor, Nathan B. Stubblefield.
1906
- Berlin Conference - 27 nations signed the
International Wireless Telegraph Convention
concluded between
Germany, the
United States of America, Argentina, Austria,
Hungary, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Chile, Denmark,
Spain, France, Great Britain, Greece, Italy, Japan,
Mexico, Monaco, Norway, the Netherlands, Persia,
Portugal, Rumania, Russia, Sweden, Turkey, and
Uruguay.This second
international radio conference was held in Berlin,
Germany in 1906, to deal with issues left over from
the 1903 Conference. The result was a comprehensive
agreement, the International Wireless Telegraph
Convention, which was adopted on November 3, 1906,
and became effective July 1, 1908. Although U.S.
representatives signed the agreement in 1906, the
U.S. Senate did not ratify the Berlin Convention
until April 3, 1912, and the President proclaimed
U.S. adherence to the Convention effective May 25,
1912.
1906 - First telephone directory featuring
classified business advertising on yellow pages
issued in Detroit by the Michigan State Telephone
Company.
1906 - Henry H.C. Dunwoody patents the use of
carborundum in detectors.
1906
1014 - Died: William Tesla Stubblefield
(1905-1906), on October 14, in Murray, Kentucky.
(17- months-old). Invant Son of inventor, Nathan B.
Stubblefield.
1906al - Alexanderson had been employed at General
Electric for only a short period of time when GE
received an order from Canadian-born professor and
researcher Reginald Fessenden for an alternator
with 1000 times higher frequency than any in
existence at that time. In the summer of 1906 Dr.
Alexanderson presented a 50 kHz alternator that was
installed in Fessenden's radio station in Brant
Rock, Massachusetts. By fall it's output had been
improved to 500 watts and 75 kHz. On Christmas Eve,
1906. Before the invention of his alternator, radio
was an affair only of dots and dashes transmitted
by inefficient crashing spark machines.
1906d
-AUDION PATENT
GRANTED: De Forest's Audion Patent Number One,
#979,275, patents the "Audion" as a "new receiver
for wireless telegraphy." He added a 'Grid' to the
Fleming Valve, creating the 'Triode."
1906d
- In 1906, De Forest's attorney was the first
person to use the word "Radio." The term was used
to describe the De Forest Wireless Radio Telegraphy
Company.
1906d - There was considerable comment in the
scientific community regarding whether de Forest's
Audion was an infringement of copying Fleming's
original idea. Fleming himself never claimed any
credit for the introduction of the grid, but did
contest the patent infringement of the thermionic
technology in the courts. Unfortunately he lost,
but many in the scientific community agreed with
him.
1906d
0626 -PATENT
- Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 824,637 Patent
Granted "Oscillation Responsive Device" (vacuum
tube detector diode), Filed Jan. 18, 1904,
Granted June 26, 1906. CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1906t -
"The Audion," did not transmit nor detect articular
voice or music, until it became the property of
AT&T, in 1914. Later on, it became a tube part
for radio telephony that relied on the Tesla and
Westinghouse AC Generator to broadcast voice
and
music.
1906d
0731 -PATENT
- Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 827,523 Patent
Granted "Wireless Telegraph System" (separate
transmitting and receiving antennas), Filed
Dec. 4, 1905, Granted July 31, 1906.
CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1906d 0726 - PATENT
FILED - Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 926,934
"Wireless Telegraph Tuning Device" Filed Jan.
20, 1906, Granted July 6,
1909.
1906d
0731 -PATENT
-
Lee
De Forest's U.S. Patent 827,524 Patent Granted
"Wireless Telegraph
System,"
filed
January 1, 1904, Granted July
31,1906.CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1906d 0827
-PATENT FILED: -
Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 841,386 "Wireless
Telegraphy" (tunable vacuum tube detector - no
grid), Filed Aug. 27, 1906, Granted Jan. 15,
1907.
1906fa
08 - Born: Philo Farnsworth (1906-1971), on August
19, in Beaver, Utah. Converted electromagnetic wave
to image. (Television Receiver).
1906d
1113 - PATENT - Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 836,070
Patent Granted "Oscillation Responsive Device"
(vacuum tube detector - no grid),
Filed
May 19, 1906, Granted Nov. 13,
1906.CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1906r - Fessenden directed the business activities
of the National Electric Signaling Company from the
Brant Rock, Massachusetts Dit Dah transmitter
facilities. He focused his technical knowledge and
efforts on perfecting the Alexanderson, General
Electric, Tesla inspired 60 cycle AC spark
generator to transmit both Dit Dahs and voice. The
station first gained fame by establishing
communications with Machrihanish in Scotland.
1906r 1219 - The 'Alexanderson Alternator' is
delivered to Fessenden's station.
1906r 1224 - On Christmas Eve 1906, Fessenden
broadcasts speech and music to surprised shipboard
operators. He broadcasts on 42 Kilohertz at 1
kilowatt. The programming includes a female voice
singing a Christmas carol, a violin solo by
Fessenden, and an invitation to report on
reception. Max Wien uses cooled gaps and quenched
gaps in his spark transmitters. Occurred the same
year Tesla's Westinghouse patent for his 60-cycle
electrical generator expired.
1906r
- Christmas Eve December 24, 1906, at 9 P.M.
eastern standard time, Reginald Fessenden, with an
upgraded Alexanderson alternator and with
Alexanderson in attendance, prepared and performed
their first speech and phonograph music program
from the Brant Rock
station.
The Christmas Eve Broadcast occurred the same year
Tesla's Westinghouse patent for his 60-cycle
electrical AC generator expired. The private
broadcast demonstration was reported to have been
received by ships at sea, with look-a-like GE --
Fessenden receivers, up and down the coast, inland
some distance in New York State and Maryland -- and
as far away as 100 miles.
Ships at sea with a same like receiver, were said
to hear the broadcast that included Fessenden
playing the song O Holy Night on the violin and
reading a passage from the Bible.
Of course, this feat was four years after Smart
Daaf Boy Marconi's Dit Dah Morse Code signal "S"
was heard by Marconi from England to Newfoundland
in 1901, and Stubblefield ship to shore two-way
wireless telephone broadcast in Philadelphia and
Washington, D.C., in 1902. Fessenden attended the
event.
1906r - Reginald Fessenden had already made a
widely heard radio voice broadcast, using a rotary
spark gap transmitter, on December 24, 1906. His
technique was in fact voice modulated high
frequency radio transmission. Regular news
broadcasts using vacuum tube technology became
common by 1920.
1906s
- Wm Tesla Stubblefield. After the death of Nathan
and Ada's 17-month-old son Tesla, Nathan
Stubblefield, to lapse the tragic death of Wm
Tesla, blamed himself for the death of their son.
It was shortly
after Tesla was found "teething" on a raw potato
from the mixed energized WiFi hotsoil patches, that
Tesla grew fatally ill on Oct. 14, 1906.
1906t - Another kind friend lent Tesla some money
to develop a bladeless steam turbine. Within four
years Tesla had produced two turbines, each
developing 100 HP. He persuaded GE to let him test
them in their New York power station. He installed
them setting them up in opposition to each other
and thus his demonstration was poor.
1906t - On his 50th birthday in 1906, Tesla
demonstrated his 200 hp (150 kW) 16,000 rpm
Bladeless Turbine.
1906t - Tesla soldiered on, but by 1906 had got
nowhere and abandoned the project.
1907
/
CLICK FOR NBS Study "K" TIMELINE -
1907 - Clarence D. Tuska the first Secretary of the
A.R.R.L. started working with the Coherer.
1907 - G.W. Pickard perfects the Dit Dah crystal
detector and takes out a patent for the use of
silicon in detectors. The first 'Broadcasts' of
records are done to aid in testing, so the operator
didn't have to talk. The worlds first
Trans-Atlantic commercial wireless service is
established by Marconi with stations at Clifden,
Ireland and Glace Bay, Nova Scotia. Marconi begins
to use rotary synchronous gaps in his spark
transmitter.
1907 - Jesse Wells, brother of Rainey T. Wells
appointed assistant chief of police, Murray,
Kentucky.
1907d - Launch of the De Forest Radio Company. An
early company advertisement stated: "It will soon
be possible to distribute grand opera music from
transmitters placed on the stage of the
Metropolitan Opera House by a Radio Telephone
station on the roof to almost any dwelling in
Greater New York and vicinity. The same applies to
large cities. Church music, lectures, etc., can be
spread abroad by the Radio Telephone."
1907d
0115 - PATENT - Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 841,386
Patent Granted "Wireless Telegraphy" (tunable
vacuum tube detector - no grid), Filed Aug. 27,
1906, Granted Jan. 15, 1907. CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1907r 02 - Two months after the Fessenden broadcast
event, the word "Radio" popped up. On February 28,
1907, the De Forest Radio Telephone Company was the
first to use the new word, "Radio" to describe the
Wireless Telephony. The first permanent wireless
telephone RF broadcasting installation was
constructed in Murray, Kentucky, by Stubblefield's
Teleph-on-del-green Industrial College, on the
campus where Murray State University is now
located.
1907d 0228 - THE FIRST RADIO STOCK
CORPORATION. De Forest RADIO TELEPHONE COMPANY - On
February 28, 1907 - the first Wireless Telephone
company USING the new WORD
"RADIO."
1907d 0620 - PATENT
FILED- Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 926,936
"Space Telegraphy" Filed June 20, 1907, Granted
July 6, 1909.
1907d 0620 -PATENT FILED- Lee De Forest's U.S.
Patent 926,937 "Space Telephony" Filed June 20,
1907, Granted July 6, 1909.
1907m - Marconi achieved fully reliable
transatlantic communication.
1907s
- Nathan B. Stubblefield Wireless Telephone
Enterprise formed with the "Big
Six."
1907 - In 1907, when there was a banking panic,
J.P. Morgan took command, rallied the other
bankers, and restored their confidence. 1907s
0101 - NBS. Articles of Agreement between Nathan B.
Stubblefield and the "Big
Six," Senator Conn
Linn, B. F. Schroader, R. Downs, J. D. Rowlett,
Geo. C. McLarin, John, P. McElrath, Samuel E.
Bynum, (Rainey T. Wells) subscribe for certain
interest in "Stubblefield's Ideal System of
Wireless Telephony" invention.
1907s
0601 - - STUBBLEFIELD PROSPECTUS
-Valuable
Applications of this Invention, As Cited In Our
United States Patent Application. June 1,
1907.
1907s
- Murray, Kentucky. Excessive telephone rates
prompted City Attorney R. T. Wells to issue 210
indictments against stockholders of the beleaguered
Cumberland Telephone
Co.
As a result of the
hassle against the phone company, articles of
incorporation were filed by 40 stockholders for a
competing firm, Murray Telephone Co.
1907 - The U.S. government has seven different
suits pending against Standard Oil. The lawsuits
argue that Standard Oil is more than twenty times
the size of its closest competitor.
1907s - Nathan Stubblefield. Patent Board of
Examiners. The new terminology, moving vehicles,
groundless loop aerials connected to mobile
wireless telephones powered by electrolytic
batteries being recharged with gasoline engines,
became Nathan's own obvious and distinct scientific
jargon to describe his system to the examiners. It
was exactly what they wanted to hear, before
tacitly motivating themselves to approve his
patent. Nathan defined Marconi, De Forest and the
others, as electricity coming from a basic
non-continuous spark wallop, powered by a
non-battery source and too dangerous to be portable
enough to be called a "wireless telephone." Their
Tesla-type alternator, Nathan explained, was
powered either by a water fall, such as the Niagara
Falls, or by a coal burning steam engine, like the
one used by Marconi in his 1901 first transatlantic
dit-dah transmission of the letter "S." As for the
Phelps and Conly coils patents, Nathan stated,
"they were the fathers of a thought." The thought
being a patent that was paragoned to a "now you see
it ... and now you don't" magic trick. The patent
described something it could not do, create ground
energy electromagnetic atmospheric
transmissions.
1907s - The new Murray school building, two years
after construction started in 1905, was completed
by George Aycock, contractor/architect. Senator
Conn Linn spoke at the opening ceremony.
1907s
0114 - Trip to Washington, Jan. 14 - April 20,
1907, by Nathan B. Stubblefield.
1907s
0118 - Wireless Telephone. Introductory of
Stubblefield's Ideal System of Wireless Telephone,
on improvements in the art of trasmitting of speech
through space electrically. Description (handwriten
original).
1907s 0222 - Night Riders from 1907 to 1909. Bands
of Night Riders in Murray, Ky. estimated 10 to 275
paid visits upon citizens, often beforehand warning
them with threatening notes, taking them from their
homes, punishing and whipping them. More people
were possessed with fear at the time than in any
other period in the history of Calloway County.
Only one who has experienced the apprehension of a
county under military control can fairly grasp its
significance, its despair and despondency. The
troups' presence had an adverse effect on the
social, economic and spiritual life of the
community. Military law under the militia had been
imposed on the count, on April 6, the longest
occupation of state militia in Calloway County
during it entire existence. "The Story of Calloway
County," Published by Kerby and Dorothy
Jennings.
1907s 04 - On April 5, 1907, Stubblefield filed his
Wireless Telephone Patent Application, Serial No.
366,544 -Room 109. The patent application was
granted in conjunction with the expiration of
Edison's Antenna patent.
The first permanent wireless telephone broadcasting
installation was in January, 1892. The station was
constructed in Murray, Kentucky, by Stubblefield's
Teleph-on-del-green Industrial College, on the
campus where Murray State University is now
located.
1907s 04 - Nathan Stubblefield. Six months after
the death of Wm Tesla, Nathan and Bernard left for
Washington, D.C. to file Nathan's patent for the
Wireless Telephone. One year later, on May
12th 1908, the 48 year old Nathan was granted the
"All-in-One" patent monopoly, his youngest son
would have been, 3 years old.
02
/ TimeLine
/
Stubblefield Patent
1907s
0405 - PATENT FILED: Wireless Telephone Patent
Application Filed Apr. 5, 1907, by Nathan B.
Stubblefield. What is the Relevancy of
Stubblefield's wireless telephone Patent to the
Internet? In the exhibits attached to the Patent,
it affixes the wireless telephone installed in
vehicles, ships and trains, traveling through a
field of wired telephone poles. The drawings are
tantamount to the EMW theory that operates today's
wireless WI-FI "HotSpots" and Bluetooth systems.
The telephone wires themselves were to be used as
part of Stubblefield's antenna to carry the
wireless broadcast into local wired telephone
switchboards for mass party-line broadcasting, if
need be. Stubblefield's groundless antenna was used
for transmission.
1907s 0405 - Frank Albert Stubblefield (1907-1977),
a Representative from Kentucky; born in Murray,
Calloway County, Ky., April 5, 1907, the same day
Nathan B. Stubblefield filed for his wireless
telephone patent in Washington, D.C. MORE
STORY
1907s
0501 - Conn Linn and Nathan in Washington to secure
original patent May 1. Returned to Murray June
8.
1907s 0501-0608 - Nathan B. Stubblefield in
Washington, D.C. Makes trip to Washing on May 1st,
returns to Murray June 8, 1907.
1907s 0513 - N. B. Stubblefield patent 366,544
amendment.
1907s 0522 - Stubblefield by 1907, with a 60 foot
transmitting coil, he could work 1/4 mile or 1320
feet "nicely." He received patent 887,357 for his
Wireless Telephone, using the voice frequency
induction system, on May 12, 1908.
1907s 0601 - N. B. Stubblefield patent 366,544
amendment.
1907s
0607 - Private Prospectus - June 7, 1907 - U.S.
Army Signal Corps - Major Squier, Washington,
D.C.
1907s 1017 - PATENT
- Stubblefield's Wireless Telephone Patent
Application Approved By Commissioner Allen - Nathan
B. Stubblefield - (Patent Expires October 17,
1924). What is the Relevancy of
Stubblefield's wireless telephone Patent to the
Internet? (See 1908)
1908
/
CLICK FOR NBS Study "K" TIMELINE -
1908
0512 - PATENT
GRANTED: Stubblefield's U.S. Patent, Number
887,357, All Purpose Wireless Telephone,Filed April 5, 1907, Granted May 12,
1908. /
Click
MORE STORY TO GO DIRECTLY TO U.S. Patent Office
- (Patent
Expires May 12, 1925)
CLICK ANY IMAGE
TO VIEW
PATENT
What is the Relevancy of Stubblefield's
wireless telephone Patent to the Internet? In the
exhibits attached to the Patent, it affixes the
wireless telephone installed in vehicles, ships and
trains, traveling through a field of wired
telephone poles; The drawings are tantamount to the
EMW theory that operates today's wireless WI-FI
"HotSpots" and Bluetooth systems. The telephone
wires themselves were to be used as part of
Stubblefield's sideband antenna system to carry the
wireless broadcast into local wired telephone
switchboards for mass party-line broadcasting, if
need be. Stubblefield's groundless antenna was used
for transmission.
Stubblefield said in the patent that it would be
useful for "securing telephonic communications
between moving vehicles and way stations." The
diagram shows wireless telephony from trains,
boats, and wagons. In foreign patents he showed
wireless telephony with cars. But there is no
indication he was using voice modulated continuous
high frequency waves, as are used for radio today
until Collins proved it. (Lochte).
1908s 0511 - Canadian application and recording
assignment, in U. S. Patent receipt on account by
E. G. Siggers, Patents and Patent Law, Washington,
D.C.
1908 - The term "Bell System" is introduced in
national advertising. The theme "One Policy, One
System. Universal Service" is originated within
AT&T to express the policy of eliminating dual
telephone services wherever possible. Dual services
were a result of competition which had been active
since the expiration of the original Bell patents
in 1894.
1908 - Vail begins national advertising, and
introduces the slogan "One System, One Policy,
Universal Service."
1908 0912 - Squier became the first passenger to
fly with Orville Wright, and the in between for the
U.S. Government and the Wright Bros.
1908d
0107 - PATENT - Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 876,165
Patent Granted "Wireless Telegraph Transmitting
System" (antenna coupler), Filed May 11, 1904,
Granted January 7,
1908.CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1908d
0218 - PATENT - LeeDeForest's U.S. Patent 879,532
Patent Granted "Space Telegraphy" (increased
sensitivity detector - clearly shows grid), Filed
January 29, 1907, issued February 18.
1908.CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1908t - From 1908 to 1910, Tesla experiments with
pumps, compressors, blowers and steam and gas
turbines.
1908t 02 - In February 1908, Tesla signs a contract
with American and British Manufacturing Company and
begins experiments with a new principle of power
transmission from fluids and to fluids.
1908
12 - Antenna PATENT EXPIRES. Thomas A. Edison's
Antenna (Dec. 1891) Wireless Telegraphy Patent
expires.
1908s - "Nathan is the most un-inventor-like
scientist in the business because he's a human
being first," said his son and fellow inventor,
Bernard Stubblefield. "My father is always working
for me in ways that I have no idea about until it
happens."
1908s
- By 1908, both Stubblefield and De Forest were
enabled to file their WT and Radio Patents, that
created the Internet and Wi-Fi
connection.
Stubblefield Received
His All Purpose - Wireless Telephone Patent, Number
887,357 1908
0512 -
PATENT: Click to Go To
U.S. Patent Office -- then Click Full Text to
refresh page. The De Forest Audion Patent Number
Three, #879, 532 Covering The Device As A Detector
- Was Issued On February 18, 1908. (See NBS100
Timeline) - Stubblefield's inventions leads
directly to the WiFi HotSpots technology of today
-- that connects directly to land-lines.
1908s
- Gen. Squier. It was in 1908, the same year
Stubblefield received his wireless patent, that
General Squier and Collins introduced NBS to the
"Fying
Machine."Together they
found the best way to utilize the new NBS wireless
telecom system with ground troops. Stubblefield
played a big part in developing the secrets of
SideBanding, for the Signal Corps. SideBanding is
the method of sending voice into space, utilizing
bare wires and land lines.
1908s - Working quietly was a hallmark of Nathan's
style. Between the years of 1908 to 1913, he was
bulking up the Company by selecting Bernard to head
his National Broadcasting System wireless network,
by pulling off a series of under-the-radar deals,
largely with the U.S. Signal Corps. It was during
these years, the U.S. Signal Corps., headed by Maj.
General Squier, was into wireless and aircraft
surveillance weapons, getting prepared for the
first World War. It was also the beginnings of the
Radio Trust monopoly, Westinghouse, AT&T, GE,
RCA and NBC.
1908 - The U.S. government launches its largest
antitrust suit to date, targeting Standard Oil.
1908 - William Randolph Hearst's "The World"
publishes a cover story revealing the "Secret
Double Life of Rockefeller's Father," revealing
Bill Rockefeller's bigamy.
1909
/
CLICK FOR NBS Study "K" TIMELINE -
1909d
- PATENT - Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 926,933
"Wireless Telegraphy" Filed March 22, 1904,
Granted July 6, 1909.
CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1909t
- PATENT - Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 926,934
"Wireless Telegraph Tuning Device" Filed Jan.
20, 1906, Granted July 6,
1909.
CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1909d
- PATENT - Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 926,935
"Wireless Telegraph Transmitter" Filed February
3 1904, issued July 6, 1909.
CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1909d
- PATENT - Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 926,936
"Space Telegraphy" Filed June 20, 1907, Granted
July 6, 1909.CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1909d
- PATENT - Lee De Forest's U.S. Patent 926,937
"Space Telephony" Filed June 20, 1907, Granted
July 6, 1909.CLICK
TO VIEW PATENT.
1908s 0824 - Nathan B. Stubblefield Sayings: "To
thy friend no secrets show for if your friend
becomes your foe the whole world your secrets
knows." "Napoleon said give him a rock to stand on,
and he could turn the world over. I believe my
creditors think I could turn it over with nothing
to stand on." "... here at home, where money is the
Lord absorbing theme and Morality gone to the devil
straight." (From Stubblefield's Corporate Report of
August 24, 1908).
1908s
0824 - NBS - Nathan B. Stubblefield Wireless
Telephone Enterprise Corporate
Report.
1908s 0831 - Proposition by Nathan B. Stubblefield
to share holders and original supporters of the N.
B. Stubblefield Wireless Telephone Enterprise.
1908s 1108 - Postcard from Nathan B. Stubblefield,
Washington, D.C., to Son Bernard, Nashville, TN
regarding compromise proposition in regards to land
matter.
1909 - Braun and Marconi share the Nobel Prize in
physics for their work in the development of
wireless telegraphy. Charles 'Doc' Herrold begins a
regular schedule of broadcasts from his "Herrold
College of Wireless and Engineering," at San Jose,
CA. S.S. Republic sinks after a collision. All but
two lives are saved with the help of wireless.
1909 - The U.S. Government bought its first
airplane, a Wright Brothers biplane, on July 30.
The airplane sold for $25,000 plus a bonus of
$5,000 because it exceeded 40 mph.
1909 - William H. Taft: Twenty-Seventh U.S.
President, 1909-1913. (b. September 15, 1857 in
Cincinnati, Ohio, d. March 8, 1930 in Washington
D.C.).
1909al
- PATENT
- Alexanderson's
1008577 U.S. Patent Filed "High frequency
alternator" (100 kHz), filed April, 1909; issued,
November 14, 1911.-
CLICK TO VIEW PATENT
1909m
- Nobel Prize - Marconi is recipient of the Nobel
Prize in Physics along with Karl Ferdinand
Braun. During
World War I, Marconi was in charge of the Italian
wireless service. Marconi developed shortwave
secret communication transmissions during this
time.
1909s - "Wireless Communication in the United
States," By Thorn I. Mayes. -Continental Wireless
Telephone and Telegraph Company; Continental
Wireless Tel. & Tel. Company; Massie Wireless
Telegraph company; Clark Wireless Telegraph
company,; Pacific Wireless Telegraph Company,
incorporated in Seattle, Washington in 1907 for
$10Mil. 1909s
- CONTINENTAL WIRELESS TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH
COMPANY,
1909: Included six
companies. (Wireless Telegraphy or Wireless
Telephony): Incorporated December 1909 In Arizona
For $5
million.
1909s 0127 - Nathan Stubblefield in Washington,
D.C.
1909s
- Patent. When Stubblefield's "All purpose Wireless
Telephone" patent, copyright and trademark
was granted, in 1908, the year not only
kick-started the radio trust monopoly, but it was
the justification for U.S. regulatory agencies to
seize the wireless radio telephone RF frequencies
owned by NBS and the other Smart-Daaf
Boys.
The Radio
Communication Acts included the Radio Acts of 1910,
1912, 1918, and 1927. The two major stock market
crashes that followed the frequency seizures, was
the cause for the bleaching any profits on all of
the frequency licensing and hardware franchise
agreements his various NBS affiliate companies sold
to GE, Bell, AT&T and the U.S. Army Signal
Corps.
1909s - STUBBLEFIELD & SQUIER - Single Sideband
experiments conducted by Nathan B. Stubblefield and
Major George Squier INSERT certain text.
1909s
0417 - PATENT: STUBBLEFIELD'S CANADIAN PATENT
Issued #114,737 - GRANTED TO STUBBLEFIELD - (Patent
Expires in 1926).
1909s 0504 - PATENT: Patent Special Sales Contract
for the purpose of suubmitting all offers that we
may receive to the owner of said patent for his
acceptance or rejection, between Nathan B.
Stubblefield and WALSH BROS. & CO., Wireless
Invention Wirelss Telephone System, patented
Canada, Patent No. 114737, Issued Oct. 20, 1907.
Price placed on patent outright, $500,000. Owner's
name Nathan B. Stubblefield. 1909s
0615 - NBS WiTel PATENT ASSIGN - Stubblefield
Assigns Canadian Patent To A. Frederick Collins,
June 15, 1909. Collins assigns 75% of his old
Collins Wireless Telephone Company Formed in
1903.
1909s 0901- Nathan B. Stubblefield in Washington,
D.C.
1909s
- Nathan B. Stubblefield paid a glowing memorial of
respect to Prof. J. P. Brannock, principal of the
Murray Male and Female
Institutefor many years,
and distinguished writer, following his death Oct.
27, 1909 in Lexington, Tenn. The body was returned
to Murray for burial beside his wife in the Murray
Cemetery, Ky.
1909s 1114 - A. Frederick Collins - Electrical Show
In Madison Square Garden, New York, Oct. 14, 1909
for the purpose of selling stock in the Collins
Wireless Telephone Co.
1909s
1122 - Nathan Stubblefield in Washington,
D.C.
1909s 1129 - Nathan B. Stubblefield in Washington,
D.C., makes calendar diary entry regards his
personal affairs in case of death or accident.
1909s - Nathan B. Stubblefield's horse, frightened
by a car with whirring chains on the outer side to
propel the thing, resulted in a runaway that hurt
the inventor of wireless telephony.