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1.
Feature Story /
1950
-1959 /
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1940
- TIMELINE -
03.
Editors Note
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The
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1950
- 1959 /
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TIMELINE
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1950
0625 - Korean War begins on June
25.
1951s
0101 - BOOKLET - Murray, Chamber of
Commerce Kentucky, January 1, 1930; MURRAY
KENTUCKY BIRTHPLACE OF
RADIO.
*NBSWiTel©AFact
Nathan B. Stubblefield, Murray citizen and
inventor, developed and demonstrated as
early as 1892 a device or transmitting the
human voice considerable distances WITHOUT
WIRES. His "wireless telephone," or
"radio" as it is known today, included
batteries, coils, a transmitter, a
receiver, antenna, and secret devices.
1950 - People are talking about
Transistors for the first time, saying
they just might replace the tube. 4
million TV sets are in use in the U.S. on
January 1st. 10 Million TV sets are in use
by December 31st. Some 90 million radio
sets are in use in the United States - an
average of 2 radios for every home in the
nation. Regular color television
transmission begins. The Korean War
begins. Shortages begin to develop for
receiving equipment.
1950d - "Father of Radio." -- De Forest
autobiography published. He also wrote
several film scripts, hundreds of poems,
and kept a daily journal. De Forest died
in 1961 and was inducted into the Radio
Hall of Fame in 1989.
1950s 0101 - Bernard Stubblefield
maintains NBS WT New York Office.
*NBSWiTel©AFact
1950s 0101 - Mr. Vernon Stubblefield, Sr.,
celebrated his 50th consecutive year on
January 1, as a member of the Dale &
Stubblefield drug store.
1951s
0319 - BROADCASTING MAGAZINE - March 19,
1951; Did He Invent Radio? By L. J.
Hortin.
WAY DOWN in the tip of Kentucky you'll
hear on your radio every hour or so: "This
is Station WNBS Murray, Ky., Birthplace of
Radio." FOR MORE STORY
1950s
1001 - NBS. The Nashville Tennessean
Magazine, 'A Claim to Fame' by John
Lipscom. Nathan B. Stubblefield relayed
sound without wires as long ago as
1892.
1951
- AT&T introduces customer-dialing of
long distance calls, initially in
Englewood,
NJ. The
national rollout takes place over the
second half of the 1950s. Until this
innovation, all long distance calls
required operator assistance.
1951
- TV stations are broadcasting. The United
States averages two radio sets in every
home.
Color TV and
UHF TV are talked about everywhere. Over 5
million auto radios are produced, and over
13 million other radio receivers. Various
conservation methods are used to get
around shortages in manufacturing of
radios and TVs.
1951s - Frank Albert Stubblefield of
Murray, Ky. elected Railroad
Commissioner.
1952s
-Felix Holt, author sold the movie rights
for his book, "The Gabriel Horn," to Burt
Lancaster.
Lancaster produced "The Kentuckian," from
the script which had for its story
background the county of Calloway. Later
Felix confided that he had received only
small financial return for the color-movie
rights. His father, Duncan Holt was a
witness to Nathan B. Stubblefield's
wireless voice transmission in 1885, in
Murray,Kentucky.
1952
- The FCC's '3 month' freeze on new TV
station applications, imposed in 1948, is
finally
lifted.
21
million US homes had TV sets. Sony markets
the miniature transistor radio. 10
thousand Transistors are manufactured,
mostly for government and research.
Geoffrey W.A. Drummer proposes "electronic
equipment in a solid block with no
connecting wires" - The integrated
circuit.
1952d - De Forest Predictions: "I do not
foresee 'spaceships' to the moon or Mars.
Mortals must live and die on Earth or
within its atmosphere!"
1952d
- De Forest Predictions: "The transistor
will more and more supplement, but never
supplant, the
Audion.
Its frequency limitations, a few hundred
kilocycles, and its strict power
limitations will never permit its general
replacement of the Audion amplifier."
1952d - De Forest Predictions: Microwave
Ovens. "I foresee great refinements in the
field of short-pulse microwave signaling,
whereby several simultaneous programs may
occupy the same channel, in sequence, with
incredibly swift electronic communication.
Short waves will be generally used in the
kitchen for roasting and baking, almost
instantaneously"
1952t - Tesla did not like to pose for
portraits. He did it only once for
princess Vilma Lwoff-Parlaghy, but that
portrait is lost. His wish was to have a
sculpture made by his close friend, Croat,
Ivan Mestrovic, who was at that time in
United States, but he died before getting
a chance to see it.
1952t - The Tesla bronze bust by Mesrovic
is held in the Nikola Tesla Museum in
Belgrade.
1953 - Dwight D. Eisenhower:
Thirty-Fourth U.S. President, 1953-1961.
(b. Oct. 14, 1890 in Denison, Texas,
d. March 28, 1969 in Washington D.C.).
Married to Mamie Geneva Doud
Eisenhower.
1953 - Three Hundred Twenty Six TV
stations are on the air. Electronics looks
like a good field to get in to. The Voice
of America steps up broadcasts to behind
the 'Iron Curtain."
1953
0727 - Korean War - Armistice, July
27.
1953s - 50th wedding anniversary for Mr.
and Mrs. Vernon Stubblefield Sr. (parents
of Congressman, Frank Stubblefield), at
the family resident on Poplar Street in
Murray by their children, Vernon Jr.,
Frank Albert (congressman) and Dr. Robert
James Stubblefield. Mrs. Stubblefield was
the daughter of the late Dr. and Mrs. A.
L. Wilson, formerly of New Providence and
Mr. Vernon was the son of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Stubblefield, also of New
Providence.
1953s - Died: Conn Linn, dies in Tulsa,
Okla. on Jan. 25. Former Calloway citizen.
Served as Kentucky representative and
state senator and was serving in the upper
house of the general assembly. Senator
Linn's body was returned to Murray for
burial. Linn was a member of inventor
Stubblefield's "Big Six."
1953s
0120 - Stubblefield Postage Stamp.
Resolutions were composed to request the
postmaster general to issue a stamp
commemorating Nathan B. Stubblefield's
achievement in transmission of the human
voice over air waves
by the
Veterans of Foreign Wars post, in Murray
on Jan. 20. The resolutions were adopted
by the post but not by the head of the
Post Office Department.
1953s 0516 - MURRAY LEDGER & TIMES -
May 16, 1953; Dr. R.A. Holt Ashes Strewn
At Bowman, The ashes of the late Dr. Rufus
A. Holt Jr., of Los Angeles, Calif., were
scattered over Bowman cemetery, in Murray,
Kentucky.
In his last will and testament, Dr. Holt
had expressed the desire his body be
cremated and the ashes scattered over
Bowman cemetery, where his ancestors had
been interred.
Four generations of two lines of his
fore-fathers are buried at Bowman. They
are Nathan Bowman and Dr. James Patterson
Holt, great-grandfathers; Oscar Holt, his
grandfather, two great-grandmothers,
uncles and cousins, including Nathan B.
Stubblefield are buried there.
*NBSWiTel©AFact
1954
- Magnetic tape is demonstrated for
recording television pictures by RCA.
Transistors begin to see widespread
use.
1954ar
- Died: Edwin Howard Armstrong (1890-1954,
on January 31, in New York City. Engineer
for Westinghouse. (Superheterodyne).
1954s - Died: Felix Holt. Felix's legacy
was the authorship of two books, "The
Gabriel Horn" and Daniel Boone Kissed Me,"
which had settings in Calloway County. His
father, Duncan Holt was a witness to
Nathan B. Stubblefield's wireless voice
transmission in 1885,in
Murray,Kentucky.
1955 - Nelson Rockefeller plays a pivotal
role in the Eisenhower-Khrushchev summit
in Geneva. Along with Henry Kissinger, he
orchestrates the proposal for mutual
aerial inspection of Soviet and U.S
military establishments, dubbed "open
skies." Nelson resigns from the Eisenhower
administration and returns to assume
chairmanship of Rockefeller Center.
1955 - Over 7 million Radio sets are
produced. That number, although less than
the peak of Radio production in 1947,
climbs steadily through 1961 when over 11
million sets are made in the US. IBM
invents the computer 'Hard Drive.'
1956
- AT&T and the US Justice department
agree on a consent decree to end an
antitrust suit brought against AT&T in
1949.
AT&T
restricts its activities to those related
to running the national telephone system,
and special projects for the federal
government.
1956 - AT&T opens for service TAT-1,
the first trans-Atlantic telephone cable.
The initial capacity is 36 calls at a time
at a price per call of $12 for the first
three minutes. Since trans-Atlantic
service opened in 1927, calls had traveled
across the ocean via radio waves. But
cables provide much higher signal quality,
avoid atmospheric interference and offer
greater capacity and security.
1956
- CCIT and the CCIF were merged to form
the International Telephone and Telegraph
Consultative Committee
(CCITT),
in order
to respond more effectively to the
requirements generated by the development
of these two types of communication.
1956t
-150th anniversary of Tesla's birth.
Mestrovic made a Tesla statue placed at
the Ruer Boskovic Institute in Zagreb.
This statue was moved to Nikola Tesla
Street in Zagreb's city centre on the
150th anniversary of Tesla's
birth,
with the Ruer Boskovic Institute to
receive a duplicate.
1956s - Died: Dr. Rainey T. Wells
(1875-1956), at age 82, at his spacious
colonial residence on the Hazel highway
June 15. Founder and president (1926-1933)
of Murray State University. In 1892,
Rainey T. Wells was one of the first
persons to hear Nathan B. Stubblefield's
wireless voice transmissions, and the
first words over a wireless telephone,
"Hello Rainey ... Hello Rainey!"
1956s
- Television International Magazine
(Television Film Magazine) was founded, by
Sam Donaldson and Al Preiss. The magazine
was purchased by the Troy and Josie Cory
in February
1987.
02
/
TimeLine
/ Sputnik,
First Artificial Earth
Satellite
1957
- Satellite RF. The year was marked by the
launch of the first artificial satellite,
Sputnik-1, and the beginning of the space
age. In
1963, the first geostationary
communications satellite (Syncom-1) was
put into orbit following the suggestion,
made by writer Arthur C. Clarke in 1945,
that satellites could be used for the
transmission of information.
1957
- USSR launches Sputnik I, first
artificial earth satellite, on October 4,
1957. The name comes from a Russian word
for "traveling companion of the
world.
What is
the Relevancy of the wired/wireless
telephone/TV -- to the Internet? -- The
start of global telecommunications.
Satellites play an important role in
transmitting all sorts of data today; In
response, U.S. forms the Advanced Research
Projects Agency (ARPA) within the
Department of Defense (DoD) to establish
U.S. lead in science and technology
applicable to the military.
1957f
- Farnsworth sole appearance on national
television was as a mystery guest on the
CBS game show "I've Got a Secret" in 1957.
He
fielded questions from the celebrity
panelists as they tried in vain to guess
his secret ("I invented electronic
television"). For stumping them,
Farnsworth took home $80 and a carton of
Winston cigarettes.
1957s - Keith Stubblefield takes show-biz
name of Troy Cory prior to signing pending
recording, movie contracts. Signed with
Specialty Records, (1957) - Mercury
Records (1960), Cinema Prize (1968). BBC
(1971) (VRA 1972-present). Sonny Bono, Nat
Goodman, Bob Sherman, Dick Sherman, Bob
Roberts, Art Rupe, Sylvester Levy, Muff
Merfin, and Ambros Seelos were Troy Cory's
producers.
1957s 0301 - TV GUIDE - LA, May 4, 1957;
M-F, Channel 7, ABC. CHEF MILANI
Show&emdash; Chef Milani, PLUS - Troy Cori
and Tip Tobin, Famous Comedy Team.
1957t - Tesla's ashes were taken to
Belgrade, Yugoslavia in 1957. The urn was
placed in the Nikola Tesla Museum, where
it resides to this day.
1958
- Stereo Records reach the marketplace.
Hi-Fi Sound reproduction is a growing
interest.
1958
-AT&T introduces the first commercial
modem.
1958s
- Frank Albert Stubblefield (1907-1977),
of Murray, Kentucky, was elected to
Congress. Member of the U.S. Congress
(1959-1974).
Elected
as a Democrat to the Eighty-sixth and to
the seven succeeding Congresses and served
from January 3, 1959, until his
resignation December 31, 1974. Cousin of
Troy Cory-Stubblefield
1959 - In order to meet the challenges of
new space communications systems, in 1959
CCIR set up a study group responsible for
studying space radiocommunication.
1959 - Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore
develop a silicon integrated circuit using
planar technology and diffused
junctions.
1959s
0601 - STRANGER THAN SCIENCE, By Frank
Edwards, June 1, 1959, Bantam Book;
NEGLECTED GENIUS (page
9).
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1940
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1950
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Excerpts
found on this page are
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"Nathan
B. Stubblefield, the Radio Boy" & "The
SMART-DAAF
BOYS"©1992 and
"Disappointments Are Great, Follow the
Money, The Internet - D-diaries -
©2006 - Published and Authored by TVI
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