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Guglielmo Marconi was born on 25 April in Bologna, Italy, second son of a wealthy Italian landowner and an Irish mother.
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The year before his first transmission, Marconi, at the age of 20, embarked on a study of the works of Heinrich
Hertz (1857-1894). Marconi started his experiments on the application of Hertzian waves to the transmission and
reception of messages over a distance, without wires, in late 1894 at the Villa Griffone at Pontecchio Bologna,
Italy, the family home. He greatly improved on the performance of Hertz's apparatus. The distance for transmission
and reception of signals was progressively increased, across a room, down the length of a corridor, from the house
and then into fields.
In the early summer of 1895 and despite an intervening hill, Marconi achieved signal transmission and reception
over a distance of about 2km. Success was indicated initially by the waving of a handkerchief and progressed to
the need to fire a gun.
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In January 1896 the young Marconi began to consider applying for a
patent for his invention and in February he travelled to Britain. Under
the guidance of his cousin Henry Jameson Davis, he filed his final specification
for the world's first patent for a system of telegraphy using Hertzian
waves.
The British Patent number 12039 was filed on the 2nd June 1896.
In July of that year he demonstrated his apparatus to the Post Office
and a historic demonstration took place at Three Mile Hill on Salisbury
Plain on 2 September, with officials from the General Post Office the
Navy and the Army present.
Many more experiments followed in 1897. Marconi returned to Salisbury
Plain and achieved a range of 7 miles (11.2km). He also established
communication across the Bristol Channel. The Channel tests were conducted
under bad weather conditions. First attempts were unsuccessful but on
the fourth day, with the aerial at 300 feet (92m) and using a 20 inch
(0.5m) spark coil, a new record of 8.7 miles (14km) was achieved. One
of the Morse messages sent was 'let it be so'.
The Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England, was the scene of
many early Marconi experiments. In 1897 he set up an aerial and installed
his apparatus in the grounds of the Royal Needles Hotel, Alum Bay, and
succeeded first in communicating with two hired ferry boats and then
with a station set up at Madeira House in Bournemouth on the mainland.
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In 1897 Marconi registered his company as the Wireless Telegraph and
Signal Company.
Premises were needed for the new organisation. Marconi decided upon
a place that was a relatively short distance from London and accessible
by rail; Chelmsford was an ideal location. In December 1898, the first
wireless factory in the world was set up in an old silk factory in Hall
Street. The building still stands today.
The Wireless Telegraph and Signal Company changed names several times
to:
- 1900 Marconi's Wireless Telegraph Company
- 1963 Marconi Company Limited
- 1987 GEC-Marconi Limited
- 1998 Marconi Electronic Systems Limited
- 1999 Marconi plc
Marconi's Wireless Telegraph Company was taken over by English Electric
in 1946. In 1968 English Electric merged with the General Electric Company
(GEC). In 1999 GEC was renamed Marconi plc.
The Wireless Telegraph and Signal Company is registered on the 20July
1897 and in 1898 The first wireless factory is set up in Hall St., Chelmsford
Today, the Hall Street building is owned by the Essex & Suffolk
Water Company but Marconi Companies maintain a strong presence in Chelmsford,
with Marconi Communications and Marconi Applied Technologies (the former
EEV Ltd).
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Marconi installs wireless for Queen Victoria and transmits the first
commercial wireless message (for Lord Kelvin).
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Marconi's first aim in perfecting communication without wires had been
to break the isolation of those at sea. The first life-saving possibilities
of wireless were realised in 1899 when a wireless message was received
from the East Goodwin lightship - which had been equipped with Marconi
wireless apparatus. It had been rammed in dense fog by a steamship R.F.
Matthews. A request was made for the assistance of a lifeboat.
In January 1909, over 1,700 people were rescued at sea when the S.S.
Republic was in collision with an Italian steamer, the Florida in thick
fog off the US East Coast. For two days in freezing conditions Jack
Binns, the Marconi radio operator aboard the Republic, sent out a total
of two hundred messages to help guide rescuing ships to his stricken
vessel's position. Thanks to his messages, all but those passengers
killed by the initial impact were rescued. Binns received a special
medal for his services and Marconi himself presented him with a gold
watch.
When the Titanic struck an iceberg and sank on 14 April 1912, the loss
of life was truly terrible, but those who survived owed their lives
to the distress calls from the Marconi wireless equipment on board.
As Lord Samuel, Postmaster General at the time, stated: 'Those who have
been saved have been saved through one man, Mr. Marconi and... his wonderful
invention.'
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The famous '7777' patent was granted on 26 April 1900, which documented
a system for tuned coupled circuits and allowed simultaneous transmissions
on different frequencies. Adjacent stations were now able to operate
without interfering with one another and ranges were increased.
1900 also saw the Company name changed to Marconi's Wireless Telegraph
Company.
The Marconi International Marine Communication Company Ltd. was formed
on 25 April to take-over the maritime business of the Company.
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In 1901, Marconi achieved communication over 198 miles between the
Isle of Wight and the Lizard in Cornwall. This was a fitting limbering-up
exercise for his marathon transatlantic attempt. It was a huge gamble
in both scientific and financial terms for Marconi and his infant company.
For the experiment, Poldhu in Cornwall was selected as the site for
the British station and Cape Cod selected as the location to build the
American Station. This site was later abandoned for a temporary installation
at Signal Hill, St. John's, Newfoundland.
On 12 December 1901, a blustering gale at Signal Hill made it difficult
for Marconi and his assistants to launch the aerial on its kite, but
at 12.30, 1.10 and 2.20, he was able to pick up the three dots of the
Morse code 'S' that were being transmitted from Poldhu. The age of long-distance
communication was born.
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Marconi awarded Nobel Prize for Physics (with Ferdinand Braun).
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Another important area in the advances made in wireless telephony lay
in public broadcasting. On 15th June 1920, Britain's first advertised
public broadcast programme took place. A song recital by Dame Nellie
Melba was broadcast using a Marconi 15 kW telephone transmitter at the
Marconi works in Chelmsford, and was heard in many countries.
Unmanned auto-alarm for ships successfully demonstrated. Commercial
radio broadcasts begin in U.S.
In 1921, the Company was permitted to broadcast the first regular public
entertainment programme from a low-power transmitter at Writtle, near
Chelmsford, and later from the first London station at Marconi House.
Unrestricted competition was checked however, when, in 1922, the question
of broadcasting was referred to the Broadcasting Sub-Committee of the
Imperial Conference. In 1922, all the competing interests were merged
the British Broadcasting Company, later to become the British Broadcasting
Corporation (BBC).
Marconi was not greatly interested in television. His company in England
however, was deeply involved in advancing the new medium. In 1934 its
television interests were merged with those of EMI Ltd in a company
called The Marconi-EMI Television Co. Ltd. in which it was responsible
for all aspect of transmission.
The Marconi-EMI system was adopted in 1936 by the BBC for its public
high definition television service - the first in the world.
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Running like a disruptive thread through the Marconi tapestry, was
the controversial plan to link the British Empire by a network of wireless
communication stations, first mooted in 1906. The project had been delayed
by war and political conflict until 1924, but by this time, on board
Elettra, his floating laboratory, Marconi had developed shortwave directional
transmission.
This new development, far superior to the longwave high power system
he had originally specified, was known as the Beam System. It was adopted
by Canada, Australia, South Africa and India and the foundations were
laid for the Imperial Wireless Chain - a revolution in world-wide communication.
The Imperial Wireless Chain was established for the Post Office, but
the Marconi Company built its own beam transmitting station for communicating
with Argentina, Brazil, the USA and Japan. These stations took their
place in the extensive 'Via Marconi' network already running.
The Imperial Wireless Chain proved such a great threat to the Empire's
cable interests that, in 1929 at the instigation of the British and
Dominion Governments, Cable and Wireless Ltd was formed to take over
the investments, patents and licences of Marconi's Wireless Telegraphy
Company.
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Marconi returned to the study of very short wavelengths and in 1932,
Marconi personally supervised the installation of the first microwave
telephone link which connected the Vatican City with the Pope's summer
residence, Castel Gandolfo.
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Marconi moved to Rome in 1935, never to leave Italy again. He died
in the early hours of 20 July 1937 aged 63 and his body was laid to
rest in the mausoleum in the grounds of Villa Griffone. In a fitting
tribute, wireless stations throughout the world fell silent for 2 minutes
and the ether was as silent as it had been before Marconi.
Marconi had demonstrated the principles of blind navigation in the
early 1930s and by 1935 Sir Robert Watson-Watt was beginning his experiments
into radar off the Suffolk coast. In 1937 the Company acquired the expertise
to fulfil Government orders for transmitter aerials for CH (Chain Home)
stations, Britain's first air defence radar network.
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Marconi Chronology
Biographical Highlights
Biographies of Marconi
By Gioia Marconi Braga
By Degna Marconi
By Francesco Paresce Marconi
Biographies of Marconi's Children and Grandchildren
Biography of Degna Marconi
Biography of Gioia Marconi Braga
Biography of Giulio Marconi
Biography of Francesco Paresce Marconi
Additional Biographical Links
Family Genealogy
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