Shortwave Broadcast from a Ship in Florida [WLW 1930]

Some months back, the Herald Tribune in southwest Florida reported on an important radio event that occurred more than seventy years ago. This is the story. The well-known radio promoter Powell Crosley had a palatial home built for himself at Venice in Florida. He loved fishing and he was the president of the Sarasota Angler’s … Read more

Marconi’s Birthday – The Story of the “Elettra”

The story of the brilliant wireless inventor Guglielmo Marconi is very well known. He was born on April 25, 1874 at the family villa near Bologna in northern Italy, and just last Friday was the 128th anniversary of his birth. Marconi began his first wireless experiments on the top floor of the family home just … Read more

VOA Relay Station on board the Battleship Texas

It is quite well known in the radio world that the Voice of America was on the air from the radio ship “Courier” while it was anchored in the harbor at the island of Rhodes in the eastern Mediterranean. However, it is not quite so well known that VOA was on the air in earlier … Read more

BBC Radio Station on Board Ship?

During the era when the Voice of America was operating a radio station on board the Coast Guard vessel Courier, the BBC in London announced that they also planned on establishing a radio station on board a ship. This was also at the time when there were several pirate radio stations on board ships in … Read more

The Story of the Little Radio Ship, the FP47

Two weeks ago, we presented the story here in Wavescan of the now famous radio broadcasting ship, the “Apache,” with its role as a relay station for AFRS radio and the “Voice of America” during the latter part of the Pacific War. At the time, we mentioned that the “Apache” had a co-traveller, a little … Read more

Radio Broadcasting from Ships in New Zealand Waters and The Story of the Wandering “Apache”

The South Pacific nation of New Zealand was settled first by Polynesians migrating south from the Central Pacific more than 1,000 years ago. The islands were first visited by European explorers in 1642 when Abel Jans Tasman tried unsuccessfully to make a landing. He named the islands after “Sea-Land,” a coastal province in northern Holland. … Read more

Kanimbla Update – What happened to this ship afterwards?

Just a few weeks back, we presented the story of the radio station on board the Australian motor vessel “Kanimbla” [see Wavescan 384]. On that occasion, we mentioned that the ship was built in Belfast, Ireland and that it was the only ship in the world into which a radio station was installed at the … Read more