From the Beginning to the Present

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In the late 19th century, the invisible forces of electro-magnetism crackled to life in laboratories and backyards around the world. James Clerk Maxwell had predicted radio waves in equations, Heinrich Hertz proved read more

Undeterred, the amateurs refused to fade. In 1914, a Connecticut inventor named Hiram Percy Maxim, frustrated by the growing interference and eager to organize, founded the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) with a handful of fellow enthusiasts.  Their goal was  read more

.The 1920s and 1930s were electric with possibility. Amateurs pioneered single-sideband voice, built beam antennas, and formed the International Amateur Radio Union in 1925 to coordinate worldwide. read more

Decades rolled on, and amateur radio refused to grow old. Transistors replaced vacuum tubes, satellites carried hams’ signals into space, and digital modes turned keyboards into worldwide telegraphs. Through hurricanes, earthquakes, and blackouts, hams have been the first voices heard when everything else read more

 “Hams” and Their Contributions

(and more to come)

Amateur radio operators have made outsized contributions to science, engineering, and technology over the past century, far beyond what their “amateur” label might suggest. Starting in the early 20th century as experimenters tinkering with wireless communication, hams have repeatedly pushed the boundaries of radio technology, often serving read more

Explore the links below.

We old-timers will enjoy reminiscing about the past, while newcomers can read the personal stories of the contributors who helped shape amateur radio into what it is today.

The YouTube Vortex

We all have been there.  Here are some videos about amateur radio.

A short documentary about amateur radio produced by University of Montana school of visual and media arts.

Did you know that they tried to ban SSB?

The Story of Ham Radio

A Journey through Time and Technology

Tour of the International Space Station showing off the station’s HAM radio using the call NA1SS 

Did you know Walter Cronkite did a story about amateur radio?