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Harry Shoemaker

Harry Shoemaker (May 11, 1879 – August 8, 1932) was an American inventor and pioneer radio engineer, who received more than 40 U.S. patents in the radio field from 1901 to 1905.[1][2] His transmitter and receiver designs set the standard for the U. S. commercial radio industry up to World War One.

Harry Shoemaker
Shoemaker in 1908
Born(1879-05-11)May 11, 1879
near Millville, Pennsylvania
DiedAugust 23, 1932(1932-08-23) (aged 53)
New Rochelle, New York, USA
NationalityAmerican
Known forEarly radio development
Notes
Photograph appeared on page 127 of the November 1908 issue of The Aerogram.

Early life edit

Shoemaker was born in 1879 near Millville, Pennsylvania. His early education was at the Greenwood Seminary in Millville, Pennsylvania and the Normal School in Muncy, Pennsylvania. In 1896, he began attending Pennsylvania State College.

In 1894, Professor Henry Russell conducted a classroom demonstration of the transmission and reception of electromagnetic radiation (radio signals). A fascinated Shoemaker conducted further experiments at his home, using a spark-gap transmitter, plus a coherer receiver of his own design, which used a galvanometer's needle to strike and reset the coherer after each received Morse code signal.[3] However, he did not publicize or patent any of his early work, so when he later testified that he had constructed a radiotelegraph system, in April 1895 at the age of 16, which anticipated Guglielmo Marconi's original patent, the U.S. courts would not accept his statement, bluntly declaring that "His testimony is so utterly unsupported and insufficient and improbable that it will not be discussed".[4]

Career history edit

Gehring companies edit

In November 1899, Dr. Gustave P. Gehring of Philadelphia, a gold mine and real estate promoter, established the American Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Company, which was the first radio communications firm established in the United States. This corporation initially (and unsuccessfully) claimed to have a monopoly on all wireless communication in the United States, based on U.S. patent number 350,299, a short-range wireless communication system using magnetic induction that had been issued in 1886 to Amos Dolbear.

American Wireless and its subsidiaries primarily engaged in the florid promotion of stock sales at inflated prices to the unwary, and did only limited legitimate work toward its supposed goal of setting up a nationwide radiotelegraphic system. However, it also employed a small number of capable engineers. At its founding A. Frederick Collins was the lead technical employee, but he soon left the firm and was replaced by Shoemaker as American Wireless' Chief Engineer. In 1901 the company built stations in New Jersey to report the Columbia vs. the Shamrock international yacht races by radio, although interference from two other companies limited the transmission's effectiveness.[5]

Shoemaker proved to be a prolific worker, and received numerous patents for improvements in radio sending and receiving equipment. Most early spark transmitters were powered by batteries or Leyden jars. Shoemaker developed an improved design, which used 120-cycle alternating current, which provided more power for stronger signals, and also produced a distinctive sound that made it easier for a transmission to be heard on congested wavelengths.[6]

In 1902, Gehring merged American Wireless with most of its subsidiaries to form the Consolidated Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Company, and the next year a further reorganization resulted in the International Wireless Telegraph and Telephone Company. Shoemaker continued as Chief Engineer throughout these restructurings. In early 1904, International Wireless was taken over by the American DeForest Wireless Telegraph Company, which thereby acquired Shoemaker's services and the use of his valuable patents. He received a Silver Medal as Collaborator for his work at the company's exhibit at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in Saint Louis, Missouri, and was put in charge of American DeForest's factory in Jersey City, New Jersey.[7]

International Telegraph Construction Company edit

Shoemaker soon left American DeForest, joining with Col. John Firth to form his own company, the International Telegraph Construction Company, in Jersey City, New Jersey. In 1905, he constructed a set of radio-controlled naval torpedoes, which, after unsuccessfully trying to interest the U.S. government, were sold to the Japanese navy.[8] By the end of 1906, the U.S. Navy had purchased three land and eighteen shipboard transmitters from the firm,[9] and the company's equipment was "regarded as the best of its time by naval radio operators".[10] Shoemaker's company also produced high voltage transmitting and variable receiver condensers, and wave meters and other measuring instruments.

United Wireless Telegraph Company edit

In late 1906, the American DeForest company was reorganized as the United Wireless Telegraph Company, but it continued to use some equipment originally designed by Shoemaker. In July 1908 United Wireless president Christopher Columbus Wilson engineered Shoemaker's return by the expedient of buying a controlling interest in International Telegraph company stock, and the firm was then merged with United Wireless operations, which was the largest in the United States at this time. Shoemaker become Chief Engineer of United Wireless, and his factory began to produce equipment designed for its installations.[11]

In 1909 he was elected as one of the vice presidents of the newly formed The Wireless Institute of New York City,[12] and in 1912 became a founding member of Institute of Radio Engineers.

Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America edit

In 1912, United Wireless went bankrupt and was taken over by the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America (American Marconi), which inherited the status as largest commercial radio firm in the United States. At American Marconi, Shoemaker's job title was Research Engineer, reporting to Chief Engineer Frederick Stammis. Shoemaker brought over the equipment designs he had developed at United Wireless, and continued as the primary designer for Marconi equipment used in the United States.

Mallory companies edit

In late 1916, P. R. Mallory formed the Liberty Electric Corporation to manufacture radio transmitters and receivers for the U.S. government during World War One, and hired Shoemaker to be the company's Chief Engineer. At the close of the war, Mallory formed the Independent Wireless Telegraph Company, with Shoemaker continuing to act as Chief Engineer until the Radio Corporation of America purchased the company in 1925. When P. R. Mallory moved the manufacturing activities from New York City to Indiana, Shoemaker resigned and remained in the east doing independent consulting. In May 1932 he was again employed by P. R. Mallory and Company, to conduct research work on dry plate rectifiers at the laboratory of Samuel Ruben (the founder of Duracell Battery) in New Rochelle, New York.[13]

Death edit

On August 23, 1932, Harry Shoemaker suffered a cerebral hemorrhage at his work site, and died at the age of 53. He was survived by his wife and two children. The opening sentence of his obituary in the Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers stated that "Radio engineering and radio engineers owe a great deal to Harry Shoemaker."[14]

Patents edit

  • U.S. patent 671,732
  • U.S. patent 672,920
  • U.S. patent 671,404
  • U.S. patent 671,403
  • U.S. patent 673,732
  • U.S. patent 671,405
  • U.S. patent 671,406
  • U.S. patent 671,407
  • U.S. patent 672,989
  • U.S. patent 672,990
  • U.S. patent 676,854
  • U.S. patent 678,353
  • U.S. patent 680,505
  • U.S. patent 680,001
  • U.S. patent 682,806
  • U.S. patent 684,467
  • U.S. patent 684,468
  • U.S. patent 691,815
  • U.S. patent 703,842
  • U.S. patent 703,712
  • U.S. patent 711,182
  • U.S. patent 716,771
  • U.S. patent 718,535
  • U.S. patent 734,476
  • U.S. patent 736,884
  • U.S. patent 787,057
  • U.S. patent 795,312
  • U.S. patent 899,629
  • U.S. patent 921,293
  • U.S. patent 997,516
  • U.S. patent 1,009,106
  • U.S. patent 1,295,245
  • U.S. patent 711,743
  • U.S. patent 1,170,853
  • U.S. patent 1,170,853
  • U.S. patent 1,241,565
  • U.S. patent 1,544,780
  • U.S. patent 1,654,668
  • U.S. patent 1,723,583
  • U.S. patent 1,794,037
  • U.S. patent 1,896,468
  • U.S. patent 676,855
  • U.S. patent 678,047
  • U.S. patent 680,002
  • U.S. patent 686,007
  • U.S. patent 687,440
  • U.S. patent 700,250
  • U.S. patent 700,708
  • U.S. patent 706,500
  • U.S. patent 707,064
  • U.S. patent 707,266
  • U.S. patent 710,121
  • U.S. patent 710,122
  • U.S. patent 710,373
  • U.S. patent 711,130
  • U.S. patent 711,131
  • U.S. patent 711,132
  • U.S. patent 711,183
  • U.S. patent 711,184
  • U.S. patent 711,266
  • U.S. patent 711,444
  • U.S. patent 711,445
  • U.S. patent 713,700
  • U.S. patent 714,246
  • U.S. patent 714,648
  • U.S. patent 717,766
  • U.S. patent 717,767
  • U.S. patent 717,768
  • U.S. patent 717,769
  • U.S. patent 717,770
  • U.S. patent 717,771
  • U.S. patent 717,772
  • U.S. patent 717,773
  • U.S. patent 717,774
  • U.S. patent 736,557
  • U.S. patent 749,584
  • U.S. patent 754,904
  • U.S. patent 756,718
  • U.S. patent 756,720
  • U.S. patent 757,802
  • U.S. patent 779,670
  • U.S. patent 782,422
  • U.S. patent 783,802
  • U.S. patent 834,497
  • U.S. patent 850,064
  • U.S. patent 850,065
  • U.S. patent 854,437
  • U.S. patent 902,613
  • U.S. patent 918,208
  • U.S. patent 921,013
  • U.S. patent 921,014
  • U.S. patent 928,074
  • U.S. patent 928,224
  • U.S. patent 932,819
  • U.S. patent 932,821
  • U.S. patent 997,516

References edit

  1. ^ United States. (1917). "Radio Communication": Hearings before the Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries, House of Representatives, Sixty-fourth Congress, second session, on H.R. 19350: A bill to regulate radio communication. January 11 to 26, 1917. Washington: Govt. Print. Off., page 414.
  2. ^ "The Early Days of Radio in America". The Electrical Experimenter (April 1917): 893, 911. 1913.
  3. ^ Wireless Communication in the United States by Thorn L. Mayes, 1989, page 210.
  4. ^ "Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America v. De Forest Wireless Telegraph Company" (Circuit Court, S. D. New York. April 11, 1905), The Federal Reporter: Cases Argued and Determined in the Circuit Courts of Appeals and Circuit and District Courts of the United States, July–September 1905 (volume 138), page 671.
  5. ^ "Wireless Telegraphy That Sends No Messages Except By Wire", New York Herald, October 28, 1901, p. 4. (fultonhistory.com)
  6. ^ "Reminiscences of an Old Operator" (Part III) by Arthur Leech, Radio Age, November 1924, page 29: "A mass of ships leaving or concentrating on a port like New York create an unimaginable jam, and... having a 120-cycle spark set easy to hear over the coarse 60-cycle notes of the mob, I was a favorite central station during these conditions."
  7. ^ Father of Radio by Lee de Forest, 1950, page 184.
  8. ^ History of Communications-Electronics in the United States Navy by Captain L.S. Howeth, USN (retired), 1963, page 337.
  9. ^ Howeth, page 106.
  10. ^ Howeth, page 104.
  11. ^ A Treatise Upon Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony, C. I. Hoppough, 1912, page 201.
  12. ^ "The Wireless Institute", Electrical World, May 27, 1909, page 1264.
  13. ^ Mayes, page 214.
  14. ^ "Harry Shoemaker" (obituary) by Robert Henry Marriott, Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers, Vol. 21, Issue 2 (February 1933), pages 190-191.

External links edit

  • Wireless Communication in the United States (Harry Shoemaker section) by Thorn L. Mayes, 1989, pages 209–215.
  • History of Communications-Electronics in the United States Navy by Captain L.S. Howeth, USN (retired), 1963.
  • Maver's Wireless Telegraphy: Theory and Practice by William Maver, Jr., 1904. New York: Maver Pub.

harry, shoemaker, 1879, august, 1932, american, inventor, pioneer, radio, engineer, received, more, than, patents, radio, field, from, 1901, 1905, transmitter, receiver, designs, standard, commercial, radio, industry, world, shoemaker, 1908born, 1879, 1879near. Harry Shoemaker May 11 1879 August 8 1932 was an American inventor and pioneer radio engineer who received more than 40 U S patents in the radio field from 1901 to 1905 1 2 His transmitter and receiver designs set the standard for the U S commercial radio industry up to World War One Harry ShoemakerShoemaker in 1908Born 1879 05 11 May 11 1879near Millville PennsylvaniaDiedAugust 23 1932 1932 08 23 aged 53 New Rochelle New York USANationalityAmericanKnown forEarly radio developmentNotesPhotograph appeared on page 127 of the November 1908 issue of The Aerogram Contents 1 Early life 2 Career history 2 1 Gehring companies 2 2 International Telegraph Construction Company 2 3 United Wireless Telegraph Company 2 4 Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America 2 5 Mallory companies 3 Death 4 Patents 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editShoemaker was born in 1879 near Millville Pennsylvania His early education was at the Greenwood Seminary in Millville Pennsylvania and the Normal School in Muncy Pennsylvania In 1896 he began attending Pennsylvania State College In 1894 Professor Henry Russell conducted a classroom demonstration of the transmission and reception of electromagnetic radiation radio signals A fascinated Shoemaker conducted further experiments at his home using a spark gap transmitter plus a coherer receiver of his own design which used a galvanometer s needle to strike and reset the coherer after each received Morse code signal 3 However he did not publicize or patent any of his early work so when he later testified that he had constructed a radiotelegraph system in April 1895 at the age of 16 which anticipated Guglielmo Marconi s original patent the U S courts would not accept his statement bluntly declaring that His testimony is so utterly unsupported and insufficient and improbable that it will not be discussed 4 Career history editGehring companies edit In November 1899 Dr Gustave P Gehring of Philadelphia a gold mine and real estate promoter established the American Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Company which was the first radio communications firm established in the United States This corporation initially and unsuccessfully claimed to have a monopoly on all wireless communication in the United States based on U S patent number 350 299 a short range wireless communication system using magnetic induction that had been issued in 1886 to Amos Dolbear American Wireless and its subsidiaries primarily engaged in the florid promotion of stock sales at inflated prices to the unwary and did only limited legitimate work toward its supposed goal of setting up a nationwide radiotelegraphic system However it also employed a small number of capable engineers At its founding A Frederick Collins was the lead technical employee but he soon left the firm and was replaced by Shoemaker as American Wireless Chief Engineer In 1901 the company built stations in New Jersey to report the Columbia vs the Shamrock international yacht races by radio although interference from two other companies limited the transmission s effectiveness 5 Shoemaker proved to be a prolific worker and received numerous patents for improvements in radio sending and receiving equipment Most early spark transmitters were powered by batteries or Leyden jars Shoemaker developed an improved design which used 120 cycle alternating current which provided more power for stronger signals and also produced a distinctive sound that made it easier for a transmission to be heard on congested wavelengths 6 In 1902 Gehring merged American Wireless with most of its subsidiaries to form the Consolidated Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Company and the next year a further reorganization resulted in the International Wireless Telegraph and Telephone Company Shoemaker continued as Chief Engineer throughout these restructurings In early 1904 International Wireless was taken over by the American DeForest Wireless Telegraph Company which thereby acquired Shoemaker s services and the use of his valuable patents He received a Silver Medal as Collaborator for his work at the company s exhibit at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in Saint Louis Missouri and was put in charge of American DeForest s factory in Jersey City New Jersey 7 International Telegraph Construction Company edit Shoemaker soon left American DeForest joining with Col John Firth to form his own company the International Telegraph Construction Company in Jersey City New Jersey In 1905 he constructed a set of radio controlled naval torpedoes which after unsuccessfully trying to interest the U S government were sold to the Japanese navy 8 By the end of 1906 the U S Navy had purchased three land and eighteen shipboard transmitters from the firm 9 and the company s equipment was regarded as the best of its time by naval radio operators 10 Shoemaker s company also produced high voltage transmitting and variable receiver condensers and wave meters and other measuring instruments United Wireless Telegraph Company edit In late 1906 the American DeForest company was reorganized as the United Wireless Telegraph Company but it continued to use some equipment originally designed by Shoemaker In July 1908 United Wireless president Christopher Columbus Wilson engineered Shoemaker s return by the expedient of buying a controlling interest in International Telegraph company stock and the firm was then merged with United Wireless operations which was the largest in the United States at this time Shoemaker become Chief Engineer of United Wireless and his factory began to produce equipment designed for its installations 11 In 1909 he was elected as one of the vice presidents of the newly formed The Wireless Institute of New York City 12 and in 1912 became a founding member of Institute of Radio Engineers Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America edit In 1912 United Wireless went bankrupt and was taken over by the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America American Marconi which inherited the status as largest commercial radio firm in the United States At American Marconi Shoemaker s job title was Research Engineer reporting to Chief Engineer Frederick Stammis Shoemaker brought over the equipment designs he had developed at United Wireless and continued as the primary designer for Marconi equipment used in the United States Mallory companies edit In late 1916 P R Mallory formed the Liberty Electric Corporation to manufacture radio transmitters and receivers for the U S government during World War One and hired Shoemaker to be the company s Chief Engineer At the close of the war Mallory formed the Independent Wireless Telegraph Company with Shoemaker continuing to act as Chief Engineer until the Radio Corporation of America purchased the company in 1925 When P R Mallory moved the manufacturing activities from New York City to Indiana Shoemaker resigned and remained in the east doing independent consulting In May 1932 he was again employed by P R Mallory and Company to conduct research work on dry plate rectifiers at the laboratory of Samuel Ruben the founder of Duracell Battery in New Rochelle New York 13 Death editOn August 23 1932 Harry Shoemaker suffered a cerebral hemorrhage at his work site and died at the age of 53 He was survived by his wife and two children The opening sentence of his obituary in the Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers stated that Radio engineering and radio engineers owe a great deal to Harry Shoemaker 14 Patents editU S patent 671 732 U S patent 672 920 U S patent 671 404 U S patent 671 403 U S patent 673 732 U S patent 671 405 U S patent 671 406 U S patent 671 407 U S patent 672 989 U S patent 672 990 U S patent 676 854 U S patent 678 353 U S patent 680 505 U S patent 680 001 U S patent 682 806 U S patent 684 467 U S patent 684 468 U S patent 691 815 U S patent 703 842 U S patent 703 712 U S patent 711 182 U S patent 716 771 U S patent 718 535 U S patent 734 476 U S patent 736 884 U S patent 787 057 U S patent 795 312 U S patent 899 629 U S patent 921 293 U S patent 997 516 U S patent 1 009 106 U S patent 1 295 245 U S patent 711 743 U S patent 1 170 853 U S patent 1 170 853 U S patent 1 241 565 U S patent 1 544 780 U S patent 1 654 668 U S patent 1 723 583 U S patent 1 794 037 U S patent 1 896 468 U S patent 676 855 U S patent 678 047 U S patent 680 002 U S patent 686 007 U S patent 687 440 U S patent 700 250 U S patent 700 708 U S patent 706 500 U S patent 707 064 U S patent 707 266 U S patent 710 121 U S patent 710 122 U S patent 710 373 U S patent 711 130 U S patent 711 131 U S patent 711 132 U S patent 711 183 U S patent 711 184 U S patent 711 266 U S patent 711 444 U S patent 711 445 U S patent 713 700 U S patent 714 246 U S patent 714 648 U S patent 717 766 U S patent 717 767 U S patent 717 768 U S patent 717 769 U S patent 717 770 U S patent 717 771 U S patent 717 772 U S patent 717 773 U S patent 717 774 U S patent 736 557 U S patent 749 584 U S patent 754 904 U S patent 756 718 U S patent 756 720 U S patent 757 802 U S patent 779 670 U S patent 782 422 U S patent 783 802 U S patent 834 497 U S patent 850 064 U S patent 850 065 U S patent 854 437 U S patent 902 613 U S patent 918 208 U S patent 921 013 U S patent 921 014 U S patent 928 074 U S patent 928 224 U S patent 932 819 U S patent 932 821 U S patent 997 516References edit United States 1917 Radio Communication Hearings before the Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries House of Representatives Sixty fourth Congress second session on H R 19350 A bill to regulate radio communication January 11 to 26 1917 Washington Govt Print Off page 414 The Early Days of Radio in America The Electrical Experimenter April 1917 893 911 1913 Wireless Communication in the United States by Thorn L Mayes 1989 page 210 Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America v De Forest Wireless Telegraph Company Circuit Court S D New York April 11 1905 The Federal Reporter Cases Argued and Determined in the Circuit Courts of Appeals and Circuit and District Courts of the United States July September 1905 volume 138 page 671 Wireless Telegraphy That Sends No Messages Except By Wire New York Herald October 28 1901 p 4 fultonhistory com Reminiscences of an Old Operator Part III by Arthur Leech Radio Age November 1924 page 29 A mass of ships leaving or concentrating on a port like New York create an unimaginable jam and having a 120 cycle spark set easy to hear over the coarse 60 cycle notes of the mob I was a favorite central station during these conditions Father of Radio by Lee de Forest 1950 page 184 History of Communications Electronics in the United States Navy by Captain L S Howeth USN retired 1963 page 337 Howeth page 106 Howeth page 104 A Treatise Upon Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony C I Hoppough 1912 page 201 The Wireless Institute Electrical World May 27 1909 page 1264 Mayes page 214 Harry Shoemaker obituary by Robert Henry Marriott Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers Vol 21 Issue 2 February 1933 pages 190 191 External links editWireless Communication in the United States Harry Shoemaker section by Thorn L Mayes 1989 pages 209 215 History of Communications Electronics in the United States Navy by Captain L S Howeth USN retired 1963 Maver s Wireless Telegraphy Theory and Practice by William Maver Jr 1904 New York Maver Pub Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harry Shoemaker amp oldid 1171747804, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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