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Nathan Stubblefield

Nathan Beverly Stubblefield[1] (November 22, 1860 – March 28, 1928) was an American inventor best known for his wireless telephone work. Self-described as a "practical farmer, fruit grower and electrician",[2] he received widespread attention in early 1902 when he gave a series of public demonstrations of a battery-operated wireless telephone, which could be transported to different locations and used on mobile platforms such as boats. While this initial design employed conduction, in 1908 he received a U.S. patent for a wireless telephone system that used magnetic induction. However, he was ultimately unsuccessful in commercializing his inventions. He later went into seclusion, and died alone in 1928.

Nathan B. Stubblefield
Stubblefield (1908) with his later, induction, wireless telephone
Born(1860-11-22)November 22, 1860
DiedMarch 28, 1928(1928-03-28) (aged 67)
Resting placeBowman Cemetery
NationalityAmerican
Occupationinventor
Known forwireless telephony
SpouseAda Mae Stubblefield
Children8

Disagreement exists whether Stubblefield's communications technology can be classified as radio, and if his 1902 demonstrations could be considered the first "radio broadcasts". Most reviews of his efforts have concluded that they were not radio transmissions, because his devices, although they used a form of "wireless", employed conduction and inductive fields, while the standard definition of radio is the transmission of electromagnetic radiation. However, Stubblefield may have been the first to simultaneously transmit audio wirelessly to multiple receivers, albeit over relatively short distances, while predicting the eventual development of broadcasting on a national scale.

Biography

Early years and family life

Stubblefield was the second of seven sons of William "Captain Billy" Jefferson Stubblefield (1830–1874), a Confederate Army veteran and lawyer, and Victoria Bowman (1837–1869), who died of scarlet fever. Stubblefield grew up in Murray, Kentucky, and his education included tutoring by a governess, followed by attendance at a boarding school in nearby Farmington called the "Male and Female Institute". His formal education ended in 1874, at the age of 14, with his father's death, which left Stubblefield an orphan in the care of his step-mother. However, he continued to develop his technical knowledge by reading contemporary scientific publications, such as Scientific American and Electrical World.

In 1881 he married Ada Mae Buchannan, by whom he had nine children, two dying in infancy. Six of Nathan's surviving children left no descendants. The seventh, Oliver (RayJack), married Priscilla Alden, who gave birth to two daughters and Nathan's only grandson, Keith Stubblefield, who would become a television and recording personality under the professional name Troy Cory.[3]

Initially Stubblefield supported his family by farming. (His farm land later became part of the campus of Murray State University.) From 1907 to 1911, he operated a home school called "The Nathan Stubblefield Industrial School," or "Teléph-on-délgreen Industrial School".[4]

Inventions

Despite very limited finances, in his spare time Stubblefield worked on developing a series of inventions. His first patent, U.S. Patent 329,864, was issued on November 3, 1885, for a tool for lighting coal oil lamps without having to remove the glass chimney.

Acoustic telephone

In late 1886, Stubblefield began to sell and install acoustic telephones—an early and somewhat limited form of the telephone, which, instead of using electricity, employed a taut wire to carry sound vibrations directly between two soundboxes which were located at the far ends of the wire. Although most installations were around Murray, he also made sales as far away as Mississippi and Oklahoma. On February 21, 1888, Stubblefield and partner Samuel Holcomb received U.S. Patent 378,183 for their "mechanical telephone" design. However, the establishment of a local Bell Telephone franchise, whose electric telephones were far superior to Stubblefield's offerings, ended most of the acoustic sales by 1890.[5]

Earth battery

In 1898, Stubblefield was issued U.S. Patent 600,457 for an "electric battery", which was an electrolytic coil of iron and insulated copper wire that was immersed in liquid or buried in the ground. Stubblefield made the unsubstantiated claim that, combined with normal battery operation, his device also drew additional power from the earth. However, it did successfully serve as both a power source and ground terminal for wireless telephony.

Wireless telephony

After the winding-down of his acoustic telephone business, Stubblefield reviewed possible alternatives that would avoid infringing on the Bell telephone patents, and began researching wireless options. Because he never filed for a patent for his early work, the technical details of his experiments are largely unknown. But, based on contemporary descriptions, it appears that they initially employed induction, similar to a wireless telephone developed by Amos Dolbear, which was issued U.S. Patent 350,299 in 1886. Information for this period is very limited, but in 1935 a former neighbor, Rainey T. Wells, reported that in 1892 Stubblefield gave him a telephone receiver, and had Wells walk a short distance away from Stubblefield's shack, after which he was amazed to distinctly hear the words "Hello, Rainey", followed by additional speech from Stubblefield.[6]

Because later references refer to earth connections, it appears that Stubblefield subsequently switched to using ground currents instead of induction. Following a decade of research and testing, he felt that his wireless telephone had now been perfected to the point that it was ready for commercialization, and began a series of demonstrations to publicize his work and attract investment. On Christmas Eve, December 24, 1901, he successfully transmitted ¼ mile (400 meters) to his home, where "A party of children were gathered there and at the receiver obtained messages from Santa Claus", and had local residents sign affidavits attesting to the success of his tests.[7]

A much more ambitious demonstration was given on January 1, 1902. Assisted by his 14-year-old son, Bernard, "hundreds of people" in Murray witnessed a test where "From a station in the law office of a friend over a transmitter of his own invention [Stubblefield] gave his friends a New Year's greeting by wireless telephony, and at seven stations, located in different business houses and offices in the town, the message was simultaneously delivered. Music, songs, whispered conversations could be heard with perfect ease."[2] This in turn attracted the attention of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, which sent a reporter to Murray to personally review Stubblefield's wireless telephone.[8] A detailed, and positive, account appeared in the newspaper, which quoted an optimistic Stubblefield as saying that, in addition to point-to-point private communication, his system was "capable of sending simultaneous messages from a central distributing station over a very wide territory. For instance, anyone having a receiving instrument, which would consist merely of a telephone receiver and a signalling gong, could, upon being signalled by a transmitting station in Washington, or nearer, if advisable, be informed of weather news. My apparatus is capable of sending out a gong signal, as well as voice messages. Eventually, it will be used for the general transmission of news of every description."[9]

However, the unrestricted reception of signals from Stubblefield's device meant that there was still a major limitation in its intended use for personal communication. Although he exuberantly declared: "The possibilities of the invention seem to be practically unlimited, and it will be no more than a matter of time when conversation over long distances between the great cities at the country will be carried on daily without wires",[2] he also admitted: "I have as yet devised no method whereby it can be used with privacy. Wherever there is a receiving station the signal and message may be heard simultaneously. Eventually I, or some one, will discover a method of tuning the transmitting and receiving instruments so that each will answer only to its mate."[10]

 
Nathan Stubblefield using his ground-current wireless telephone to receive a March 1902 test transmission at Washington, D.C.

At this point a promoter, Gerald Fennel, traveled to Murray from New York City to enlist Stubblefield in a commercial venture. While negotiating, Stubblefield next embarked on his most publicized promotional trip. On March 20, 1902, he demonstrated his system in Washington, D.C., where voice and music transmissions were made over a third of a mile (535 meters) from the steamer Bartholdi, anchored in the Potomac River, to shore. This particular test was reported in prestigious scientific publications, including Scientific American, which claimed that Stubblefield's invention would be installed by the "Gordon Telephone Company, of Charleston, S. C., for the establishment of telephonic communication between the city of Charleston and the sea islands lying off the coast of South Carolina",[11] and Nature, which noted: "The system used is an earth-conduction one, and is, therefore, similar in principle to, though doubtless differing in detail from, many other wireless telephony systems which are being tried in various countries."[12]

In early 1902 three New York City residents, J. B. Green, W. B. Whelpley, and Wm. T. Quinn, incorporated, in the Territory of Arizona, the Wireless Telephone Company of America. The firm had a $5,000,000 capitalization, with shares set at a par value of $1 each.[13] Gerald Fennel offered Stubblefield 500,000 shares of stock in exchange for the rights to his wireless telephone technology. A June 1902 stock-promotion advertisement for the company, echoing the excessive claims of contemporary wireless telegraph companies, proclaimed: "With the vast savings made in cost and maintenance by the Stubblefield system, it is not unreasonable to expect that the earnings of Bell Telephone will be easily equalled by those of this company. Its stock at 25c. places the subscriber on the same basis as the earliest investors in Bell, whose profits have amounted to over 2,000%". This advertisement also stated that regional sub-companies would be established throughout the United States.[14]

With travel expenses financed by Fennel, Stubblefield made additional successful demonstrations in Philadelphia from May 30 to June 7, 1902, spanning a distance of around a mile (1600 meters). Tests followed in New York City beginning on June 11, 1902, which were less successful, with the explanation for the difficulties encountered including the rocky soil in Battery Park, and electrical interference from local alternating current power distribution.

Stubblefield quickly became distrustful of the promoters behind the Wireless Telephone Company of America, and, in a letter dated June 19, 1902, severed his connections as a director after expressing his concern that the company was being fraudulently run. Two months later, the company announced that it had merged its operations with the Collins Wireless Telephone & Telegraph Company,[15] a company that had been organized to promote the work of Archie Frederick Collins, who had been doing research on conductive and inductive wireless telephone systems very similar to Stubblefield's.[16] The fanciful stock solicitations now claimed that there were plans to "license subsidiary companies in each state of the Union".

Stubblefield returned to Murray, where he faced considerable skepticism—a March 1903 review of his "earth battery" and wireless telephony endeavors stated: "...the people in this section of the country are yet wondering whether he is simply a crank or will yet emerge some day from his obscurity to astonish the whole civilized world with a great discovery".[17] Later that same year, he posted a Public Notice in the Murray Ledger stating that the Wireless Telephone Company of America had "gone out of existence", and "My inventions have reverted back to me." He also noted that he was continuing his wireless telephone research, using the "over two thousand dollars" he had received from that company's promoter.[18]

Stubblefield returned once again to investigating using induction, rather than conduction, for his wireless telephone system. This approach employed large circular induction coils, that no longer needed ground connections. He carefully documented his progress, preparing affidavits that in 1903 he had transmitted 375 feet (114 m), and in 1904 reached 600 feet (180 m). The total wire required for the transmitting and receiving coils was greater than the distance between the transmitter and receiver, but the invention allowed mobility. Bernard Stubblefield reported that in 1907, using a 60-foot (18 m) coil, transmitting and receiving spanned "¼ mile (400 meters) nicely."

Encountering difficulty in obtaining a patent, Nathan Stubblefield moved for a time to Washington, D.C. to speed up the process. On May 12, 1908, he was granted U.S. patent 887,357 for his new version of a wireless telephone. The patent application stated that it would be usable for "securing telephonic communications between moving vehicles and way stations". An accompanying diagram shows wireless telephony from a fixed location to passing trains, boats, and wagons.

Despite receiving a patent and some financial backing from Murray residents, and the assertion that "while messages have been sent for distances less than ten miles, he is confident that with his machine he can talk across the Atlantic",[19] Stubblefield made no headway in commercializing his latest invention. By now continuous-wave arc and alternator radio transmitters had been developed, which were capable of wireless telephone communication over distances that dwarfed the short ranges attainable by induction wireless systems, in addition to being able to be tuned to multiple transmitting frequencies. The invention of vacuum-tube radio transmitters in the mid-1910s would make possible, in the early 1920s, the nationwide broadcasting that Stubblefield had envisioned in 1902. But Stubblefield himself made no further progress beyond his previous work.

Final years

Stubblefield later lived in self-imposed isolation in a crude shelter near Almo, Kentucky and died around March 28, 1928, although his body, "gnawed by rats", was not discovered until a couple days later.[20] Although many later accounts state that he died of starvation, at the time of his death a coroner was quoted as saying "he apparently was a victim of heart disease".[21] He was initially buried in an unmarked grave in the Bowman family cemetery in Murray, Kentucky.

Legacy

Although Stubblefield's inventions did not lead directly to the development of radio technology, the public demonstrations in 1902 and the extensive press coverage may have helped spur interest in the possibilities of wireless transmission of voice and music, as most prior inventors had merely sought to provide point-to-point communication, to compete with telephone and telegraph companies.

Since his death, various individuals and groups in Murray, Kentucky, have promoted Murray as the Birthplace of Radio, and Stubblefield as the Father of Broadcasting. Loren J. Hortin, Journalism Professor at Murray State, organized his students to investigate Stubblefield's work, leading to the dedication of a monument on the campus in 1930. Hortin, adopting an expanded definition of "radio" to include wireless transmissions that did not employ electromagnetic radiation, later contended: "Radio is a device that transmits and receives voice over considerable distance without connecting wires. Stubblefield invented, manufactured, and demonstrated such a device and did so before anyone else on the planet." However, there had actually been earlier audio wireless transmissions, including, beginning in 1880, the photophone, invented by Alexander Graham Bell and Charles Sumner Tainter, which employed light beams,[22] and Amos Dolbear's "electrostatic telephone", for which it was noted in 1884 that "with this instrument we can telephone, not only without wires, but without even a beam of light".[23]

In 1948, Murray, Kentucky's first radio station began broadcast operations, and in honor of Nathan B. Stubblefield, the owners selected WNBS as the station's call letters. In 1952, his family installed a memorial headstone at his gravesite, which credits him as the "Inventor of Wireless Telephony, or Radio".[24] The Murray State University physics club is also named in his honor.

In 1991, Kentucky Governor Wallace G. Wilkinson issued a proclamation declaring that Stubblefield "is the true inventor of radio" and proclaimed 1992 as "Nathan Beverly Stubblefield Year" in Kentucky.[25]

Timeline

  • 1892: First voice transmission, using conduction wireless telephone attached to ground electrodes.
  • May 8, 1898: patented "electric battery" (wireless telephone transmission coil) U.S. Patent 600,457.
  • 1902: First ship-to-shore wireless telephone transmission, using wires dropped in the water from the steamer Bartholdi.
  • 1908: Patented inductive wireless telephone capable of mobile use U.S. Patent 887,357.

Further reading

Historical: Documents during Stubblefield's lifetime

  • Nathan B. Stubblefield Collection (MS 84-4), Wrather Museum, Murray State University, Murray, Kentucky
• Collection's online archive ("correspondence, handwritten notes, drawings, photographs and patents")
• Collection inventory (December 15, 2011)
  • Nathan B. Stubblefield Papers, Pogue Library, Murray State University, Murray, Kentucky
  • "To Try Wireless Telephony: Inventor Stubblefield to Give an Exhibition of His Apparatus Thursday on the Potomac River", New York Times, March 17, 1902, p. 1
  • "Wireless Telephony Tests: Partial Success of Inventor Stubblefield Near Washington", New York Times, March 21, 1902, p. 2
  • "Practical Tests of Wireless Telephony", Washington Times, March 24, 1902, p. 4
  • Fawcett, Waldon, "The Latest Advance in Wireless Telephony", Scientific American, May 24, 1902, p. 363
  • White, Trumbull, Telephoning Without Wires, pp. 297–302, in Our Wonderful Progress: The World's Triumphant Knowledge and Works, Book 2, "The World's Science and Invention", 1902
  • "Radio Pioneer Dies, Poor and Embittered. Kentucky Hermit, Stubblefield Had Wireless Phone in 1902-Predicted Broadcasting", New York Times, April 24, 1928, p. 25

Books, Periodicals, journals, and dissertations after 1928 discussing Stubblefield

  • Cory-Stubblefield, Troy and Josie Cory, Disappointments Are Great! Follow the Money... Smart Daaf Boys, The Inventors of Radio & Television and the Life Style of Stubblefield, Marconi, Ambrose Fleming, Reginald Fessenden, Tesla, ... De Forest, Armstrong, Alexanderson and Farnsworth, 2003, Library of Congress Catalog Card #93-060451, ISBN 1-883644-34-8
  • Dunlap, Orrin E. Jr., "Listening In", New York Times, April 13, 1930, p. 137
  • Horton, L.T.(sic) (L.J. Hortin), "Murray, Kentucky, Birthplace of Radio", Kentucky, Progress Magazine, March 1930
  • Kane, Joseph, et al., Famous First Facts (5th Edition), New York: Wilson, 1997:
• First radio broadcast demonstration (by Stubblefield, 1892). Item 6262, p. 455.
• First mobile radio telephone marine demonstration (by Stubblefield, March 20, 1902). Item 7716, p. 590.
  • Lochte, Bob, Kentucky Farmer Invents Wireless Telephone! But Was It Radio? Facts and Folklore About Nathan Stubblefield, All About Wireless, 2001, ISBN 0-9712511-9-3
  • Morgan, Thomas O., "The Contribution of Nathan B. Stubblefield to the Invention of Wireless Voice Communications" (dissertation), Florida State University, 1971
  • Nahin, Paul J. The Science of Radio (2nd Ed.), Springer Verlag, New York, 2001, p 7.
  • Sivowitch, Elliot N., "A Technological Survey of Broadcasting's 'Pre-History,' 1876–1920", Journal of Broadcasting, Winter 1970–1971

See also

References

  1. ^ Kappele, William A.; Kappele, Cora (2000-04-01). Scenic Driving Kentucky. Globe Pequot. p. 202. ISBN 9781560447337. Nathan Beverly Stubblefield, the third of 4 sons of William Jefferson and Victoria Frances Stubblefield
  2. ^ a b c "Kentucky Inventor Solves Problem of Wireless Telephony", The Sunny South, March 8, 1902, page 6.
  3. ^ profiles4.com – Troy Cory
  4. ^ Lochte, Bob, Kentucky Farmer Invents Wireless Telephone! But Was It Radio? Facts and Folklore About Nathan Stubblefield, All About Wireless, 2001, ISBN 0-9712511-9-3, pages 12, 93.
  5. ^ Lochte, pages 15-22.
  6. ^ "Omahan Believes Heard First Radio Broadcast" by W. H. Graham, Omaha (Nebraska) World-Herald, December 1, 1935, page 12.
  7. ^ "Here's Wireless Telephone", New York Sun, December 31, 1901, page 10.
  8. ^ Instead of seven listening sites, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch's account of the January 1, 1902 test stated: "Mr. Stubblefield placed his transmitter in the courthouse square, and... established five 'listening' stations in various parts of the town, the furthest six blocks distant from the transmitter."
  9. ^ "Kentucky Farmer Invents Wireless Telephone", St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 12, 1902, Sunday Magazine, page 3.
  10. ^ "Telephoning Without Wires", Our Wonderful Progress, Trumbull White (editor), 1902, page 300.
  11. ^ "The Latest Advance in Wireless Telephony" by Waldon Fawcett, Scientific American, May 24, 1902, p. 363. There is no evidence that the South Carolina link was ever constructed.
  12. ^ "Notes", Nature (London), June 12, 1902, page 158.
  13. ^ "Certificate of Incorporation of The Wireless Telephone Company of America" (public notice), Prescott (Arizona) Morning Courier, April 12, 1902, page 3.
  14. ^ "Wireless Telephone Company of America" (advertisement), Boston Globe, June 22, 1902, page 32.
  15. ^ "Wireless Telephone Company of America" (advertisement), Paducah (Kentucky) Sun, August 7, 1902, page 4.
  16. ^ "The Collins Wireless Telephone", Scientific American, July 19, 1902, pages 37-38. (as reprinted in the Journal of the United States Artillery, September–October 1902, pages 202-205). Collins would later also develop radio-based wireless telephones, using arc-transmitters, but his efforts were tainted by excessive stock promotion. In early 1913 he and two associates working for the Continental Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Company would be convicted of mail fraud, for which he served one year of a three-year prison sentence.
  17. ^ "Inventor of Queer Motor", Waterbury (Connecticut) Evening Democrat, March 9, 1903, page 2.
  18. ^ "Odds and Ends", Telephony, January 1904, page 51.
  19. ^ "Stubblefield Wireless Phone", Hopkinsville Kentuckian, May 26, 1908, page 8.
  20. ^ "Nathan Stubblefield Probably 'Father' of Radio; End of His Dreams Finds Him Dead, Rats Gnaw Body", Lexington (Kentucky) Leader, April 29, 1928, page 1.
  21. ^ "N. B. Stubblefield Buried", Washington ( D.C.) Evening Star, April 1, 1928, Part 1, page 25.
  22. ^ "The Photophone: How Sound is Reproduced by Light-No Connecting Wires Between Stations Needed", Springfield (Massachusetts) Republican, August 30, 1880, page 4.
  23. ^ "Telephoning Without Wires" by Professor E. J. Houston, Scientific American Supplement, December 6, 1884, page 7444.
  24. ^ Lochte, pages 129-130.
  25. ^ Cory, Josie. "Governor's Proclamation that Stubblefield Invented Wireless Telephone". Television International Magazine. Universal City, California. Retrieved 2016-03-28.

External links

Patents

  • U.S. Patent 329,864 Patent – "Lighting device" – November 3, 1885.
  • U.S. Patent 378,183 Patent – "Mechanical telephone" – February 21, 1888.
  • U.S. Patent 600,457 Patent – "Electric battery" – March 8, 1898.
  • U.S. Patent 887,357 Patent – "Wireless telephone" – May 12, 1908.
  • Canadian patent 114,737, "Wireless Telephone" dated October 20, 1908

Pro-Stubblefield pages

(ed. The links below are cited in Troy Cory-Stubblefield and Josie Cory book)

  • Yes90 tviNews s90 • LookRadio Main. / FEATURE: lookradio.com / Smart90, lookradio, nbs100, tvimagazine, WiFi-187, WiMax187, RF-300, WiMaxBunny, WiVATS, Patent887, vratv, ... at lookradio.com
  • "Stubblefield Radio Trust". SMART90.com.
  • "Did Nathan B. Stubblefield, really invent the wireless telephone?". The TeleKey Group.
  • "Nathan Stubblefield". All About Wireless. 2001.

Other

  • Virgin Media website commemorating Nathan Stubblefield's device as "world's first ever mobile telephone"
  • Maupin, Judy (1979-03-31). "Stubblefield - Inventor And Man of Mystery". Western Kentucky History & Genealogy. Retrieved 2016-03-28.
  • "Stubblefield, Nathan Beverly 1860-1928". WorldCat. Retrieved 2016-03-28.
  • Cory, Josie. "Nathan B. Stubblefield: The Inventor and Patent Holder of the Wireless Telephone". Television International Magazine. Universal City, California. Retrieved 2016-03-28.

nathan, stubblefield, nathan, beverly, stubblefield, november, 1860, march, 1928, american, inventor, best, known, wireless, telephone, work, self, described, practical, farmer, fruit, grower, electrician, received, widespread, attention, early, 1902, when, ga. Nathan Beverly Stubblefield 1 November 22 1860 March 28 1928 was an American inventor best known for his wireless telephone work Self described as a practical farmer fruit grower and electrician 2 he received widespread attention in early 1902 when he gave a series of public demonstrations of a battery operated wireless telephone which could be transported to different locations and used on mobile platforms such as boats While this initial design employed conduction in 1908 he received a U S patent for a wireless telephone system that used magnetic induction However he was ultimately unsuccessful in commercializing his inventions He later went into seclusion and died alone in 1928 Nathan B StubblefieldStubblefield 1908 with his later induction wireless telephoneBorn 1860 11 22 November 22 1860DiedMarch 28 1928 1928 03 28 aged 67 Resting placeBowman CemeteryNationalityAmericanOccupationinventorKnown forwireless telephonySpouseAda Mae StubblefieldChildren8Disagreement exists whether Stubblefield s communications technology can be classified as radio and if his 1902 demonstrations could be considered the first radio broadcasts Most reviews of his efforts have concluded that they were not radio transmissions because his devices although they used a form of wireless employed conduction and inductive fields while the standard definition of radio is the transmission of electromagnetic radiation However Stubblefield may have been the first to simultaneously transmit audio wirelessly to multiple receivers albeit over relatively short distances while predicting the eventual development of broadcasting on a national scale Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years and family life 2 Inventions 2 1 Acoustic telephone 2 2 Earth battery 2 3 Wireless telephony 3 Final years 4 Legacy 5 Timeline 6 Further reading 6 1 Historical Documents during Stubblefield s lifetime 6 2 Books Periodicals journals and dissertations after 1928 discussing Stubblefield 7 See also 8 References 9 External links 9 1 Patents 9 2 Pro Stubblefield pages 9 3 OtherBiography EditEarly years and family life Edit Stubblefield was the second of seven sons of William Captain Billy Jefferson Stubblefield 1830 1874 a Confederate Army veteran and lawyer and Victoria Bowman 1837 1869 who died of scarlet fever Stubblefield grew up in Murray Kentucky and his education included tutoring by a governess followed by attendance at a boarding school in nearby Farmington called the Male and Female Institute His formal education ended in 1874 at the age of 14 with his father s death which left Stubblefield an orphan in the care of his step mother However he continued to develop his technical knowledge by reading contemporary scientific publications such as Scientific American and Electrical World In 1881 he married Ada Mae Buchannan by whom he had nine children two dying in infancy Six of Nathan s surviving children left no descendants The seventh Oliver RayJack married Priscilla Alden who gave birth to two daughters and Nathan s only grandson Keith Stubblefield who would become a television and recording personality under the professional name Troy Cory 3 Initially Stubblefield supported his family by farming His farm land later became part of the campus of Murray State University From 1907 to 1911 he operated a home school called The Nathan Stubblefield Industrial School or Teleph on delgreen Industrial School 4 Inventions EditDespite very limited finances in his spare time Stubblefield worked on developing a series of inventions His first patent U S Patent 329 864 was issued on November 3 1885 for a tool for lighting coal oil lamps without having to remove the glass chimney Acoustic telephone Edit In late 1886 Stubblefield began to sell and install acoustic telephones an early and somewhat limited form of the telephone which instead of using electricity employed a taut wire to carry sound vibrations directly between two soundboxes which were located at the far ends of the wire Although most installations were around Murray he also made sales as far away as Mississippi and Oklahoma On February 21 1888 Stubblefield and partner Samuel Holcomb received U S Patent 378 183 for their mechanical telephone design However the establishment of a local Bell Telephone franchise whose electric telephones were far superior to Stubblefield s offerings ended most of the acoustic sales by 1890 5 Earth battery Edit In 1898 Stubblefield was issued U S Patent 600 457 for an electric battery which was an electrolytic coil of iron and insulated copper wire that was immersed in liquid or buried in the ground Stubblefield made the unsubstantiated claim that combined with normal battery operation his device also drew additional power from the earth However it did successfully serve as both a power source and ground terminal for wireless telephony Wireless telephony Edit After the winding down of his acoustic telephone business Stubblefield reviewed possible alternatives that would avoid infringing on the Bell telephone patents and began researching wireless options Because he never filed for a patent for his early work the technical details of his experiments are largely unknown But based on contemporary descriptions it appears that they initially employed induction similar to a wireless telephone developed by Amos Dolbear which was issued U S Patent 350 299 in 1886 Information for this period is very limited but in 1935 a former neighbor Rainey T Wells reported that in 1892 Stubblefield gave him a telephone receiver and had Wells walk a short distance away from Stubblefield s shack after which he was amazed to distinctly hear the words Hello Rainey followed by additional speech from Stubblefield 6 Because later references refer to earth connections it appears that Stubblefield subsequently switched to using ground currents instead of induction Following a decade of research and testing he felt that his wireless telephone had now been perfected to the point that it was ready for commercialization and began a series of demonstrations to publicize his work and attract investment On Christmas Eve December 24 1901 he successfully transmitted mile 400 meters to his home where A party of children were gathered there and at the receiver obtained messages from Santa Claus and had local residents sign affidavits attesting to the success of his tests 7 A much more ambitious demonstration was given on January 1 1902 Assisted by his 14 year old son Bernard hundreds of people in Murray witnessed a test where From a station in the law office of a friend over a transmitter of his own invention Stubblefield gave his friends a New Year s greeting by wireless telephony and at seven stations located in different business houses and offices in the town the message was simultaneously delivered Music songs whispered conversations could be heard with perfect ease 2 This in turn attracted the attention of the St Louis Post Dispatch which sent a reporter to Murray to personally review Stubblefield s wireless telephone 8 A detailed and positive account appeared in the newspaper which quoted an optimistic Stubblefield as saying that in addition to point to point private communication his system was capable of sending simultaneous messages from a central distributing station over a very wide territory For instance anyone having a receiving instrument which would consist merely of a telephone receiver and a signalling gong could upon being signalled by a transmitting station in Washington or nearer if advisable be informed of weather news My apparatus is capable of sending out a gong signal as well as voice messages Eventually it will be used for the general transmission of news of every description 9 However the unrestricted reception of signals from Stubblefield s device meant that there was still a major limitation in its intended use for personal communication Although he exuberantly declared The possibilities of the invention seem to be practically unlimited and it will be no more than a matter of time when conversation over long distances between the great cities at the country will be carried on daily without wires 2 he also admitted I have as yet devised no method whereby it can be used with privacy Wherever there is a receiving station the signal and message may be heard simultaneously Eventually I or some one will discover a method of tuning the transmitting and receiving instruments so that each will answer only to its mate 10 Nathan Stubblefield using his ground current wireless telephone to receive a March 1902 test transmission at Washington D C At this point a promoter Gerald Fennel traveled to Murray from New York City to enlist Stubblefield in a commercial venture While negotiating Stubblefield next embarked on his most publicized promotional trip On March 20 1902 he demonstrated his system in Washington D C where voice and music transmissions were made over a third of a mile 535 meters from the steamer Bartholdi anchored in the Potomac River to shore This particular test was reported in prestigious scientific publications including Scientific American which claimed that Stubblefield s invention would be installed by the Gordon Telephone Company of Charleston S C for the establishment of telephonic communication between the city of Charleston and the sea islands lying off the coast of South Carolina 11 and Nature which noted The system used is an earth conduction one and is therefore similar in principle to though doubtless differing in detail from many other wireless telephony systems which are being tried in various countries 12 In early 1902 three New York City residents J B Green W B Whelpley and Wm T Quinn incorporated in the Territory of Arizona the Wireless Telephone Company of America The firm had a 5 000 000 capitalization with shares set at a par value of 1 each 13 Gerald Fennel offered Stubblefield 500 000 shares of stock in exchange for the rights to his wireless telephone technology A June 1902 stock promotion advertisement for the company echoing the excessive claims of contemporary wireless telegraph companies proclaimed With the vast savings made in cost and maintenance by the Stubblefield system it is not unreasonable to expect that the earnings of Bell Telephone will be easily equalled by those of this company Its stock at 25c places the subscriber on the same basis as the earliest investors in Bell whose profits have amounted to over 2 000 This advertisement also stated that regional sub companies would be established throughout the United States 14 With travel expenses financed by Fennel Stubblefield made additional successful demonstrations in Philadelphia from May 30 to June 7 1902 spanning a distance of around a mile 1600 meters Tests followed in New York City beginning on June 11 1902 which were less successful with the explanation for the difficulties encountered including the rocky soil in Battery Park and electrical interference from local alternating current power distribution Stubblefield quickly became distrustful of the promoters behind the Wireless Telephone Company of America and in a letter dated June 19 1902 severed his connections as a director after expressing his concern that the company was being fraudulently run Two months later the company announced that it had merged its operations with the Collins Wireless Telephone amp Telegraph Company 15 a company that had been organized to promote the work of Archie Frederick Collins who had been doing research on conductive and inductive wireless telephone systems very similar to Stubblefield s 16 The fanciful stock solicitations now claimed that there were plans to license subsidiary companies in each state of the Union Stubblefield returned to Murray where he faced considerable skepticism a March 1903 review of his earth battery and wireless telephony endeavors stated the people in this section of the country are yet wondering whether he is simply a crank or will yet emerge some day from his obscurity to astonish the whole civilized world with a great discovery 17 Later that same year he posted a Public Notice in the Murray Ledger stating that the Wireless Telephone Company of America had gone out of existence and My inventions have reverted back to me He also noted that he was continuing his wireless telephone research using the over two thousand dollars he had received from that company s promoter 18 Stubblefield returned once again to investigating using induction rather than conduction for his wireless telephone system This approach employed large circular induction coils that no longer needed ground connections He carefully documented his progress preparing affidavits that in 1903 he had transmitted 375 feet 114 m and in 1904 reached 600 feet 180 m The total wire required for the transmitting and receiving coils was greater than the distance between the transmitter and receiver but the invention allowed mobility Bernard Stubblefield reported that in 1907 using a 60 foot 18 m coil transmitting and receiving spanned mile 400 meters nicely Encountering difficulty in obtaining a patent Nathan Stubblefield moved for a time to Washington D C to speed up the process On May 12 1908 he was granted U S patent 887 357 for his new version of a wireless telephone The patent application stated that it would be usable for securing telephonic communications between moving vehicles and way stations An accompanying diagram shows wireless telephony from a fixed location to passing trains boats and wagons Despite receiving a patent and some financial backing from Murray residents and the assertion that while messages have been sent for distances less than ten miles he is confident that with his machine he can talk across the Atlantic 19 Stubblefield made no headway in commercializing his latest invention By now continuous wave arc and alternator radio transmitters had been developed which were capable of wireless telephone communication over distances that dwarfed the short ranges attainable by induction wireless systems in addition to being able to be tuned to multiple transmitting frequencies The invention of vacuum tube radio transmitters in the mid 1910s would make possible in the early 1920s the nationwide broadcasting that Stubblefield had envisioned in 1902 But Stubblefield himself made no further progress beyond his previous work Final years EditStubblefield later lived in self imposed isolation in a crude shelter near Almo Kentucky and died around March 28 1928 although his body gnawed by rats was not discovered until a couple days later 20 Although many later accounts state that he died of starvation at the time of his death a coroner was quoted as saying he apparently was a victim of heart disease 21 He was initially buried in an unmarked grave in the Bowman family cemetery in Murray Kentucky Legacy EditAlthough Stubblefield s inventions did not lead directly to the development of radio technology the public demonstrations in 1902 and the extensive press coverage may have helped spur interest in the possibilities of wireless transmission of voice and music as most prior inventors had merely sought to provide point to point communication to compete with telephone and telegraph companies Since his death various individuals and groups in Murray Kentucky have promoted Murray as the Birthplace of Radio and Stubblefield as the Father of Broadcasting Loren J Hortin Journalism Professor at Murray State organized his students to investigate Stubblefield s work leading to the dedication of a monument on the campus in 1930 Hortin adopting an expanded definition of radio to include wireless transmissions that did not employ electromagnetic radiation later contended Radio is a device that transmits and receives voice over considerable distance without connecting wires Stubblefield invented manufactured and demonstrated such a device and did so before anyone else on the planet However there had actually been earlier audio wireless transmissions including beginning in 1880 the photophone invented by Alexander Graham Bell and Charles Sumner Tainter which employed light beams 22 and Amos Dolbear s electrostatic telephone for which it was noted in 1884 that with this instrument we can telephone not only without wires but without even a beam of light 23 In 1948 Murray Kentucky s first radio station began broadcast operations and in honor of Nathan B Stubblefield the owners selected WNBS as the station s call letters In 1952 his family installed a memorial headstone at his gravesite which credits him as the Inventor of Wireless Telephony or Radio 24 The Murray State University physics club is also named in his honor In 1991 Kentucky Governor Wallace G Wilkinson issued a proclamation declaring that Stubblefield is the true inventor of radio and proclaimed 1992 as Nathan Beverly Stubblefield Year in Kentucky 25 Timeline Edit1892 First voice transmission using conduction wireless telephone attached to ground electrodes May 8 1898 patented electric battery wireless telephone transmission coil U S Patent 600 457 1902 First ship to shore wireless telephone transmission using wires dropped in the water from the steamer Bartholdi 1908 Patented inductive wireless telephone capable of mobile use U S Patent 887 357 Further reading EditHistorical Documents during Stubblefield s lifetime Edit Nathan B Stubblefield Collection MS 84 4 Wrather Museum Murray State University Murray Kentucky Collection s online archive correspondence handwritten notes drawings photographs and patents Collection inventory December 15 2011 Nathan B Stubblefield Papers Pogue Library Murray State University Murray Kentucky To Try Wireless Telephony Inventor Stubblefield to Give an Exhibition of His Apparatus Thursday on the Potomac River New York Times March 17 1902 p 1 Wireless Telephony Tests Partial Success of Inventor Stubblefield Near Washington New York Times March 21 1902 p 2 Practical Tests of Wireless Telephony Washington Times March 24 1902 p 4 Fawcett Waldon The Latest Advance in Wireless Telephony Scientific American May 24 1902 p 363 White Trumbull Telephoning Without Wires pp 297 302 in Our Wonderful Progress The World s Triumphant Knowledge and Works Book 2 The World s Science and Invention 1902 Radio Pioneer Dies Poor and Embittered Kentucky Hermit Stubblefield Had Wireless Phone in 1902 Predicted Broadcasting New York Times April 24 1928 p 25Books Periodicals journals and dissertations after 1928 discussing Stubblefield Edit Cory Stubblefield Troy and Josie Cory Disappointments Are Great Follow the Money Smart Daaf Boys The Inventors of Radio amp Television and the Life Style of Stubblefield Marconi Ambrose Fleming Reginald Fessenden Tesla De Forest Armstrong Alexanderson and Farnsworth 2003 Library of Congress Catalog Card 93 060451 ISBN 1 883644 34 8 Dunlap Orrin E Jr Listening In New York Times April 13 1930 p 137 Horton L T sic L J Hortin Murray Kentucky Birthplace of Radio Kentucky Progress Magazine March 1930 Kane Joseph et al Famous First Facts 5th Edition New York Wilson 1997 First radio broadcast demonstration by Stubblefield 1892 Item 6262 p 455 First mobile radio telephone marine demonstration by Stubblefield March 20 1902 Item 7716 p 590 Lochte Bob Kentucky Farmer Invents Wireless Telephone But Was It Radio Facts and Folklore About Nathan Stubblefield All About Wireless 2001 ISBN 0 9712511 9 3 Morgan Thomas O The Contribution of Nathan B Stubblefield to the Invention of Wireless Voice Communications dissertation Florida State University 1971 Nahin Paul J The Science of Radio 2nd Ed Springer Verlag New York 2001 p 7 Sivowitch Elliot N A Technological Survey of Broadcasting s Pre History 1876 1920 Journal of Broadcasting Winter 1970 1971See also EditNear and far field electromagnetic concept References Edit Kappele William A Kappele Cora 2000 04 01 Scenic Driving Kentucky Globe Pequot p 202 ISBN 9781560447337 Nathan Beverly Stubblefield the third of 4 sons of William Jefferson and Victoria Frances Stubblefield a b c Kentucky Inventor Solves Problem of Wireless Telephony The Sunny South March 8 1902 page 6 profiles4 com Troy Cory Lochte Bob Kentucky Farmer Invents Wireless Telephone But Was It Radio Facts and Folklore About Nathan Stubblefield All About Wireless 2001 ISBN 0 9712511 9 3 pages 12 93 Lochte pages 15 22 Omahan Believes Heard First Radio Broadcast by W H Graham Omaha Nebraska World Herald December 1 1935 page 12 Here s Wireless Telephone New York Sun December 31 1901 page 10 Instead of seven listening sites the St Louis Post Dispatch s account of the January 1 1902 test stated Mr Stubblefield placed his transmitter in the courthouse square and established five listening stations in various parts of the town the furthest six blocks distant from the transmitter Kentucky Farmer Invents Wireless Telephone St Louis Post Dispatch January 12 1902 Sunday Magazine page 3 Telephoning Without Wires Our Wonderful Progress Trumbull White editor 1902 page 300 The Latest Advance in Wireless Telephony by Waldon Fawcett Scientific American May 24 1902 p 363 There is no evidence that the South Carolina link was ever constructed Notes Nature London June 12 1902 page 158 Certificate of Incorporation of The Wireless Telephone Company of America public notice Prescott Arizona Morning Courier April 12 1902 page 3 Wireless Telephone Company of America advertisement Boston Globe June 22 1902 page 32 Wireless Telephone Company of America advertisement Paducah Kentucky Sun August 7 1902 page 4 The Collins Wireless Telephone Scientific American July 19 1902 pages 37 38 as reprinted in the Journal of the United States Artillery September October 1902 pages 202 205 Collins would later also develop radio based wireless telephones using arc transmitters but his efforts were tainted by excessive stock promotion In early 1913 he and two associates working for the Continental Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Company would be convicted of mail fraud for which he served one year of a three year prison sentence Inventor of Queer Motor Waterbury Connecticut Evening Democrat March 9 1903 page 2 Odds and Ends Telephony January 1904 page 51 Stubblefield Wireless Phone Hopkinsville Kentuckian May 26 1908 page 8 Nathan Stubblefield Probably Father of Radio End of His Dreams Finds Him Dead Rats Gnaw Body Lexington Kentucky Leader April 29 1928 page 1 N B Stubblefield Buried Washington D C Evening Star April 1 1928 Part 1 page 25 The Photophone How Sound is Reproduced by Light No Connecting Wires Between Stations Needed Springfield Massachusetts Republican August 30 1880 page 4 Telephoning Without Wires by Professor E J Houston Scientific American Supplement December 6 1884 page 7444 Lochte pages 129 130 Cory Josie Governor s Proclamation that Stubblefield Invented Wireless Telephone Television International Magazine Universal City California Retrieved 2016 03 28 External links EditPatents Edit U S Patent 329 864 Patent Lighting device November 3 1885 U S Patent 378 183 Patent Mechanical telephone February 21 1888 U S Patent 600 457 Patent Electric battery March 8 1898 U S Patent 887 357 Patent Wireless telephone May 12 1908 Canadian patent 114 737 Wireless Telephone dated October 20 1908Pro Stubblefield pages Edit ed The links below are cited in Troy Cory Stubblefield and Josie Cory book Yes90 tviNews s90 LookRadio Main FEATURE lookradio com Smart90 lookradio nbs100 tvimagazine WiFi 187 WiMax187 RF 300 WiMaxBunny WiVATS Patent887 vratv at lookradio com Stubblefield Radio Trust SMART90 com Did Nathan B Stubblefield really invent the wireless telephone The TeleKey Group Nathan Stubblefield All About Wireless 2001 Other Edit Virgin Media website commemorating Nathan Stubblefield s device as world s first ever mobile telephone Maupin Judy 1979 03 31 Stubblefield Inventor And Man of Mystery Western Kentucky History amp Genealogy Retrieved 2016 03 28 Stubblefield Nathan Beverly 1860 1928 WorldCat Retrieved 2016 03 28 Cory Josie Nathan B Stubblefield The Inventor and Patent Holder of the Wireless Telephone Television International Magazine Universal City California Retrieved 2016 03 28 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nathan Stubblefield amp oldid 1128835127, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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