Very odd table - thoughts?

Discussion in 'Furniture' started by Ownedbybear, Dec 26, 2014.

  1. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Moderator Moderator

    I showed my Dad the result today, he had never heard of them either.
    He was born in 1920, so he would have been 6 when they went out of production.
    If there were only 600 subscribers it makes one wonder how many were made and how many are left.
    I presume most were situated in London as that is where the exchange was and the theatres.
     
  2. springfld.arsenal

    springfld.arsenal Store: http://www.springfieldarsenal.net/

  3. Ownedbybear

    Ownedbybear Well-Known Member

  4. Ladybranch

    Ladybranch Well-Known Member

    I suspect London also. From the following article this phenomenon didn't occur in the U.S. because we were too preoccupied with the radio. Seems the newspapers in Britain did all they could to keep public radio broadcast from happening because of the fear of revenue lost.

    "By the end of the first year, Electrophone had forty seven customers. One reason for its success was the slow recognition of the broadcast potential of radio in Britain. Although U.S. inventors were experimenting with public broadcasting, no such experiments seem to have taken place in Britain at this point. Marconi's work on radio was still exploring the military and shipping communications possibilities, rather than public broadcasting. Some experimental broadcasts to ships at sea had been tried but interest died out with the start of World War 1.

    "Electrophone subscribers had increased to around 600 by 1908 and the company covered performances from some 30 churches and theatres.

    "During the war, recuperating servicemen were given free access to Electrophone, and so many people became aware of the the potential of the system. In the U.S., however, this interest was directed to radio broadcasting rather than the telephone lines. In 1922 Western Electric opened its radio station WEAF in New York, and made time on the station available to customers for a fee. Thus the evil of advertising came to broadcasting. It worked, though, and the writing was on the wall for Electrophone.

    "In Britain resistance to broadcasting was especially high from the newspapers who saw their position and advertising revenue being challenged. Against them were the companies who could see a lucrative market in radio transmitters and receivers , including the powerful Marconi and GEC companies....."

    http://www.telephonecollecting.org/Bobs phones/Pages/Essays/Electrophone.htm

    --- Susan
     
  5. kentworld

    kentworld Well-Known Member

    Wow! It is a telephone table, but a very special one! It could go over $1000 maybe! WTG Spring!
     
  6. Ownedbybear

    Ownedbybear Well-Known Member

    I think it was more about geography and money in some ways. London had a decent telecoms network and also a nigh monopoly on good theatre - and money, of course. So, being in a relatively small area, the homes and clubs of those with the money to do so could easily be connected. it was innovative and almost certainly a major status symbol for those who could afford it. Don't forget this thing started in 1896, well before any inkling of broadcast radio.

    2LO - the precursor of the BBC - started to broadcast in 1922, at around the same time period as US and European stations. That would have killed it off.
     
  7. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Moderator Moderator

    My Dad said on Sunday that he used to build a radio receiver in his bedroom in the late 20`s and early 30`s, he used his bed head as an aerial and listened to the boxing coming from New York.
     
  8. springfld.arsenal

    springfld.arsenal Store: http://www.springfieldarsenal.net/

    Part of the story which may remain unwritten is how the fully-loaded units were turned into domestic furniture. Perhaps some enterprising merchant bought the returned tables from the phone company, sold the headsets for scrap metal, had someone make up the little knobs to fill the screw-holes in the sides of the tables, then sold them to furniture stores. Someone please go off and find that chapter.
     
    Messilane likes this.
  9. gregsglass

    gregsglass Well-Known Member

    Hi Davey,
    That is what I did in the early 40s. Once in a while I would get signals from Brazil mostly from Pittsburgh. It seemed the crystal radio would also get Ham operators signals from all over. It seemed magical that I would be lying in bed hearing people from far off places. I would be under the featherbed hearing the trees branches breaking from the cold and frost with no light but a tiny voice crackling. God yes, it was magic and wonderful.
    greg
     
    daveydempsey likes this.
  10. Ladybranch

    Ladybranch Well-Known Member

    First public radio broadcast in the U.S. was in 1910. It was a live broadcast from the Metropolitan Opera House. My mother used to tell how her brother made a radio by wrapping copper wire around something. He had seen a diagram of a homemade one in some magazine in the late teens to early 1920s. It had a single headphone/earphone. They would get into a quiet part of the house, sit on the floor with their heads close together, and listen on that one earphone. Mom said the reception was terrible, but they were thrilled to hear voices, news, through that earphone. They both were only adolescents. A few years later they listened to the progress of Lindberg's flight across the Atlantic, or more accurately the news that no one knew for sure if he was still flying, and were the first in their small town to hear the news that Lindberg had landed in Paris.

    That uncle was a very interesting man with many wonderful stories. He became a chemist and patent attorney for American Cyamide heading up their patent department. He got his undergraduate, M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Clark University in Worcester, MA. He was attending Clark at the same time Dr. Robert Goddard (the rocket scientist, physicist, inventor, engineer) was doing his liquid fluid rocket tests there. He knew Goddard on the student to professor level, and witnessed some of Goddard's rocket launches in Auburn, MA.

    --- Susan
     
    gregsglass likes this.
  11. 42Skeezix

    42Skeezix Moderator Moderator

    Sounds like a "cat's whisker" radio. Neat early set-up. No battery needed. The radio signal alone was the source of power. They probably wrapped the wire around a Quaker Oats box. My uncle, born 1905, was also an early homebuilt radio enthusiast in those earlier days...teens early twenties. He could build a cat's whisker in his sleep.

    Wow, knowing Goddard. I have always considered him a hero. To have seen his launches was to see the world changing. That's epic stuff.
     
  12. Ladybranch

    Ladybranch Well-Known Member

    >To have seen his launches was to see the world changing. That's epic stuff.<

    It certain was. Listening to the first radios and seeing those rocket tests were right up there with landing on the moon for us. It was thrilling and out of this world stuff. My mother (1912-2003) used to marvel about advances she witnessed in her lifetime: radio, television, computers; phone in every pocket; flight advances; etc... Then she told how her mother (1880-1960) used to say the same thing about her life for she had lived from the horse and buggy days to the automobile, from kerosene lamps to electricity, from the first airplanes to sputnik, first telephones, the many kitchen inventions, etc... Today we are blasé about it all.

    --- Susan
     
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