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{{short description|American inventor (1873–1961)}}
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Lee De Forest
| name = Lee de Forest
| image = Lee De Forest.jpg
| image = Lee De Forest.jpg
| caption =
| caption = Lee de Forest {{circa|1904}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|1873|8|26|mf=y}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|1873|08|26}}
| birth_place = [[Council Bluffs, Iowa]], [[United States|U.S.]]
| birth_place = [[Council Bluffs, Iowa]], U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1961|6|30|1873|8|26|mf=y}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|1961|06|30|1873|08|26}}
| death_place = [[Hollywood, Los Angeles, California|Hollywood, California]], [[United States|U.S.]]
| death_place = [[Hollywood, California]], U.S.
| alma_mater = [[Yale University|Yale College]] ([[Sheffield Scientific School]])
| occupation = [[Inventor]]
| occupation = Inventor
| salary =
| spouse = {{plainlist|
| parents = Henry Swift DeForest<br>Anna Robbins
| spouse ={{marriage|Lucille Sheardown|1906}}<br>{{marriage|[[Nora Stanton Blatch Barney]]|1907|1911}}<br>Mary Mayo (m. 1912–?)<br>{{marriage|[[Marie Mosquini]]|1930|1961}}
* {{marriage|Lucille Sheardown|1906|1906|end=divorced}}
* {{marriage|[[Nora Stanton Blatch Barney]]|1908|1911|end=divorced}}
| relatives = [[Calvert DeForest]] (grandnephew)
* {{marriage|Mary Mayo|1912|1923|end=divorced}}
| footnotes =
* {{marriage|[[Marie Mosquini]]|1930}}
|known_for= [[Triode]]
}}
| known_for = Three-electrode vacuum-tube (Audion), sound-on-film recording ([[Phonofilm]])
| awards = [[IEEE Medal of Honor]] {{small|(1922)}}<br>[[Elliott Cresson Medal]] {{small|(1923)}}<br>[[IEEE Edison Medal]] {{small|(1946)}}<br>[[Audio Engineering Society#Awardees in chronological order|Audio Engineering Society Gold Medal Award]] {{small|(1955)}}
}}
}}


'''Lee De Forest''' (August 26, 1873 – June 30, 1961) was an [[United States|American]] [[inventor]] with over 180 patents to his credit. De Forest invented the [[Audion tube|Audion]], a [[vacuum tube]] that takes relatively weak [[electric]]al signals and amplifies them. De Forest is one of the fathers of the "electronic age", as the Audion helped to usher in the widespread use of [[electronics]]. He is also credited with one of the principal inventions which brought sound to motion pictures.
'''Lee de Forest''' (August 26, 1873&nbsp;– June 30, 1961) was an American [[inventor]], [[electrical engineer]] and an early pioneer in [[electronics]] of fundamental importance. He invented the first practical electronic [[amplifier]],
the three-element "[[Audion]]" [[triode]] [[vacuum tube]] in 1906. This helped start the Electronic Age, and enabled the development of the [[electronic oscillator]]. These made [[radio broadcasting]] and long distance telephone lines possible, and led to the development of [[talking motion picture]]s, among countless other applications.


He had over 300 patents worldwide, but also a tumultuous career – he boasted that he made, then lost, four fortunes. He was also involved in several major patent lawsuits, spent a substantial part of his income on legal bills, and was even tried (and acquitted) for [[mail fraud]].
He was involved in several patent lawsuits and he spent a substantial part of his income from his inventions on the legal bills. He had four marriages and 25 companies, he was defrauded by business partners (as well as defrauding business partners himself), and he was once indicted for mail fraud, but was later acquitted.


Despite this, he was recognised for his pioneering work with the 1922 [[IEEE Medal of Honor]], the 1923 [[Franklin Institute]] [[Elliott Cresson Medal]] and the 1946 [[American Institute of Electrical Engineers]] [[Edison Medal]].
He typically signed his name "Lee de Forest."


==Early life==
He was a charter member of the [[Institute of Radio Engineers]], one of the two predecessors of the [[IEEE]] (the other was the [[American Institute of Electrical Engineers]]).
Lee de Forest was born in 1873 in [[Council Bluffs, Iowa]], the son of Anna Margaret ({{née}} Robbins) and Henry Swift DeForest<!--Spelling is correct-->.<ref>[[Media:1900 census DeForest.jpg|Lee de Forest entry (#20)]] in the 1900 U.S. Census (Milwaukee, Wisconsin)</ref><ref>[[Media:1920 census DeForest.jpg|Lee de Forest entry (#29)]] in the 1920 U.S. Census (Bronx, New York)</ref> He was a direct descendant of [[Jessé de Forest]], the leader of a group of [[Walloons|Walloon]] [[Huguenots]] who fled Europe in the 17th century due to religious persecution.


De Forest's father was a [[Congregational church|Congregational Church]] minister who hoped his son would also become a pastor. In 1879 the elder de Forest became president of the American Missionary Association's [[Talladega College]] in [[Talladega, Alabama]], a school "open to all of either sex, without regard to sect, race, or color", and which educated primarily African-Americans. Many of the local white citizens resented the school and its mission, and Lee spent most of his youth in Talladega isolated from the white community, with several close friends among the black children of the town.
[[DeVry University]] was originally named '''DeForest Training School''', after Lee De Forest, by its founder Dr. Herman A. DeVry, who was a friend and colleague of De Forest's.
==Birth and education==
Lee De Forest was born in 1873 in [[Council Bluffs, Iowa]] to Henry Swift DeForest and Anna Robbins.<ref>[[Media:1900 census DeForest.jpg|Lee De Forest in the]] [[1900 US Census]] in [[Milwaukee|Milwaukee, Wisconsin]]</ref><ref>[[Media:1920 census DeForest.jpg|Lee De Forest in the]] [[1920 US Census]] in the [[Bronx, New York]]</ref>


De Forest prepared for college by attending [[Northfield Mount Hermon School|Mount Hermon Boys' School]] in [[Gill, Massachusetts]], for two years, beginning in 1891. In 1893, he enrolled in a three-year course of studies at [[Yale University]]'s [[Sheffield Scientific School]] in New Haven, Connecticut, on a $300 per year scholarship that had been established for relatives of David de Forest. Convinced that he was destined to become a famous—and rich—inventor, and perpetually short of funds, he sought to interest companies with a series of devices and puzzles he created, and expectantly submitted essays in prize competitions, all with little success.
His father was a [[Congregational Church]] minister who hoped that his son would become a minister, also. His father accepted the position of President of [[Talladega College]], a traditionally [[African American]] school, in [[Talladega, Alabama]], where Lee spent most of his youth. Most citizens of the white community resented his father's efforts to educate Negro students. Lee De Forest had several friends among the [[African American|Negro]] children of the town.


After completing his undergraduate studies, in September 1896 de Forest began three years of postgraduate work. However, his electrical experiments had a tendency to blow fuses, causing building-wide blackouts. Even after being warned to be more careful, he managed to douse the lights during an important lecture by Professor [[Charles S. Hastings]], who responded by having de Forest expelled from Sheffield.
De Forest went to [[Mount Hermon School]], and then enrolled at the [[Sheffield Scientific School]] at [[Yale University]] in [[Connecticut]] in 1893. As an inquisitive inventor, he tapped into the electrical system at Yale one evening and completely blacked out the campus, leading to his suspension. However, he was eventually allowed to complete his studies. He paid some of his tuition with income from mechanical and gaming inventions, and he received his [[bachelor's degree]] in 1896. He remained at Yale for graduate studies, and he earned his [[Doctor of Philosophy|Ph.D.]] degree in 1899 with a dissertation on radio waves. From 1899 to 1901 he was on faculty at Armour Institute of Technology and Lewis Institute (merging in 1940 to become [[Illinois Institute of Technology]]) and conducted his first long-distance broadcasts from the university.


With the outbreak of the [[Spanish–American War]] in 1898, de Forest enrolled in the Connecticut Volunteer Militia Battery as a bugler, but the war ended and he was mustered out without ever leaving the state. He then completed his studies at Yale's Sloane Physics Laboratory, earning a Doctorate in 1899 with a dissertation on the "Reflection of Hertzian Waves from the Ends of Parallel Wires", supervised by theoretical physicist [[Josiah Willard Gibbs|Willard Gibbs]].<ref>''Father of Radio: The Autobiography of Lee de Forest'', 1950, p. 88.</ref>
==Audion==


==Early radio work==
[[Image:Triode tube 1906.jpg|right|thumb|De Forest Audion from 1906.]]
[[File:Lee De Forest with Audion tubes.jpg|thumb|De Forest, some time between 1914 and 1922, with two of his Audions, a small 1 watt receiving tube ''(left)'', and a later 250-watt transmitting power tube ''(right)'', which he called an "oscillion".]]
De Forest had an interest in wireless telegraphy and he invented the [[Audion tube|Audion]] in 1906. He then developed an improved wireless telegraph receiver.
Reflecting his pioneering work, de Forest has sometimes been credited as the "Father of Radio",<ref>[https://archive.org/details/Radio-Craft_1947_01/page/n18/mode/1up "De Forest—Father of Radio"] by Hugo Gernsback, ''Radio-Craft'', January 1947, p. 17.</ref><ref>[https://www.britannica.com/biography/Lee-de-Forest "Lee de Forest: American inventor"] by Raymond E. Fielding (britannica.com)</ref><ref>[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1943-04-07/ed-1/seq-28/ "De Forest Forecasts Boom in Use of Television"] (AP), ''Washington (D.C.) Evening Star'', April 7, 1943, p. B-11.</ref> an honorific which he adopted as the title of his 1950 autobiography. In the late 1800s he became convinced there was a great future in radiotelegraphic communication (then known as "[[wireless telegraphy]]"), but Italian [[Guglielmo Marconi]], who received his first patent in 1896, was already making impressive progress in both Europe and the United States. One drawback of Marconi's approach was his use of a [[coherer]] as a receiver, which, while providing for permanent records, was also slow (after each received [[Morse code]] dot or dash, it had to be tapped to restore operation), insensitive, and not very reliable. De Forest was determined to devise a better system, including a self-restoring detector that could receive transmissions by ear, thus making it capable of receiving weaker signals and also allowing faster Morse code sending speeds.


After making unsuccessful inquiries about employment with [[Nikola Tesla]] and Marconi, de Forest struck out on his own. His first job after leaving Yale was with the [[Western Electric Company]]'s telephone lab in Chicago, Illinois. While there he developed his first receiver, which was based on findings by two German scientists, Drs. [[A. Neugschwender]] and [[Emil Aschkinass]]. Their original design consisted of a mirror in which a narrow, moistened slit had been cut through the silvered back. Attaching a battery and telephone receiver, they could hear sound changes in response to radio signal impulses. De Forest, along with Ed Smythe, a co-worker who provided financial and technical help, developed variations they called "responders".
In January 1906, De Forest filed a patent for [[diode]] vacuum tube [[detector (radio)|detector]], a two-electrode device for detecting electromagnetic waves, a variant of the [[Fleming valve]] invented two years earlier. One year later, De Forest filed a patent for a three-electrode device that was a much more sensitive detector of electromagetic waves. It was granted US Patent 879,532 in February 1908. The device was also called the De&nbsp;Forest valve, and since 1919 has been known as the [[triode]]. De Forest's innovation was the insertion of a third [[electrode]], the [[Control grid|grid]], between the [[cathode]] ([[Electrical filament|filament]]) and the [[anode]] ([[Plate electrode|plate]]) of the previously invented diode. The resulting triode or three-electrode [[vacuum tube]] could be used as an [[amplifier]] of electrical signals, notably for radio reception. The Audion was the fastest electronic switching element of the time, and was later used in early [[digital]] electronics (such as [[computer]]s). The triode was vital in the development of transcontinental [[telephone]] communications, [[radio]], and [[radar]] after [[Nikola Tesla]]'s and [[Guglielmo Marconi]]'s progress in radio in the 1890s, until the 1948 invention of the [[transistor]].


A series of short-term positions followed, including three unproductive months with Professor [[Warren S. Johnson]]'s American Wireless Telegraph Company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and work as an assistant editor of the ''[[Western Electrician]]'' in Chicago. With radio research his main priority, de Forest next took a night teaching position at the [[Lewis Institute]], which freed him to conduct experiments at the [[Armour Institute]].<ref>The two Institutes merged in 1940 to become the [[Illinois Institute of Technology]] [[IIT Physics Department|physics department]].</ref> By 1900, using a spark-coil transmitter and his responder receiver, de Forest expanded his transmitting range to about seven kilometers (four miles). Professor [[Clarence Freeman]] of the Armour Institute became interested in de Forest's work and developed a new type of spark transmitter.
De Forest had, in fact, stumbled onto this invention via tinkering and did not completely understand how it worked. De Forest had initially claimed that the operation was based on ions created within the gas in the tube when, in fact, it was shown by others to operate with a vacuum in the tube. The American inventor [[Irving Langmuir]] of General Electric Corp. was the first to correctly explain the theory of operation of the device, and also to significantly improve it.
<!--technical details regarding de Forest, Armstrong and the history of the audio and the radio may be found in various works, notably in Chapter 1 (A Nonlinear History of Radio) of "Radio Frequency CMOS Integrated Circuits" by Dr. Thomas H Lee.-->


De Forest soon felt that Smythe and Freeman were holding him back, so in the fall of 1901 he made the bold decision to go to New York to compete directly with Marconi in transmitting race results for the International Yacht races. Marconi had already made arrangements to provide reports for the [[Associated Press]], which he had successfully done for the 1899 contest. De Forest contracted to do the same for the smaller Publishers' Press Association.
[[Image:LeeDeforest.jpg|right|thumb|First broadcast]]
In 1904, a De Forest transmitter and receiver were set up aboard the [[steamboat]] ''[[Haimun]]'' operated on behalf of ''[[The Times]]'', the first of its kind.<ref>''The De Forest Wireless Telegraphy Tower: Bulletin No. 1'', Summer 1904.</ref> On July 18, 1907, De Forest [[broadcast]] the first ship-to-shore message from the [[steam yacht]] ''Thelma''. The [[communication]] provided quick, accurate race results of the Annual Inter-Lakes Yachting Association (I-LYA) Regatta. The message was received by his assistant, Frank E. Butler of Monroeville, Ohio, in the Pavilion at Fox's Dock located on [[South Bass Island]] on [[Lake Erie]]. DeForest disliked the term "[[wireless]]", and chose a new moniker, "[[radio]]". De Forest is credited with the [[birth of public radio broadcasting]] when on January 12, 1910, he conducted experimental broadcast of part of the live performance of ''[[Tosca]]'' and, the next day, a performance with the participation of the Italian tenor [[Enrico Caruso]] from the stage of [[Metropolitan Opera]] House in New York City.<ref name="learfield">{{cite web|url= http://learfielddata.blogspot.com/2006_01_08_archive.html|title= Today in History, Jan 13|accessdate= 2008-06-24}}</ref>
<ref>[http://archives.metoperafamily.org/archives/frame.htm The MetOpera Database (archives)]</ref>


The race effort turned out to be an almost total failure. The Freeman transmitter broke down—in a fit of rage, de Forest threw it overboard—and had to be replaced by an ordinary spark coil. Even worse, the [[American Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Company]], which claimed its ownership of [[Amos Dolbear]]'s 1886 patent for wireless communication meant it held a monopoly for all wireless communication in the United States, had also set up a powerful transmitter. None of these companies had effective tuning for their transmitters, so only one could transmit at a time without causing mutual interference. Although an attempt was made to have the three systems avoid conflicts by rotating operations over five-minute intervals, the agreement broke down, resulting in chaos as the simultaneous transmissions clashed with each other.<ref>[https://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%2014/New%20York%20NY%20Herald/New%20York%20NY%20Herald%201901/New%20York%20NY%20Herald%201901%20b%20-%201844.pdf "Wireless Telegraphy That Sends No Messages Except By Wire"], ''New York Herald'', October 28, 1901, p. 4. (fultonhistory.com)</ref> De Forest ruefully noted that under these conditions the only successful "wireless" communication was done by visual semaphore "wig-wag" flags.<ref>De Forest (1950) p. 126.</ref> (The 1903 International Yacht races would be a repeat of 1901—Marconi worked for the Associated Press, de Forest for the Publishers' Press Association, and the unaffiliated International Wireless Company (successor to 1901's American Wireless Telephone and Telegraph) operated a high-powered transmitter that was used primarily to drown out the other two.)<ref>[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1903-08-27/ed-1/seq-1/ "Cuss Words in the Wireless"], ''New York Sun'', August 27, 1903, p. 1. (loc.gov)</ref>
[[Image:Electronics Research Laboratory plaque.jpg|right|thumb|California Historical Landmark No. 836]]
De Forest came to San Francisco in 1910, and worked for the [[Federal Telegraph Company]], which began developing the first global radio communications system in 1912. [[California Historical Landmark]] No. 836 is a bronze plaque at the eastern corner of Channing St. and Emerson Ave. in [[Palo Alto, California]] which memorializes the Electronics Research Laboratory at that location and De Forest for the invention of the three-element radio vacuum tube.


==American De Forest Wireless Telegraph Company==
==Middle years==
[[File:American DeForest Wireless Telegraph Company's observation tower, 1904 Saint Louis Louisiana Purchase Exposition.JPG|right|thumb|American DeForest Wireless Telegraph Company's observation tower, 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition at Saint Louis, Missouri<ref>"Wireless Telegraphy at the St. Louis Exposition", ''The Electrical Age'', September 1904, p. 167.</ref>]]
The [[United States]] [[Attorney General]] sued De Forest for fraud (in 1913) on behalf of his shareholders, stating that his claim of regeneration was an "absurd" promise (he was later acquitted). Nearly bankrupt with legal bills, De Forest sold his triode vacuum-tube patent to [[American Telephone and Telegraph|AT&T and the Bell System]] in 1913 for the bargain price of $50,000.


Despite this setback, de Forest remained in the New York City area, in order to raise interest in his ideas and capital to replace the small working companies that had been formed to promote his work thus far. In January 1902 he met a promoter, Abraham White, who would become de Forest's main sponsor for the next five years. White envisioned bold and expansive plans that enticed the inventor—however, he was also dishonest and much of the new enterprise would be built on wild exaggeration and stock fraud. To back de Forest's efforts, White incorporated the American DeForest Wireless Telegraph Company, with himself as the company's president, and de Forest the Scientific Director. The company claimed as its goal the development of "world-wide wireless".
De Forest filed another patent in 1916 that became the cause of a contentious lawsuit with the prolific inventor [[Edwin Howard Armstrong]], whose patent for the [[regenerative circuit]] had been issued in 1914. The lawsuit lasted twelve years, winding its way through the appeals process and ending up before the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]] in 1926. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of De Forest, although the view of many historians is that the judgment was incorrect.<ref> The IRE awarded Armstrong a medal for this invention. See: Man of High Fidelity, a biography of Armstrong)</ref>


The original "responder" receiver (also known as the "goo anti-coherer") proved to be too crude to be commercialized, and de Forest struggled to develop a non-infringing device for receiving radio signals. In 1903, [[Reginald Fessenden]] demonstrated an electrolytic detector, and de Forest developed a variation, which he called the "spade detector", claiming it did not infringe on Fessenden's patents. Fessenden, and the U.S. courts, did not agree, and court injunctions enjoined American De Forest from using the device.
===Radio pioneer===
In 1916, De Forest, from experimental radio station 2XG in [[New York City]], broadcast the first [[radio]] [[advertisement]]s (for his own products) and the first [[President]]ial [[election]] report by radio in November 1916 for [[Charles Evans Hughes]] and [[Woodrow Wilson]]. A few months later, DeForest moved his tube transmitter to [[Highbridge, Bronx]]. <ref> [http://earlyradiohistory.us/2XG_ads.htm High Bridge station] east bank of the Harlem River</ref> Like [[Charles Herrold]] in [[San Jose, California]] -- who had been broadcasting since 1909 with call letters "FN", "SJN", and then "6XF" -- De Forest had a license from the [[United States Department of Commerce|Department of Commerce]] for an experimental radio station, but, like Herrold, had to cease all broadcasting when the U.S. entered [[World War I]] in April 1917. From April 1920 to November 1921, DeForest broadcast from station 6XC at the California Theater at Market and Fourth Streets in San Francisco. In late 1921, 6XC moved its transmitter to Ocean View Drive in the [[Rockridge, Oakland, California|Rockridge]] section of [[Oakland, California]] and became KZY.<ref>[http://www.sfradiomuseum.com/schneider/early.shtml SF Radio Museum article]</ref><ref>[http://www.historigraphics.com/jwbubar/biography-ca_theatre_photo.html Photo of California Theater, opened November 1, 1917 at Fourth and Market, San Francisco]</ref>


Meanwhile, White set in motion a series of highly visible promotions for American DeForest: "Wireless Auto No.1" was positioned on Wall Street to "send stock quotes" using an unmuffled spark transmitter to loudly draw the attention of potential investors, in early 1904 two stations were established at Wei-hai-Wei on the Chinese mainland and aboard the Chinese steamer ''[[SS Haimun]]'', which allowed war correspondent Captain Lionel James of ''[[The Times]]'' of London to report on the brewing [[Russo-Japanese War]],<ref>[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=coo1.ark:/13960/t0gt65c8j&view=1up&seq=9 ''A Modern Campaign: War and Wireless in the Far East''] by David Fraser, 1905.</ref> and later that year a tower, with "DEFOREST" arrayed in lights, was erected on the grounds of the [[Louisiana Purchase Exposition]] in Saint Louis, Missouri, where the company won a gold medal for its radiotelegraph demonstrations. (Marconi withdrew from the Exposition when he learned de Forest would be there).<ref>''Inventing American Broadcasting: 1899–1922'' by Susan J. Douglas, 1987, p. 97.</ref>
Just like [[Pittsburgh]]’s [[KDKA (AM)|KDKA]] four years later in November 1920, DeForest used the Hughes/Wilson presidential election returns for his broadcast. The ''[[New York American]]'' installed a private wire and bulletins were sent out every hour. About 2000 listeners heard ''The Star-Spangled Banner'' and other anthems, songs, and hymns. DeForest went on to sponsor [[radio]] broadcasts of music, featuring opera star [[Enrico Caruso]] and many other events, but he received little financial backing.


The company's most important early contract was the construction, in 1905–1906, of five high-powered radiotelegraph stations for the U.S. Navy, located in Panama, Pensacola and Key West, Florida, Guantanamo, Cuba, and Puerto Rico. It also installed shore stations along the Atlantic Coast and Great Lakes, and equipped shipboard stations. But the main focus was selling stock at ever more inflated prices, spurred by the construction of promotional inland stations. Most of these inland stations had no practical use and were abandoned once the local stock sales slowed.
===Phonofilm sound-on-film process===

De Forest eventually came into conflict with his company's management. His main complaint was the limited support he got for conducting research, while company officials were upset with de Forest's inability to develop a practical receiver free of patent infringement. (This problem was finally resolved with the invention of the [[carborundum]] [[crystal set|crystal]] detector by another company employee, General [[Henry Harrison Chase Dunwoody]]).<ref>''Wireless Communication in the United States: The Early Development of American Radio Operating Companies'' by Thorn L. Mayes, 1989, p. 44.</ref> On November 28, 1906, in exchange for $1000 (half of which was claimed by an attorney) and the rights to some early Audion detector patents, de Forest turned in his stock and resigned from the company that bore his name. American DeForest was then reorganized as the [[United Wireless Telegraph Company]], and would be the dominant U.S. radio communications firm, albeit propped up by massive stock fraud, until its bankruptcy in 1912.

==Radio Telephone Company==
De Forest moved quickly to re-establish himself as an independent inventor, working in his own laboratory in the [[Parker Building (New York City)|Parker Building]] in New York City. The Radio Telephone Company was incorporated in order to promote his inventions, with James Dunlop Smith, a former American DeForest salesman, as president, and de Forest the vice president (De Forest preferred the term [[radio]], which up to now had been primarily used in Europe, over [[wireless]]).

===Arc radiotelephone development===
[[File:LeeDeforest.jpg|right|thumb|Ohio Historical Marker. On July 18, 1907 Lee de Forest transmitted the first ship-to-shore messages that were sent by radiotelephone]]

At the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition, [[Valdemar Poulsen]] had presented a paper on an [[arc converter|arc transmitter]], which unlike the discontinuous pulses produced by spark transmitters, created steady "continuous wave" signals that could be used for [[amplitude modulated]] (AM) audio transmissions. Although Poulsen had patented his invention, de Forest claimed to have come up with a variation that allowed him to avoid infringing on Poulsen's work. Using his "sparkless" arc transmitter, de Forest first transmitted audio across a lab room on December 31, 1906, and by February was making experimental transmissions, including music produced by [[Thaddeus Cahill]]'s [[telharmonium]], that were heard throughout the city.

On July 18, 1907, de Forest made the first ship-to-shore transmissions by radiotelephone—race reports for the Annual Inter-Lakes Yachting Association (I-LYA) Regatta held on [[Lake Erie]]—which were sent from the steam yacht ''Thelma'' to his assistant, Frank E. Butler, located in the Fox's Dock Pavilion on [[South Bass Island]].<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/electricalworld50newy#page/293/mode/1up "Reporting Yacht Races by Wireless Telephony"], ''Electrical World'', August 10, 1907, pp. 293–294. (archive.org)</ref> De Forest also interested the U.S. Navy in his radiotelephone, which placed a rush order to have 26 arc sets installed for its [[Great White Fleet]] around-the-world voyage that began in late 1907. However, at the conclusion of the circumnavigation the sets were declared to be too unreliable to meet the Navy's needs and removed.<ref>''History of Communications-Electronics in the United States Navy'' by Captain L. S. Howeth, USN (Retired), 1963, [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112064674325&view=1up&seq=201 "The Radio Telephone Failure"], pp. 169–172.</ref>

The company set up a network of radiotelephone stations along the Atlantic coast and the Great Lakes, for coastal ship navigation. However, the installations proved unprofitable, and by 1911 the parent company and its subsidiaries were on the brink of bankruptcy.

===Initial broadcasting experiments===
[[File:1910 Mariette Mazarin broadcast.jpg|thumb|right|February 24, 1910 radio broadcast by Mme. Mariette Mazarin of the Manhattan Opera Company.<ref>[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.65463418&view=1up&seq=349 "A Review of Radio"] by Lee de Forest, ''Radio Broadcast'', August 1922, p. 333.</ref>]]
De Forest also used the arc-transmitter to conduct some of the earliest experimental entertainment radio broadcasts. [[Eugenia Farrar]] sang "I Love You Truly" in an unpublicized test from his laboratory in 1907, and in 1908, on de Forest's Paris honeymoon, musical selections were broadcast from the Eiffel Tower as a part of demonstrations of the arc-transmitter. In early 1909, in what may have been the first public speech by radio, de Forest's mother-in-law, [[Harriot Eaton Stanton Blatch|Harriot Stanton Blatch]], made a broadcast supporting women's suffrage.<ref>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1909/02/26/101867811.pdf "Barnard Girls Test Wireless 'Phones"], ''New York Times'', February 26, 1909, p. 7. (nytimes.com)</ref>

More ambitious demonstrations followed. A series of tests in conjunction with the [[Metropolitan Opera House (39th Street)|Metropolitan Opera House]] in New York City were conducted to determine whether it was practical to broadcast opera performances live from the stage. ''[[Tosca]]'' was performed on January 12, 1910, and the next day's test included Italian tenor [[Enrico Caruso]].<ref>[http://archives.metoperafamily.org/archives/scripts/cgiip.exe/WService=BibSpeed/fullcit.w?xCID=46150&limit=5000&xBranch=ALL&xsdate=1/1/1910&xedate=1/31/1910&theterm=caruso&x=0&xhomepath=http://archives.metoperafamily.org/archives/&xhome=http://archives.metoperafamily.org/archives/bibpro.htm "Metropolitan Opera House: January 13, 1910 Broadcast"] (metoperafamily.org)</ref> On February 24, the Manhattan Opera Company's Mme. [[Mariette Mazarin]] sang "La Habanera" from ''Carmen'' and selections from the controversial "Elektra" over a transmitter located in de Forest's lab.<ref>[https://earlyradiohistory.us/1910df2.htm "Radio Telephone Experiments"], ''Modern Electrics'', May 1910, p. 63. (earlyradiohistory.us)</ref> But these tests showed that the idea was not yet technically feasible, and de Forest would not make any additional entertainment broadcasts until late 1916, when more capable vacuum-tube equipment became available.

==="Grid" Audion detector===
{{Main|Audion}}
De Forest's most famous invention was the "grid Audion", which was the first successful three-element ([[triode]]) [[vacuum tube]], and the first device which could amplify electrical signals. He traced its inspiration to 1900, when, experimenting with a spark-gap transmitter, he briefly thought that the flickering of a nearby gas flame might be in response to electromagnetic pulses. With further tests he soon determined that the cause of the flame fluctuations was due to air pressure changes produced by the loud sound of the spark.<ref>De Forest (1950) p. 114. The notebook recordings of the 1900 experiments, including the determination that the flickering was due to sound only, are reproduced on this page.</ref> Still, he was intrigued by the idea that, properly configured, it might be possible to use a flame or something similar to detect radio signals.

After determining that an open flame was too susceptible to ambient air currents, de Forest investigated whether ionized gases, heated and enclosed in a partially evacuated glass tube, could be used instead. In 1905 to 1906 he developed various configurations of glass-tube devices, which he gave the general name of "Audions". The first Audions had only two [[electrode]]s, and on October 25, 1906,<ref>{{cite patent |inventor1-last=De Forest |inventor1-first=Lee |title=Device for Amplifying Feeble Electrical Currents |country=US |number=841387 |fdate=1906-10-25 |pubdate=1907-01-15}}</ref> de Forest filed a patent for the [[diode]] vacuum tube [[detector (radio)|detector]], that was granted U.S. patent number 841387 on January 15, 1907.<!-- Check this patent. Appears to be 3 terminal device with grid on the wrong side. Also version with external solenoid. --> Subsequently, a third "control" electrode was added, originally as a surrounding metal cylinder or a wire coiled around the outside of the glass tube. None of these initial designs worked particularly well.<ref>[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=iau.31858044013914&view=1up&seq=279 "What Everyone Should Know About Radio History: Part II"] by J. H. Morecroft, ''Radio Broadcast'', August 1922, p. 299: "[De Forest] took out a patent in 1905 on a bulb having two hot filaments connected in a peculiar manner, the intended functioning of which is not at all apparent to one comprehending the radio art."</ref> De Forest gave a presentation of his work to date to the October 26, 1906, New York meeting of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, which was reprinted in two parts in late 1907 in the ''Scientific American Supplement''.<ref>"The Audion: A New Receiver for Wireless Telegraphy" by Lee de Forest, ''Scientific American Supplement'': No. 1665, [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112089533605&view=1up&seq=356 November 30, 1907, pp. 348–350] and No. 1666, [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112089533605&view=1up&seq=362 December 7, 1907, pp. 354–356].</ref> He was insistent that a small amount of residual gas was necessary for the tubes to operate properly. However, he also admitted that "I have arrived as yet at no completely satisfactory theory as to the exact means by which the high-frequency oscillations affect so markedly the behavior of an ionized gas."

[[File:Triode tube 1906.jpg|right|thumb|De Forest grid Audion from 1906.]]
In late 1906, de Forest made a breakthrough when he reconfigured the control electrode, moving it from outside the tube envelope to a position inside the tube between the [[Hot cathode|filament]] and the [[Plate electrode|plate]]. He called the intermediate electrode a ''grid'', reportedly due to its similarity to the "gridiron" lines on American football playing fields.<ref>An alternate explanation was given by early associate Frank Butler, who stated that de Forest coined the term because the control electrode looked "just like a roaster grid". ("How the Term 'Grid' Originated", ''Communications'' magazine, December 1930, p. 41.)</ref> Experiments conducted with his assistant, [[John Vincent Lawless Hogan|John V. L. Hogan]], convinced him that he had discovered an important new radio detector. He quickly prepared a patent application which was filed on January 29, 1907, and received {{US Patent| 879,532}} on February 18, 1908. Because the grid-control Audion was the only configuration to become commercially valuable, the earlier versions were forgotten, and the term ''Audion'' later became synonymous with just the grid type. It later also became known as the triode.

The grid Audion was the first device to amplify, albeit only slightly, the strength of received radio signals. However, to many observers it appeared that de Forest had done nothing more than add the grid electrode to an existing detector configuration, the [[Fleming valve]], which also consisted of a filament and plate enclosed in an evacuated glass tube. De Forest passionately denied the similarly of the two devices, claiming his invention was a relay that amplified currents, while the Fleming valve was merely a rectifier that converted alternating current to direct current. (For this reason, de Forest objected to his Audion being referred to as "a valve".) The U.S. courts were not convinced, and ruled that the grid Audion did in fact infringe on the Fleming valve patent, now held by [[Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America|Marconi]]. In contrast, Marconi admitted that the addition of the third electrode was a patentable improvement, and the two sides agreed to license each other so that both could manufacture three-electrode tubes in the United States. (De Forest's European patents had lapsed because he did not have the funds needed to renew them).<ref>De Forest (1950) p. 322.</ref>

Because of its limited uses and the great variability in the quality of individual units, the grid Audion would be rarely used during the first half-decade after its invention. In 1908, John V. L. Hogan reported that "The Audion is capable of being developed into a really efficient detector, but in its present forms is quite unreliable and entirely too complex to be properly handled by the usual wireless operator."<ref>[https://earlyradiohistory.us/1908aud.htm "The Audion; A Third Form of the Gas Detector"] by John L. Hogan, Jr., ''Modern Electrics'', October 1908, p. 233.</ref>

==Employment at Federal Telegraph==
[[File:Electronics Research Laboratory plaque.jpg|right|thumb|[[California Historical Landmark]] No. 836, located at the eastern corner of Channing Street and Emerson Avenue in [[Palo Alto, California]], stands at the former location of the Federal Telegraph laboratory, and references Lee de Forest's development there, in 1911–1913, of "the first vacuum-tube amplifier and oscillator".]]
In May 1910, the Radio Telephone Company and its subsidiaries were reorganized as the North American Wireless Corporation, but financial difficulties meant that the company's activities had nearly come to a halt. De Forest moved to San Francisco, California, and in early 1911 took a research job at the [[Federal Telegraph Company]], which produced long-range radiotelegraph systems using high-powered [[Poulsen arc]]s.

===Audio frequency amplification===
One of de Forest's areas of research at Federal Telegraph was improving the reception of signals, and he came up with the idea of strengthening the [[audio frequency]] output from a grid Audion by feeding it into a second tube for additional amplification. He called this a "cascade amplifier", which eventually consisted of chaining together up to three Audions.

At this time the American Telephone and Telegraph Company was researching ways to amplify telephone signals to provide better long-distance service, and it was recognized that de Forest's device had potential as a telephone line repeater. In mid-1912 an associate, [[John Stone Stone]], contacted AT&T to arrange for de Forest to demonstrate his invention. It was found that de Forest's "gassy" version of the Audion could not handle even the relatively low voltages used by telephone lines. (Owing to the way he constructed the tubes, de Forest's Audions would cease to operate with too high a vacuum.) However, careful research by Dr. [[Harold D. Arnold]] and his team at AT&T's Western Electric subsidiary determined that improving the tube's design would allow it to be more fully evacuated, and the high vacuum allowed it to operate at telephone-line voltages. With these changes the Audion evolved into a modern electron-discharge vacuum tube, using electron flows rather than ions.<ref>''The Continuous Wave: Technology and American Radio, 1900–1932'' by Hugh G. J. Aitken, 1985, pp. 235–244.</ref> (Dr. [[Irving Langmuir]] at the General Electric Corporation made similar findings, and both he and Arnold attempted to patent the "high vacuum" construction, but the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1931 that this modification could not be patented).

After a delay of ten months, in July 1913 AT&T, through a third party who disguised his link to the telephone company, purchased the wire rights to seven Audion patents for $50,000. De Forest had hoped for a higher payment, but was again in bad financial shape and was unable to bargain for more. In 1915, AT&T used the innovation to conduct the first transcontinental telephone calls, in conjunction with the Panama-Pacific International Exposition at San Francisco. <!--technical details regarding de Forest, Armstrong and the history of the audio and the radio may be found in various works, notably in Chapter 1 (A Nonlinear History of Radio) of "Radio Frequency CMOS Integrated Circuits" by Dr. Thomas H Lee.-->

==Reorganized Radio Telephone Company==
Radio Telephone Company officials had engaged in some of the same stock selling excesses that had taken place at American DeForest, and as part of the U.S. government's crackdown on stock fraud, in March 1912 de Forest, plus four other company officials, were arrested and charged with "use of the mails to defraud". Their trials took place in late 1913, and while three of the defendants were found guilty, de Forest was acquitted. With the legal problems behind him, de Forest reorganized his company as the DeForest Radio Telephone Company, and established a laboratory at 1391 Sedgewick Avenue in the Highbridge section of the Bronx in New York City. The company's limited finances were boosted by the sale, in October 1914, of the commercial Audion patent rights for radio signalling to AT&T for $90,000, with de Forest retaining the rights for sales for "amateur and experimental use".<ref>De Forest (1950) p. 327.</ref> In October 1915 AT&T conducted test radio transmissions from the Navy's station in Arlington, Virginia that were heard as far away as Paris and Hawaii.

[[File:Audion vacuum tube advertisement.png|thumb|Audion advertisement, ''Electrical Experimenter'' magazine, August 1916]]
The Radio Telephone Company began selling "Oscillion" power tubes to amateurs, suitable for radio transmissions. The company wanted to keep a tight hold on the tube business, and originally maintained a policy that retailers had to require their customers to return a worn-out tube before they could get a replacement. This style of business encouraged others to make and sell unlicensed vacuum tubes which did not impose a return policy. One of the boldest was Audio Tron Sales Company founded in 1915 by [[Elmer T. Cunningham]] of San Francisco, whose Audio Tron tubes cost less but were of equal or higher quality. The de Forest company sued Audio Tron Sales, eventually settling out of court.<ref>{{cite book|last=Tyne|first=Gerald E. J.|title=Saga of the Vacuum Tube|year=1977|publisher=Howard W. Sams & Company|location=Indianapolis, IN|isbn=0-672-21471-7}} pp. [https://archive.org/details/SagaOfTheVacuumTube/page/n120/mode/1up 119] and [https://archive.org/details/SagaOfTheVacuumTube/page/n163/mode/1up 162].</ref>

In April 1917, the company's remaining commercial radio patent rights were sold to AT&T's Western Electric subsidiary for $250,000.<ref>De Forest (1950) p. 340.</ref> During World War I, the Radio Telephone Company prospered from sales of radio equipment to the military. However, it also became known for the poor quality of its vacuum tubes, especially compared to those produced by major industrial manufacturers such as General Electric and Western Electric.

===Regeneration controversy===
Beginning in 1912, there was increased investigation of vacuum-tube capabilities, simultaneously by numerous inventors in multiple countries, who identified additional important uses for the device. These overlapping discoveries led to complicated legal disputes over priority, perhaps the most bitter being one in the United States between de Forest and [[Edwin Howard Armstrong]] over the discovery of [[regenerative circuit|regeneration]] (also known as the "feedback circuit" and, by de Forest, as the "ultra-audion").<ref>{{cite web|last1=Armstrong|first1=Edwin H.|title=Edwin Armstrong: Pioneer of the Airwaves|url=http://www.columbia.edu/cu/alumni/Magazine/Spring2002/Armstrong.html|website=Living Legacies|publisher=Columbia University|access-date=2017-12-10}}</ref>

Beginning in 1913 Armstrong prepared papers and gave demonstrations that comprehensively documented how to employ three-element vacuum tubes in circuits that amplified signals to stronger levels than previously thought possible, and that could also generate high-power oscillations usable for radio transmission. In late 1913 Armstrong applied for patents covering the [[regenerative circuit]], and on October 6, 1914 {{US Patent|1,113,149}} was issued for his discovery.<ref>''Empire of the Air'' by Tom Lewis, 1991, pp. 77, 87.</ref>

U.S. patent law included a provision for challenging grants if another inventor could prove prior discovery. With an eye to increasing the value of the patent portfolio that would be sold to Western Electric in 1917, beginning in 1915 de Forest filed a series of patent applications that largely copied Armstrong's claims, in the hopes of having the priority of the competing applications upheld by an interference hearing at the patent office. Based on a notebook entry recorded at the time, de Forest asserted that, while working on the cascade amplifier, he had stumbled on August 6, 1912, across the feedback principle, which was then used in the spring of 1913 to operate a low-powered transmitter for [[heterodyne]] reception of Federal Telegraph arc transmissions. However, there was also strong evidence that de Forest was unaware of the full significance of this discovery, as shown by his lack of follow-up and continuing misunderstanding of the physics involved. In particular, it appeared that he was unaware of the potential for further development until he became familiar with Armstrong's research. De Forest was not alone in the interference determination—the patent office identified four competing claimants for its hearings, consisting of Armstrong, de Forest, General Electric's Langmuir, and a German, Alexander Meissner, whose application would be seized by the [[Office of Alien Property Custodian]] during World War I.<ref>''Ibid.'', p. 192.</ref>

The subsequent legal proceedings become divided between two groups of court cases. The first court action began in January 1920 when Armstrong, with Westinghouse, which purchased his patent, sued the De Forest Company in district court for infringement of patent 1,113,149.<ref>US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. (1927). [https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/F2/21/918/1510239/ ''Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. De Forest Radio T. & T. Co., 21 F.2d 918 (3d Cir. 1927)'']. Retrieved Nov. 2021.</ref> On May 17, 1921, the court ruled that the lack of awareness and understanding on de Forest's part, in addition to the fact that he had made no immediate advances beyond his initial observation, made implausible his attempt to prevail as inventor.

However, a second series of court cases, which were the result of the patent office interference proceeding, had a different outcome. The interference board had also sided with Armstrong, and de Forest appealed its decision to the District of Columbia district court. On May 8, 1924, that court concluded that the evidence, beginning with the 1912 notebook entry, was sufficient to establish de Forest's priority. Now on the defensive, Armstrong's side tried to overturn the decision, but these efforts, which twice went before the U.S. Supreme Court, in 1928 and 1934, were unsuccessful.<ref>''Ibid.'', pp. 193–198, 203.</ref>

This judicial ruling meant that Lee de Forest was now legally recognized in the United States as the inventor of regeneration. However, much of the engineering community continued to consider Armstrong to be the actual developer, with de Forest viewed as someone who skillfully used the patent system to get credit for an invention to which he had barely contributed. Following the 1934 Supreme Court decision, Armstrong attempted to return his [[Institute of Radio Engineers]] (present-day [[Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers]]) Medal of Honor, which had been awarded to him in 1917 "in recognition of his work and publications dealing with the action of the oscillating and non-oscillating audion", but the organization's board refused to let him, stating that it "strongly affirms the original award".<ref>{{cite web|title=Edwin H. Armstrong|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Edwin-H-Armstrong|author=Lawrence P. Lessing|website=Encyclopædia Britannica|access-date=2017-12-10}}</ref> The practical effect of de Forest's victory was that his company was free to sell products that used regeneration, for during the controversy, which became more a personal feud than a business dispute, Armstrong tried to block the company from even being licensed to sell equipment under his patent.

De Forest regularly responded to articles which he thought exaggerated Armstrong's contributions with animosity that continued even after Armstrong's 1954 suicide. Following the publication of [[Carl Dreher]]'s "E. H. Armstrong, the Hero as Inventor" in the August 1956 Harper's magazine, de Forest wrote the author, describing Armstrong as "exceedingly arrogant, brow beating, even brutal...", and defending the Supreme Court decision in his favor.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Lewis|first1=Tom|title=Empire of the Air|date=1991|publisher=Harper Collins|isbn=0-06-018215-6|pages=[https://archive.org/details/empireofairmenwh00lewi/page/218 218]–219|edition=first|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/empireofairmenwh00lewi}}</ref>

===Renewed broadcasting activities===
[[File:1916 Lee DeForest Columbia broadcast at 2XG.JPG|thumb|right|De Forest broadcasting Columbia phonograph records (October 1916)<ref name="columbia">[https://mtr.arcade-museum.com/MTR-1916-63-19/MTR-1916-63-19-52.pdf "Columbia Used to Demonstrate Wireless Telephone"], ''The Music Trade Review'', November 4, 1916, p. 52. (arcade-museum.com)</ref>]]
In the summer of 1915, the company received an Experimental license for station [[Radio 2XG|2XG]],<ref>[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b3221816&view=1up&seq=111 "Special Land Stations: New Stations"], ''Radio Service Bulletin'', July 1915, p. 3. The "2" in 2XG's callsign indicated that the station was located in the 2nd Radio Inspection district, while the "X" signified that it held an Experimental license.</ref> located at its Highbridge laboratory. In late 1916, de Forest renewed the entertainment broadcasts he had suspended in 1910, now using the superior capabilities of vacuum-tube equipment.<ref>De Forest (1950) p. 243. He noted that he had been "totally unaware of the fact that in the little audion tube, which I was then using only as a radio detector, lay dormant the principle of ''oscillation'' which, had I but realized it, would have caused me to unceremoniously dump into the ash can all of the fine arc mechanisms which I had ever constructed..."</ref> 2XG's debut program aired on October 26, 1916,<ref name="columbia"/> as part of an arrangement with the [[Columbia Graphophone Company]] to promote its recordings, which included "announcing the title and 'Columbia Gramophone [''sic''] Company' with each playing".<ref>De Forest (1950) p. 337.</ref> Beginning November 1, the "Highbridge Station" offered a nightly schedule featuring the Columbia recordings.

These broadcasts were also used to advertise "the products of the DeForest Radio Co., mostly the radio parts, with all the zeal of our catalogue and price list", until comments by Western Electric engineers caused de Forest enough embarrassment to make him decide to eliminate the direct advertising.<ref>''Ibid.'', pp. 337–338.</ref> The station also made the first audio broadcast of election reports—in earlier elections, stations that broadcast results had used Morse code—providing news of the November 1916 [[1916 United States presidential election|Wilson-Hughes presidential election]].<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/electricalexperi04gern#page/650/mode/1up"Election Returns Flashed by Radio to 7,000 Amateurs"], ''The Electrical Experimenter'', January 1917, p. 650. (archive.org)</ref> The ''[[New York American]]'' installed a private wire and bulletins were sent out every hour. About 2,000 listeners heard ''The Star-Spangled Banner'' and other anthems, songs, and hymns.

With the entry of the United States into World War I on April 6, 1917, all civilian radio stations were ordered to shut down, so 2XG was silenced for the duration of the war. The ban on civilian stations was lifted on October 1, 1919, and 2XG soon renewed operation, with the Brunswick-Balke-Collender company now supplying the phonograph records.<ref>De Forest (1950) p. 350.</ref> In early 1920, de Forest moved the station's transmitter from the Bronx to Manhattan, but did not have permission to do so, so district Radio Inspector [[Arthur Batcheller]] ordered the station off the air. De Forest's response was to return to San Francisco in March, taking 2XG's transmitter with him. A new station, [[KZY|6XC]], was established as "The California Theater station", which de Forest later stated was the "first radio-telephone station devoted solely" to broadcasting to the public.<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/electricalworld77newy#page/936/mode/1up"'Broadcasting' News by Radiotelephone"] (letter from Lee de Forest), ''Electrical World'', April 23, 1921, p. 936. (archive.org)</ref>

Later that year a de Forest associate, Clarence "C.S." Thompson, established Radio News & Music, Inc., in order to lease de Forest radio transmitters to newspapers interested in setting up their own broadcasting stations.<ref>The initial advertisements for Radio News & Music, Inc., appeared on p. 20 of the [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112044127626&view=1up&seq=394 March 13, 1920 ''The Fourth Estate''], and p. 202 of the [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015064566386&view=1up&seq=2366 March 18, 1920 ''Printers' Ink''].</ref> In August 1920, The ''Detroit News'' began operation of "The Detroit News Radiophone", initially with the callsign [[WWJ (AM)|8MK]], which later became broadcasting station [[WWJ (AM)|WWJ]].

==Phonofilm sound-on-film process==
{{main|Phonofilm}}
{{main|Phonofilm}}
[[File:Phonofilm1.jpg|right|thumb|Poster promoting a Phonofilm demonstration (December 1925)]]
In 1919, De Forest filed the first patent on his [[sound-on-film]] process, which improved on the work of Finnish inventor [[Eric Tigerstedt]] and the German partnership [[Tri-Ergon]], and called it the De Forest [[Phonofilm]] process. Phonofilm recorded sound directly onto film as parallel lines of variable shades of gray, and later became known as a "variable density" system as opposed to "variable area" systems such as [[RCA Photophone]]. These lines [[photograph]]ically recorded electrical waveforms from a [[microphone]], which were translated back into [[sound]] waves when the movie was projected. This system, which synchronized sound directly onto film, was used to record stage performances (such as in vaudeville), speeches, and musical acts. In November 1922, De Forest established his De Forest Phonofilm Company at 314 East 48th Street in New York City, but none of the [[Hollywood, California|Hollywood]] [[film studio|movie studios]] expressed any interest in his invention.
In 1921, de Forest ended most of his radio research in order to concentrate on developing an optical [[sound-on-film]] process called [[Phonofilm]]. In 1919 he filed the first patent for the new system, which improved upon earlier work by Finnish inventor [[Eric Tigerstedt]] and the German partnership [[Tri-Ergon]]. Phonofilm recorded the electrical waveforms produced by a microphone photographically onto film, using parallel lines of variable shades of gray, an approach known as "variable density", in contrast to "variable area" systems used by processes such as [[RCA Photophone]]. When the movie film was projected, the recorded information was converted back into sound, in synchronization with the picture.


From October 1921 to September 1922, de Forest lived in [[Berlin]], Germany, meeting the Tri-Ergon developers (German inventors [[Josef Engl]] (1893–1942), [[Hans Vogt (engineer)|Hans Vogt]] (1890–1979), and [[Joseph Massolle]] (1889–1957)) and investigating other European sound film systems. In April 1922 he announced that he would soon have a workable sound-on-film system.<ref>"Lee de Forest and Phonofilm: Virtual Broadway" from ''The Talkies: American Cinema's Transition to Sound, 1926–1931'' by Donald Crafton (1999)</ref> On March 12, 1923, he demonstrated Phonofilm to the press;<ref>[https://www.wired.com/2008/03/dayintech-0312/ "March 12, 1923: Talkies Talk... On Their Own"] by Randy Alfred, ''Wired'', March 12, 2008. (wired.com)</ref> this was followed on April 12, 1923, by a private demonstration to electrical engineers at the Engineering Society Building's Auditorium at [[Engineering Societies' Building|33 West 39th Street]] in New York City.
De Forest premiered 18 short films made in Phonofilm on 15 April 1923 at the Rivoli Theater in New York City. He was forced to show his films in independent theaters such as the Rivoli, since Hollywood movie studios controlled all major theater chains. De Forest chose to film primarily short [[vaudeville]] acts, not features, limiting the appeal of his process to Hollywood studios. [[Max Fleischer]] and [[Dave Fleischer]] used the Phonofilm process for their [[Sound Car-Tunes|Song Car-Tune]] series of cartoons—featuring the "Follow the Bouncing Ball" gimmick—starting in May 1924. De Forest also worked with [[Freeman Harrison Owens]] and [[Theodore Case]], using Owens's and Case's work to perfect the Phonofilm system. However, DeForest had a falling out with both men. Case took his patents to studio head [[William Fox (producer)|William Fox]], owner of [[Fox Film Corporation]], who then perfected the [[Movietone sound system|Fox Movietone]] process. Shortly before the Phonofilm Company filed for bankruptcy in September 1926, Hollywood introduced a new method for [[sound film]], the [[sound-on-disc]] process developed by [[Warner Brothers]] as [[Vitaphone]], with the [[John Barrymore]] film ''[[Don Juan (1926 film)|Don Juan]]'', released 6 August 1926.


In November 1922, de Forest established the De Forest Phonofilm Company, located at 314 East 48th Street in New York City. But none of the [[Hollywood, California|Hollywood]] movie studios expressed interest in his invention, and because at this time these studios controlled all the major theater chains, this meant de Forest was limited to showing his experimental films in independent theaters (The Phonofilm Company would file for bankruptcy in September 1926.).
In 1927 and 1928, Hollywood began to use sound-on-film systems, including Fox Movietone and RCA Photophone. Meanwhile, a theater chain owner, [[M. B. Schlesinger]], acquired the [[United Kingdom|UK]] rights to Phonofilm and released short films of British [[music hall]] performers from September 1926 to May 1929. Almost 200 short films were made in the Phonofilm process, and many are preserved in the collections of the [[Library of Congress]] and the [[British Film Institute]].<ref>Today, many sources such as the [[Encyclopaedia Britannica]] list De Forest as one of the inventors of sound film.</ref>


After recording stage performances (such as in vaudeville), speeches, and musical acts, on April 15, 1923, de Forest premiered 18 Phonofilm short films at the independent Rivoli Theater in New York City. Starting in May 1924, [[Max Fleischer|Max]] and [[Dave Fleischer]] used the Phonofilm process for their [[Sound Car-Tunes|Song Car-Tune]] series of cartoons—featuring the "[[Bouncing ball (music)|Follow the Bouncing Ball]]" gimmick. However, de Forest's choice of primarily filming short [[vaudeville]] acts, instead of full-length features, limited the appeal of Phonofilm to Hollywood studios.
==Later years and death==
De Forest sold one of his radio manufacturing firms to [[RCA]] in 1931. In 1934, the courts sided with De Forest against [[Edwin Armstrong]] (although the technical community did not agree with the courts). De Forest won the court battle, but he lost the battle for public opinion. His peers would not take him seriously as an inventor or trust him as a colleague. {{Citation needed|date=August 2007}}


De Forest also worked with [[Freeman Harrison Owens]] and [[Theodore Case]], using their work to perfect the Phonofilm system. However, de Forest had a falling out with both men. Due to de Forest's continuing misuse of Theodore Case's inventions and failure to publicly acknowledge Case's contributions, the Case Research Laboratory proceeded to build its own camera. That camera was used by Case and his colleague Earl Sponable to record [[Calvin Coolidge]] on August 11, 1924, which was one of the films shown by de Forest and claimed by him to be the product of his inventions.
In 1940 he sent a famous [[open letter]] to the [[National Association of Broadcasters]] in which he demanded to know, "What have you done with my child, the radio broadcast? You have debased this child, dressed him in rags of ragtime, tatters of jive and boogie-woogie."


Believing that de Forest was more concerned with his own fame and recognition than he was with actually creating a workable system of sound film, and because of his continuing attempts to downplay the contributions of the Case Research Laboratory in the creation of Phonofilm, Case severed his ties with de Forest in the fall of 1925. Case successfully negotiated an agreement to use his patents with studio head [[William Fox (producer)|William Fox]], owner of [[Fox Film Corporation]], who marketed the innovation as [[Movietone sound system|Fox Movietone]]. [[Warner Brothers]] introduced a competing method for sound film, the [[Vitaphone]] [[sound-on-disc]] process developed by [[Western Electric]], with the August 6, 1926, release of the [[John Barrymore]] film ''[[Don Juan (1926 film)|Don Juan]]''.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20101011023221/http://www.cinematechnologymagazine.com/pdf/dion%20sound.pdf "The History of Sound in the Cinema"] by Dion Hanson, ''Cinema Technology'', July/August 1998, pp. 8–13.</ref><ref>''Hollywood be Thy Name: The Warner Brothers Story'' by Cass Warner Sperling, Cork Millner and Jack Warner (1998), p. 111.</ref>
For De Forest's initially rejected, but later adopted, movie soundtrack method, he was given an [[Academy Honorary Award|Academy Award]] (Oscar) in 1959/1960 for "his pioneering inventions which brought sound to the motion picture", and a star on the [[Hollywood Walk of Fame]].


In 1927 and 1928, Hollywood expanded its use of sound-on-film systems, including Fox Movietone and RCA Photophone. Meanwhile, theater chain owner [[Isadore Schlesinger]] purchased the [[United Kingdom|UK]] rights to Phonofilm and released short films of British [[music hall]] performers from September 1926 to May 1929. Almost 200 Phonofilm shorts were made, and many are preserved in the collections of the [[Library of Congress]] and the [[British Film Institute]].
De Forest was the guest celebrity on the May 22, 1957 episode of the television show ''[[This Is Your Life]]'', where he was introduced as "the father of radio and the grandfather of television". Highlights of this, as well as a film clip of his 1940 NAB letter, can be found in the 1991 [[Ken Burns]] PBS documentary, whose title was based on one of his quotes: [[Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio]]. The documentary portrays De Forest as a man of dubious integrity with a relentless desire to become wealthy and famous as an inventor, seemingly at any cost.


==Later years and death==
De Forest authored an autobiography ''Father of Radio'' in 1957, but suffered a severe heart attack a year later, and remained mostly bedridden.<ref>''Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio''. PBS: 1992.</ref> He died in Hollywood on June 30, 1961, aged 87, and was interred in [[San Fernando Mission Cemetery]] in [[Los Angeles, California]].<ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Lee De Forest, 87, Radio Pioneer, Dies; Lee De Forest, Inventor, Is Dead at 87 |url= |quote=[[Hollywood, California]], July 1, 1961. Dr. Lee De Forest, the inventor known as the father of radio, died last night at his home. He was 87 years old. |publisher=New York Times |date=July 2, 1961, Sunday |accessdate=2007-07-21 }}</ref> De Forest died relatively poor, with just $1,250 in his bank account at the time of his death.<ref>''Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio''</ref>
In April 1923, the [[De Forest Radio Telephone & Telegraph Company]], which manufactured de Forest's Audions for commercial use, was sold to a group headed by [[Edward Jewett]] of [[Jewett-Paige Motors]], which expanded the company's factory to cope with rising demand for radios. The sale also bought the services of de Forest, who was focusing his attention on newer innovations.<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/radiodigest1923461923radi#page/n235/mode/1up "DeForest Company Bought by Jewett"], ''Radio Digest'', April 21, 1923, p. 2.</ref> De Forest's finances were badly hurt by the stock market crash of 1929, and research in mechanical television proved unprofitable. In 1934, he established a small shop to produce [[diathermy]] machines, and, in a 1942 interview, still hoped "to make at least one more great invention".<ref>"'Magnificent Failure'" by Samuel Lubell, ''Saturday Evening Post'', January 31, 1942, p. 49.</ref>

De Forest was a vocal critic of many of the developments in the entertainment side of the radio industry. In 1940 he sent an open letter to the [[National Association of Broadcasters]] in which he demanded: "What have you done with my child, the radio broadcast? You have debased this child, dressed him in rags of ragtime, tatters of jive and boogie-woogie." That same year, de Forest and early TV engineer [[Ulises Armand Sanabria]] presented the concept of a primitive [[unmanned combat air vehicle]] using a [[television camera]] and a jam-resistant radio control in a ''[[Popular Mechanics]]'' issue.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=19kDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA805 "Robot Television Bomber"], ''Popular Mechanics'', December 1940, pp. 805–806.</ref> In 1950 his autobiography, ''Father of Radio'', was published, although it sold poorly.


[[File:Lee de Forest 2012 002 6580 sx61dn13g crop.tiff|thumb|right| De Forest visiting Beckman Industries in Germany, 1955]]
De Forest's archives were donated through his widow to the [[Perham Electronic Foundation]], and housed in a museum at [[Foothill College]] in [[Los Altos]]. In 1991 the college broke its contract and closed the museum. The foundation later won a lawsuit, and was awarded $775,000. The archives are stored in San Jose, waiting for space, perhaps in the [[Kelley Park|San Jose Historical Park]].<ref>{{cite news |first=Max |last=Millard |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Lee de Forest, Class of 1893:Father of the Electronics Age |url=http://www.maxmillard.com/articles/mthermo2.htm |quote= |publisher=Northfield Mount Hermon Alumni Magazine |date=October 1993 |accessdate=22011-01-20 }}</ref>
De Forest was the guest celebrity on the May 22, 1957, episode of the television show ''[[This Is Your Life (American franchise)|This Is Your Life]]'', where he was introduced as "the father of radio and the grandfather of television".<ref>Highlights of this episode, as well as a film clip of his 1940 NAB letter, are included in the 1992 [[Ken Burns]] PBS documentary [[Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio]].</ref> He suffered a severe heart attack in 1958, after which he remained mostly bedridden.<ref>''Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio''. PBS: 1992.</ref> He died in Hollywood on June 30, 1961, aged 87, and was interred in [[San Fernando Mission Cemetery]] in Los Angeles, California.<ref>[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=MsdaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=NmwDAAAAIBAJ&pg=7333%2C394648 "Dr. DeForest, Father of Radio, Dead at 87"] (AP), ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette'', July 2, 1961, p. 4: "Hollywood, California, July 1, 1961. Dr. Lee de Forest, 87, the so-called 'father of radio', died at his home here Friday."</ref> De Forest died relatively poor, with just $1,250 in his bank account.<ref>''Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio''</ref>


==Legacy==
==Legacy==
[[File:DeForest building San Jose.jpg|thumb|The DeForest Lofts at [[Santana Row]], [[San Jose, California]], are in this building named for Lee de Forest.]]
De Forest received the [[Institute of Radio Engineers|IRE]] [[IEEE Medal of Honor|Medal of Honor]] in 1922, as "recognition for his invention of the three-electrode amplifier and his other contributions to radio". He was awarded the [[Franklin Institute]]'s [[Elliott Cresson Medal]] in 1923. In 1946, he received the [[Edison Medal]] of the [[American Institute of Electrical Engineers]] 'For the profound technical and social consequences of the grid-controlled vacuum tube which he had introduced'. An important annual medal awarded to engineers by the [[Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers]] is named the Lee De Forest Medal.
The grid Audion, which de Forest called "my greatest invention", and the vacuum tubes developed from it, dominated the field of [[electronics]] for forty years, making possible long-distance telephone service, [[radio broadcasting]], television, and many other applications. It could also be used as an electronic switching element, and was later used in early digital electronics, including the first electronic computers, although the 1948 invention of the [[transistor]] would lead to microchips that eventually supplanted vacuum-tube technology. For this reason de Forest has been called one of the founders of the "electronic age".<ref>''Quantum Generations: A History of Physics in the Twentieth Century'' by Helge Kragh, 2002, p. 127: "...De Forest's invention of the triode (or "audion") was the starting point of the electronic age."</ref><ref>''Dawn of the Electronic Age'' by Frederick Nebeker, 2009, p. 15: "The triode vacuum-tube is one of the small number of technical devices... that have radically changed human culture. It defined a new realm of technology, that of electronics..."</ref>


According to Donald Beaver, his intense desire to overcome the deficiencies of his childhood account for his independence, self-reliance, and inventiveness. He displayed a strong desire to achieve, to conquer hardship, and to devote himself to a career of invention. "He possessed the qualities of the traditional tinkerer-inventor: visionary faith, self-confidence, perseverance, the capacity for sustained hard work."<ref>John A. Garraty, ed., ''encyclopedia of American biography 1974 pp 268–269. </ref>
==Politics==
De Forest was a conservative Republican and fervent anti-[[communist]] and anti-[[fascist]]. In 1932 he had voted for [[Franklin Roosevelt]], in the midst of the [[Great Depression]], but later came to resent him, calling Roosevelt America's "first Fascist president". In 1949, he "sent letters to all members of Congress urging them to vote against [[socialized medicine]], federally subsidized housing, and an excess profits tax." In 1952, he wrote newly elected Vice President [[Richard Nixon]], urging him to "prosecute with renewed vigor your valiant fight to put out Communism from every branch of our government". In December 1953, he cancelled his subscription to ''[[The Nation]]'', accusing it of being "lousy with Treason, crawling with Communism."<ref>James A. Hijya, ''Lee De Forest and the Fatherhood of Radio'' (1992), Lehigh University Press, pages 119-120</ref>


De Forest's archives were donated by his widow to the [[Perham Electronic Foundation]], which in 1973 opened the [[Foothills Electronics Museum]] at [[Foothill College]] in Los Altos Hills, California. In 1991 the college closed the museum, breaking its contract. The foundation won a lawsuit and was awarded $775,000.<ref>{{cite news |first=Max |last=Millard |title=Lee de Forest, Class of 1893: Father of the Electronics Age |url=http://www.maxmillard.com/articles/mthermo2.htm |publisher=Northfield Mount Hermon Alumni Magazine |date=October 1993 |access-date=2017-12-10}}</ref> The holdings were placed in storage for twelve years, before being acquired in 2003 by History San José and put on display as The Perham Collection of Early Electronics.<ref>[http://perhamcollection.historysanjose.org/ "The Perham Collection of Early Electronics at History San José"] (perhamcollection.historysanjose.org)</ref>
==Quotes==
De Forest was given to expansive predictions, many of which were not borne out, but he also made many correct predictions, including microwave communication and cooking.
*"I foresee great refinements in the field of short-pulse microwave signaling, whereby several simultaneous programs may occupy the same channel, in sequence, with incredibly swift electronic communication. [...] Short waves will be generally used in the kitchen for roasting and baking, almost instantaneously" – 1952 <ref name="PopMech">{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Dawn of the Electronic Age |url=http://blog.modernmechanix.com/2006/03/20/dawn-of-the-electronic-age |quote= |publisher=[[Popular Mechanics]] |date=January 1952 |accessdate=2007-07-21 }}</ref>


==Awards and recognition==
*"So I repeat that while theoretically and technically television may be feasible, yet commercially and financially I consider it an impossibility; a development of which we need not waste little time in dreaming." – 1926<ref>{{cite book|last=Gawlinski|first=Mark|title=Interactive television production|year=2003|publisher=Focal Press|isbn=0240516796|page=89}}</ref>
* Charter member, in 1912, of the [[Institute of Radio Engineers]] (IRE).
*"To place a man in a multi-stage rocket and project him into the controlling gravitational field of the moon where the passengers can make scientific observations, perhaps land alive, and then return to earth—all that constitutes a wild dream worthy of [[Jules Verne]]. I am bold enough to say that such a man-made voyage will never occur regardless of all future advances." – 1926<ref>[[Wikiquote]]: [[Wikiquote:Incorrect predictions#Space travel|Incorrect predictions]] (space travel)</ref>{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}}
* Received the 1922 IRE [[IEEE Medal of Honor|Medal of Honor]], in "recognition for his invention of the three-electrode amplifier and his other contributions to radio".<ref>[http://ethw.org/IEEE_Medal_of_Honor#List_of_Medal_of_Honor_Recipients "IRE Medal of Honor Recipients 1917–1963"] (ethw.org)</ref>
*"I do not foresee 'spaceships' to the moon or Mars. Mortals must live and die on Earth or within its atmosphere!" – 1952<ref name="PopMech"/>
* Awarded the 1923 [[Franklin Institute]] [[Elliott Cresson Medal]] for "inventions embodied in the Audion".
*"As a growing competitor to the tube amplifier comes now the Bell Laboratories’ transistor, a three-electrode germanium crystal of amazing amplification power, of wheat-grain size and low cost. Yet its frequency limitations, a few hundred [[kilohertz|kilocycles]], and its strict power limitations will never permit its general replacement of the Audion amplifier." – 1952<ref name="PopMech"/>
* Received the 1946 [[American Institute of Electrical Engineers]] [[Edison Medal]], "For the profound technical and social consequences of the grid-controlled vacuum tube which he had introduced".
*"I came, I saw, I invented--it's that simple--no need to sit and think--it's all in your imagination"{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}}
* [[Academy Honorary Award|Honorary Academy Award]] [[Academy Awards|Oscar]] presented by the [[32nd Academy Awards|Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences]] in 1960, in recognition of "his pioneering inventions which brought sound to the motion picture".<ref>[https://www.oscars.org/oscar/ceremonies/1960/memorable-moments "The 32nd Academy Awards: Memorable Moments"] (oscars.org)</ref>
* Honored February 8, 1960, with a star on the [[Hollywood Walk of Fame]].<ref>[https://www.walkoffame.com/lee-de-forest "Hollywood Walk of Fame: Lee De Forest"] (walkoffame.com)</ref>
* [[DeVry University]] was originally named the De Forest Training School by its founder Dr. Herman A. De Vry, who was a friend and colleague of de Forest.


== Personal life ==
==Notable Items==
=== Marriages ===
Lee De Forest's great nephew, actor [[Calvert DeForest]], became well known in another broadcasting venue some 75 years following his uncle's Audion invention. Calvert DeForest portrayed the comic "Larry 'Bud' Melman" character on [[David Letterman]]'s late night television programs for two decades.
[[File:Mary Mayo (1892-1957) who married Lee DeForest.jpg|thumb|Mary Mayo, his third wife]]
De Forest was married four times, with the first three marriages ending in divorce:
* Lucille Sheardown in February 1906. Divorced before the end of the year.<ref name="Sterling 2004 p. 980">{{cite book |last=Sterling |first=C.H. |title=Encyclopedia of Radio 3-Volume Set |publisher=Taylor & Francis |year=2004 |isbn=978-1-135-45648-1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5oimpCPL1ewC&pg=PT980 |access-date=20 May 2021 |page=980 |quote=The first of these, in 1906, was to a Lucille Sheardown, a marriage thatended in divorce the same year.}}</ref>
* [[Nora Stanton Blatch Barney]] (1883–1971) on February 14, 1908. They had a daughter, Harriet, but were separated by 1909 and divorced in 1912.<ref name="Publishing Hollar 2012 p. 113">{{cite book |last1=Publishing |first1=B.E. |last2=Hollar |first2=S. |title=Pioneers of the Industrial Age: Breakthroughs in Technology |publisher=Rosen Publishing Group |series=Inventors and Innovators |year=2012 |isbn=978-1-61530-745-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6RGcAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA113 |access-date=20 May 2021 |page=113}}</ref><ref name="Bailey 1994 p. 19">{{cite book |last=Bailey |first=M.J. |title=American Women in Science: A Biographical Dictionary |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=1994 |isbn=978-0-87436-740-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Nm1qAAAAMAAJ |access-date=20 May 2021 |page=19}}</ref>
* Mary Mayo White (1891–1957), stage name Mary Mayo, in December 1912. According to census records, in 1920 they were living with their infant daughter, Deena (born {{circa|1919}}); divorced October 5, 1930 (per ''Los Angeles Times''). Mayo died December 30, 1957, in a fire in Los Angeles.<ref>"Second Wife of De Forest Dies in Blaze", ''Los Angeles Times'', December 31, 1957, part III, p. 2.</ref>
* [[Marie Mosquini]] (1899–1983) on October 10, 1930; Mosquini was a silent film actress, and they remained married until his death in 1961.<ref name="Froehlich Kent 1992 p. 288">{{cite book |last1=Froehlich |first1=F.E. |last2=Kent |first2=A. |title=The Froehlich/Kent Encyclopedia of Telecommunications: Volume 5 – Crystal and Ceramic Filters to Digital-Loop Carrier |publisher=Taylor & Francis |year=1992 |isbn=978-0-8247-2903-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3s0yBitFcy8C&pg=PA288 |access-date=20 May 2021 |page=288}}</ref>


=== Politics ===
''[[Star Trek]]'' actor [[DeForest Kelley]] was named after Lee De Forest.
De Forest was a conservative Republican and fervent [[anti-communist]] and [[anti-fascist]]. In 1932, in the midst of the Great Depression, he voted for [[Franklin Roosevelt]], but later came to resent him, calling Roosevelt America's "first Fascist president". In 1949, he "sent letters to all members of Congress urging them to vote against [[socialized medicine]], federally subsidized housing, and an excess profits tax". In 1952, he wrote to the newly elected Vice President [[Richard Nixon]], urging him to "prosecute with renewed vigor your valiant fight to put out Communism from every branch of our government". In December 1953, he cancelled his subscription to ''[[The Nation]]'', accusing it of being "lousy with Treason, crawling with Communism."<ref>James A. Hijya, ''Lee de Forest and the Fatherhood of Radio'' (1992), Lehigh University Press, pp. 119–120.</ref>


=== Religious views ===
==Personal life==
Although raised in a strongly religious Protestant household, de Forest later became an agnostic.<ref name="Adams 2011 p. 31">{{cite book |last=Adams |first=M. |title=Lee de Forest: King of Radio, television, and Film |publisher=Springer New York |series=SpringerLink : Bücher |year=2011 |isbn=978-1-4614-0418-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y_NMWZFVgCsC&pg=PA31 |access-date=20 May 2021 |page=31}}</ref> In his autobiography, he wrote that in the summer of 1894 there was an important shift in his beliefs: "Through that Freshman vacation at Yale I became more of a philosopher than I have ever since. And thus, one by one, were my childhood's firm religious beliefs altered or reluctantly discarded."<ref name="De Forest 1950 p. 71">{{cite book |last=De Forest |first=L. |title=Father of Radio: The Autobiography of Lee De Forest |publisher=Wilcox & Follett |year=1950 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AoVRAAAAMAAJ |access-date=20 May 2021 |page=71}}</ref>
Lee de Forest had four wives:


==Quotes==
*[[Lucille Sheardown]] in February 1906. They divorced the same year they were married.
De Forest was given to expansive predictions, many of which were not borne out, but he also made many correct predictions, including microwave communication and cooking.
*[[Nora Stanton Blatch Barney]] (1883–1971) in February 1907. They had a daughter, Harriet, but were divorced by 1911.
* "I discovered an Invisible Empire of the Air, intangible, yet solid as granite."<ref>Campbell, Richard, Christopher R. Martin, and Bettina Fabos. "Sounds and Images." ''Media and Culture: An Introduction to Mass Communication''. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2000. 113, additional text.</ref>
*[[Mary Mayo]] (1892–1921) in December 1912. According to census records, in 1920 they were living with their infant daughter, Deena (born ca. 1919); divorced October 5, 1930 (per Los Angeles Times). Died in a fire in Los Angeles, December 30, 1957 (per Los Angeles Times, December 31, 1957)
* "I foresee great refinements in the field of short-pulse microwave signaling, whereby several simultaneous programs may occupy the same channel, in sequence, with incredibly swift electronic communication. [...] Short waves will be generally used in the kitchen for roasting and baking, almost instantaneously." – 1952<ref name="PopMech">[https://books.google.com/books?id=tNwDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA154 "Dawn of the Electronic Age"] by Lee de Forest, ''Popular Mechanics'', December 1940, pp. 154–159, 358, 360, 362, 364.</ref>
*[[Marie Mosquini]] (1899–1983) on October 10, 1930; Mosquini was a [[silent film]] actress, and she and DeForest remained married until his death in 1961.
* "So I repeat that while theoretically and technically television may be feasible, yet commercially and financially, I consider it an impossibility; a development of which we need not waste little time in dreaming." – 1926<ref>{{cite book|last=Gawlinski|first=Mark|title=Interactive television production|year=2003|publisher=Focal Press|isbn=0-240-51679-6|page=89}}</ref>
* "To place a man in a multi-stage rocket and project him into the controlling gravitational field of the moon where the passengers can make scientific observations, perhaps land alive, and then return to earth—all that constitutes a wild dream worthy of [[Jules Verne]]. I am bold enough to say that such a man-made voyage will never occur regardless of all future advances." – 1957<ref>[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=KXhfAAAAIBAJ&sjid=my8MAAAAIBAJ&pg=3288%2C6595098 "De Forest Says Space Travel Is Impossible"] (AP), ''Lewiston (Idaho) Morning Tribune'', February 25, 1957.</ref>
* "I do not foresee 'spaceships' to the moon or Mars. Mortals must live and die on Earth or within its atmosphere!" – 1952<ref name="PopMech"/>
* "As a growing competitor to the tube amplifier comes now the Bell Laboratories’ transistor, a three-electrode germanium crystal of amazing amplification power, of wheat-grain size and low cost. Yet its frequency limitations, a few hundred [[kilohertz|kilocycles]], and its strict power limitations will never permit its general replacement of the Audion amplifier." – 1952<ref name="PopMech"/>
* "I came, I saw, I invented—it's that simple—no need to sit and think—it's all in your imagination."{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}}


==Patents==
==Patents==
''Patent images in [[TIFF]] format''
''Patent images in [[TIFF]] format''
* {{US patent|0824637}} "Oscillation Responsive Device" (vacuum tube detector diode), filed January 1906, issued June 1906
* {{US patent|748597}} "Wireless Signaling Device" (directional antenna), filed December 1902, issued January 1904;
* {{US patent|0827523}} "Wireless Telegraph System" (separate transmitting and receiving antennas), filed December 1905, issued July 1906
* {{US patent|824637}} "Oscillation Responsive Device" (vacuum tube detector diode), filed January 1906, issued June 1906;
* {{US patent|0827524}} "Wireless Telegraph System", filed January 1906 issued July 1906
* {{US patent|827523}} "Wireless Telegraph System" (separate transmitting and receiving antennas), filed December 1905, issued July 1906;
* {{US patent|0836070}} "Oscillation Responsive Device" (vacuum tube detector - no grid), filed May 1906, issued November 1906
* {{US patent|827524}} "Wireless Telegraph System," filed January 1906 issued July 1906;
* {{US patent|0841386}} "Wireless Telegraphy" (tunable vacuum tube detector - no grid), filed August 1906, issued January 1907
* {{US patent|836070}} "Oscillation Responsive Device" (vacuum tube detector no grid), filed May 1906, issued November 1906;
* {{US patent|0876165}} "Wireless Telegraph Transmitting System" (antenna coupler), filed May 1904, issued January 1908
* {{US patent|841386}} "Wireless Telegraphy" (tunable vacuum tube detector – no grid), filed August 1906, issued January 1907;
* {{US patent|0879532}} "Space Telegraphy" (increased sensitivity detector - clearly shows grid), filed January 1907, issued February 18, 1908
* {{US patent|841387}} "Device for Amplifying Feeble Electrical Currents" (...), filed August 1906, issued January 1907;
* {{US patent|0926933}} "Wireless Telegraphy"
* {{US patent|876165}} "Wireless Telegraph Transmitting System" (antenna coupler), filed May 1904, issued January 1908;
* {{US patent|879532}} "Space Telegraphy" (increased sensitivity detector – clearly shows grid), filed January 1907, issued February 18, 1908;
* {{US patent|0926934}} "Wireless Telegraph Tuning Device"
* {{US patent|0926935}} "Wireless Telegraph Transmitter", filed February 1906, issued July 1909
* {{US patent|926933}} "Wireless Telegraphy";
* {{US patent|0926936}} "Space Telegraphy"
* {{US patent|926934}} "Wireless Telegraph Tuning Device";
* {{US patent|0926937}} "Space Telephony"
* {{US patent|926935}} "Wireless Telegraph Transmitter," filed February 1906, issued July 1909;
* {{US patent|0979275}} "Oscillation Responsive Device" (parallel plates in [[Bunsen burner|Bunsen]] flame) filed February 1905, issued December 1910
* {{US patent|926936}} "Space Telegraphy";
* {{US patent|926937}} "Space Telephony";
* {{US patent|979275}} "Oscillation Responsive Device" (parallel plates in [[Bunsen burner|Bunsen]] flame) filed February 1905, issued December 1910;
* {{US patent|1025908}}
* {{US patent|1025908}} "Transmission of Music by Electromagnetic Waves";
* {{US patent|1101533}} "Wireless Telegraphy" (directional antenna/direction finder), filed June 1906, issued June 1914
* {{US patent|1101533}} "Wireless Telegraphy" (directional antenna/direction finder), filed June 1906, issued June 1914;
* {{US patent|1214283}} "Wireless Telegraphy"
* {{US patent|1214283}} "Wireless Telegraphy."
* {{US patent|1214283}} "Wireless Signaling Device" (directional antenna), filed December 1902, issued January 1904


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts]]
* [[Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts]]
* [[Robert von Lieben]]
*[[Birth of public radio broadcasting]]


==References and notes==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist|30em}}

==Further reading==
* Adams, Mike. ''Lee de Forest: King of Radio, Television, and Film'' (Springer Science & Business Media, 2011).
* Adams, Mike. "Lee de Forest and the Invention of Sound Movies, 1918–1926" ''The AWA Review'' (vol. 26, 2013).
* Aitken, , Hugh G. J. ''The Continuous Wave: Technology and American Radio, 1900–1932'' (1985).
* De Forest, Lee. ''Father of Radio: the Autobiography of Lee de Forest''' (Wilcox & Follett, 1950).
* Chipman, Robert A. "De Forest and the Triode Detector" ''Scientific American'', March 1965, pp. 93–101.
* Hijiya, James A. ''Lee de Forest and the Fatherhood of Radio'' (Lehigh UP, 1992).
* {{Cite CAB|wstitle= De Forest, Lee |last= Homans |first= James E. |author-link= |page= |short=}}
* Lubell, Samuel. "'Magnificent Failure'" ''Saturday Evening Post'', three parts: January 17, 1942 (pp. 9–11, 75–76, 78, 80), January 24, 1942 (pp. 20–21, 27–28, 38, and 43), and January 31, 1942 (pp. 27, 38, 40–42, 46, 48–49).
* Tyne, Gerald E. J. [https://archive.org/details/SagaOfTheVacuumTube/page/n4/mode/1up ''Saga of the Vacuum Tube''] (Howard W. Sams and Company, 1977). Tyne was a research associate with the [[Smithsonian Institution]]. Details de Forest's activities from the invention of the Audion to 1930.
* ''Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio'' by [[Ken Burns]] a PBS Documentary Video 1992. Focuses on three of the individuals who made significant contributions to the early radio industry in the United States: De Forest, [[David Sarnoff]] and [[Edwin Armstrong]]. [https://www.pbs.org/kenburns/empire/ LINK] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181206030242/https://www.pbs.org/kenburns/empire/ |date=2018-12-06 }}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Commons category|Lee De Forest}}
{{wikisource author}}
{{wikiquote}}
{{wikiquote}}
*[http://www.leedeforest.org Lee de Forest, American Inventor]
* [http://www.leedeforest.org Lee de Forest, American Inventor] (leedeforest.com)
* {{IMDb name|208418}}
*[http://www.deforestradio.com Dr. Lee De Forest internet radio project & forum]
* [https://ethw.org/Lee_De_Forest Lee de Forest biography] (ethw.org)
*{{imdb name|0208418}}
*[http://www.ieee.org/web/aboutus/history_center/biography/deforest.html Lee De Forest] at [[IEEE]]
* [https://www.invent.org/inductees/lee-de-forest Lee de Forest biography] at [[National Inventors Hall of Fame]]
* {{YouTube|aZR9KdkMlhM|A Few Moments with Eddie Cantor (1923) (De Forest Phonofilm Sound Movie)}}
*[http://www.invent.org/hall_of_fame/40.html Lee De Forest] at [[National Inventors Hall of Fame]]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20030610154810/http://www.geocities.com/lyon95065/Radio.html "Who said Lee de Forest was the 'Father of Radio'?"] by Stephen Greene, ''Mass Comm Review'', February 1991.
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aZR9KdkMlhM De Forest Phonofilm Sound Movie with Eddie Cantor (1923)]
* [https://en.wikisource.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=File:March_1916_QST.djvu&page=2 "Practical Pointers on the Audion"] by A. B. Cole, Sales Manager – De Forest Radio Tel. & Tel. Co., ''QST'', March 1916, pp. 41–44. (wikisource.org)
*[http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.geocities.com/lyon95065/Radio.html&date=2009-10-26+02:02:28 Stephen Greene's ''Who said Lee de Forest was the "Father of Radio"?'']
* [http://aireradio.org/Superet_arms/storia%20della%20reazione.pdf "A History of the Regeneration Circuit: From Invention to Patent Litigation]" by Sungook Hong, Seoul National University (PDF)
* Eugenii Katz's [http://chem.ch.huji.ac.il/~eugeniik/history/deforest.htm Lee De Forest]
* [https://www.shorpy.com/node/19414 "De Forest Phonofilm Co. Inc. on White House grounds"] (1924) (shorpy.com)
* Cole, A. B., "''[http://earlyradiohistory.us/audi1916.htm Practical Pointers on the Audion]: Sales Manager - De Forest Radio Tel. & Tel. Co.''", QST, March, 1916, pages 41–44:
* [https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.CRMS159 Guide to the Lee De Forest Papers 1902–1953] at the [https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/scrc/ University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center]
* Hong, Sungook, "''[http://www.ieee.org/organizations/history_center/Che2004/Hong.pdf A History of the Regeneration Circuit: From Invention to Patent Litigation]''" University, Seoul, Korea (PDF)
* [[PBS]], "[http://www.pbs.org/transistor/quicktimes/movieclips/monkeysVIDEO/monkeysVIDEO_MSTR.mov ''Monkeys'']"; a film on the Audion operation ([[QuickTime]] movie)


{{IEEE Edison Medal Laureates 1926-1950}}
{{IEEE Edison Medal Laureates 1926-1950}}
{{IEEE Medal of Honor Laureates 1917-1925}}
{{IEEE Medal of Honor Laureates 1917-1925}}
{{Academy Honorary Award}}
{{Telecommunications}}

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{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = De Forest, Lee
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| DATE OF BIRTH = August 26, 1873
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Council Bluffs, Iowa]], [[United States|U.S.]]
| DATE OF DEATH = June 30, 1961
| PLACE OF DEATH = [[Hollywood, Los Angeles, California|Hollywood, California]], [[United States|U.S.]]
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:De Forest, Lee}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:De Forest, Lee}}
[[Category:1873 births]]
[[Category:1873 births]]
[[Category:1961 deaths]]
[[Category:1961 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century American inventors]]
[[Category:Academy Honorary Award recipients]]
[[Category:American agnostics]]
[[Category:American agnostics]]
[[Category:American inventors]]
[[Category:American anti-fascists]]
[[Category:American anti-communists]]
[[Category:American electrical engineers]]
[[Category:American electrical engineers]]
[[Category:Burials at San Fernando Mission Cemetery]]
[[Category:California Republicans]]
[[Category:History of radio in the United States]]
[[Category:Illinois Institute of Technology faculty]]
[[Category:Illinois Institute of Technology faculty]]
[[Category:IEEE Edison Medal recipients]]
[[Category:IEEE Medal of Honor recipients]]
[[Category:Naval Consulting Board]]
[[Category:Northfield Mount Hermon School alumni]]
[[Category:People from Council Bluffs, Iowa]]
[[Category:People from Council Bluffs, Iowa]]
[[Category:Yale University alumni]]
[[Category:Radio pioneers]]
[[Category:Radio pioneers]]
[[Category:IEEE Medal of Honor recipients]]
[[Category:Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science alumni]]
[[Category:Academy Honorary Award recipients]]
[[Category:Presidents of the Institute of Radio Engineers]]
[[Category:IEEE Edison Medal recipients]]
[[Category:Stanton family]]
[[Category:National Inventors Hall of Fame inductees]]

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[[uk:Лі де Форест]]

Latest revision as of 21:55, 5 December 2024

Lee de Forest
Lee de Forest c. 1904
Born(1873-08-26)August 26, 1873
DiedJune 30, 1961(1961-06-30) (aged 87)
Alma materYale College (Sheffield Scientific School)
OccupationInventor
Known forThree-electrode vacuum-tube (Audion), sound-on-film recording (Phonofilm)
Spouses
Lucille Sheardown
(m. 1906; div. 1906)
(m. 1908; div. 1911)
Mary Mayo
(m. 1912; div. 1923)
(m. 1930)
AwardsIEEE Medal of Honor (1922)
Elliott Cresson Medal (1923)
IEEE Edison Medal (1946)
Audio Engineering Society Gold Medal Award (1955)

Lee de Forest (August 26, 1873 – June 30, 1961) was an American inventor, electrical engineer and an early pioneer in electronics of fundamental importance. He invented the first practical electronic amplifier, the three-element "Audion" triode vacuum tube in 1906. This helped start the Electronic Age, and enabled the development of the electronic oscillator. These made radio broadcasting and long distance telephone lines possible, and led to the development of talking motion pictures, among countless other applications.

He had over 300 patents worldwide, but also a tumultuous career – he boasted that he made, then lost, four fortunes. He was also involved in several major patent lawsuits, spent a substantial part of his income on legal bills, and was even tried (and acquitted) for mail fraud.

Despite this, he was recognised for his pioneering work with the 1922 IEEE Medal of Honor, the 1923 Franklin Institute Elliott Cresson Medal and the 1946 American Institute of Electrical Engineers Edison Medal.

Early life

[edit]

Lee de Forest was born in 1873 in Council Bluffs, Iowa, the son of Anna Margaret (née Robbins) and Henry Swift DeForest.[1][2] He was a direct descendant of Jessé de Forest, the leader of a group of Walloon Huguenots who fled Europe in the 17th century due to religious persecution.

De Forest's father was a Congregational Church minister who hoped his son would also become a pastor. In 1879 the elder de Forest became president of the American Missionary Association's Talladega College in Talladega, Alabama, a school "open to all of either sex, without regard to sect, race, or color", and which educated primarily African-Americans. Many of the local white citizens resented the school and its mission, and Lee spent most of his youth in Talladega isolated from the white community, with several close friends among the black children of the town.

De Forest prepared for college by attending Mount Hermon Boys' School in Gill, Massachusetts, for two years, beginning in 1891. In 1893, he enrolled in a three-year course of studies at Yale University's Sheffield Scientific School in New Haven, Connecticut, on a $300 per year scholarship that had been established for relatives of David de Forest. Convinced that he was destined to become a famous—and rich—inventor, and perpetually short of funds, he sought to interest companies with a series of devices and puzzles he created, and expectantly submitted essays in prize competitions, all with little success.

After completing his undergraduate studies, in September 1896 de Forest began three years of postgraduate work. However, his electrical experiments had a tendency to blow fuses, causing building-wide blackouts. Even after being warned to be more careful, he managed to douse the lights during an important lecture by Professor Charles S. Hastings, who responded by having de Forest expelled from Sheffield.

With the outbreak of the Spanish–American War in 1898, de Forest enrolled in the Connecticut Volunteer Militia Battery as a bugler, but the war ended and he was mustered out without ever leaving the state. He then completed his studies at Yale's Sloane Physics Laboratory, earning a Doctorate in 1899 with a dissertation on the "Reflection of Hertzian Waves from the Ends of Parallel Wires", supervised by theoretical physicist Willard Gibbs.[3]

Early radio work

[edit]
De Forest, some time between 1914 and 1922, with two of his Audions, a small 1 watt receiving tube (left), and a later 250-watt transmitting power tube (right), which he called an "oscillion".

Reflecting his pioneering work, de Forest has sometimes been credited as the "Father of Radio",[4][5][6] an honorific which he adopted as the title of his 1950 autobiography. In the late 1800s he became convinced there was a great future in radiotelegraphic communication (then known as "wireless telegraphy"), but Italian Guglielmo Marconi, who received his first patent in 1896, was already making impressive progress in both Europe and the United States. One drawback of Marconi's approach was his use of a coherer as a receiver, which, while providing for permanent records, was also slow (after each received Morse code dot or dash, it had to be tapped to restore operation), insensitive, and not very reliable. De Forest was determined to devise a better system, including a self-restoring detector that could receive transmissions by ear, thus making it capable of receiving weaker signals and also allowing faster Morse code sending speeds.

After making unsuccessful inquiries about employment with Nikola Tesla and Marconi, de Forest struck out on his own. His first job after leaving Yale was with the Western Electric Company's telephone lab in Chicago, Illinois. While there he developed his first receiver, which was based on findings by two German scientists, Drs. A. Neugschwender and Emil Aschkinass. Their original design consisted of a mirror in which a narrow, moistened slit had been cut through the silvered back. Attaching a battery and telephone receiver, they could hear sound changes in response to radio signal impulses. De Forest, along with Ed Smythe, a co-worker who provided financial and technical help, developed variations they called "responders".

A series of short-term positions followed, including three unproductive months with Professor Warren S. Johnson's American Wireless Telegraph Company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and work as an assistant editor of the Western Electrician in Chicago. With radio research his main priority, de Forest next took a night teaching position at the Lewis Institute, which freed him to conduct experiments at the Armour Institute.[7] By 1900, using a spark-coil transmitter and his responder receiver, de Forest expanded his transmitting range to about seven kilometers (four miles). Professor Clarence Freeman of the Armour Institute became interested in de Forest's work and developed a new type of spark transmitter.

De Forest soon felt that Smythe and Freeman were holding him back, so in the fall of 1901 he made the bold decision to go to New York to compete directly with Marconi in transmitting race results for the International Yacht races. Marconi had already made arrangements to provide reports for the Associated Press, which he had successfully done for the 1899 contest. De Forest contracted to do the same for the smaller Publishers' Press Association.

The race effort turned out to be an almost total failure. The Freeman transmitter broke down—in a fit of rage, de Forest threw it overboard—and had to be replaced by an ordinary spark coil. Even worse, the American Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Company, which claimed its ownership of Amos Dolbear's 1886 patent for wireless communication meant it held a monopoly for all wireless communication in the United States, had also set up a powerful transmitter. None of these companies had effective tuning for their transmitters, so only one could transmit at a time without causing mutual interference. Although an attempt was made to have the three systems avoid conflicts by rotating operations over five-minute intervals, the agreement broke down, resulting in chaos as the simultaneous transmissions clashed with each other.[8] De Forest ruefully noted that under these conditions the only successful "wireless" communication was done by visual semaphore "wig-wag" flags.[9] (The 1903 International Yacht races would be a repeat of 1901—Marconi worked for the Associated Press, de Forest for the Publishers' Press Association, and the unaffiliated International Wireless Company (successor to 1901's American Wireless Telephone and Telegraph) operated a high-powered transmitter that was used primarily to drown out the other two.)[10]

American De Forest Wireless Telegraph Company

[edit]
American DeForest Wireless Telegraph Company's observation tower, 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition at Saint Louis, Missouri[11]

Despite this setback, de Forest remained in the New York City area, in order to raise interest in his ideas and capital to replace the small working companies that had been formed to promote his work thus far. In January 1902 he met a promoter, Abraham White, who would become de Forest's main sponsor for the next five years. White envisioned bold and expansive plans that enticed the inventor—however, he was also dishonest and much of the new enterprise would be built on wild exaggeration and stock fraud. To back de Forest's efforts, White incorporated the American DeForest Wireless Telegraph Company, with himself as the company's president, and de Forest the Scientific Director. The company claimed as its goal the development of "world-wide wireless".

The original "responder" receiver (also known as the "goo anti-coherer") proved to be too crude to be commercialized, and de Forest struggled to develop a non-infringing device for receiving radio signals. In 1903, Reginald Fessenden demonstrated an electrolytic detector, and de Forest developed a variation, which he called the "spade detector", claiming it did not infringe on Fessenden's patents. Fessenden, and the U.S. courts, did not agree, and court injunctions enjoined American De Forest from using the device.

Meanwhile, White set in motion a series of highly visible promotions for American DeForest: "Wireless Auto No.1" was positioned on Wall Street to "send stock quotes" using an unmuffled spark transmitter to loudly draw the attention of potential investors, in early 1904 two stations were established at Wei-hai-Wei on the Chinese mainland and aboard the Chinese steamer SS Haimun, which allowed war correspondent Captain Lionel James of The Times of London to report on the brewing Russo-Japanese War,[12] and later that year a tower, with "DEFOREST" arrayed in lights, was erected on the grounds of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in Saint Louis, Missouri, where the company won a gold medal for its radiotelegraph demonstrations. (Marconi withdrew from the Exposition when he learned de Forest would be there).[13]

The company's most important early contract was the construction, in 1905–1906, of five high-powered radiotelegraph stations for the U.S. Navy, located in Panama, Pensacola and Key West, Florida, Guantanamo, Cuba, and Puerto Rico. It also installed shore stations along the Atlantic Coast and Great Lakes, and equipped shipboard stations. But the main focus was selling stock at ever more inflated prices, spurred by the construction of promotional inland stations. Most of these inland stations had no practical use and were abandoned once the local stock sales slowed.

De Forest eventually came into conflict with his company's management. His main complaint was the limited support he got for conducting research, while company officials were upset with de Forest's inability to develop a practical receiver free of patent infringement. (This problem was finally resolved with the invention of the carborundum crystal detector by another company employee, General Henry Harrison Chase Dunwoody).[14] On November 28, 1906, in exchange for $1000 (half of which was claimed by an attorney) and the rights to some early Audion detector patents, de Forest turned in his stock and resigned from the company that bore his name. American DeForest was then reorganized as the United Wireless Telegraph Company, and would be the dominant U.S. radio communications firm, albeit propped up by massive stock fraud, until its bankruptcy in 1912.

Radio Telephone Company

[edit]

De Forest moved quickly to re-establish himself as an independent inventor, working in his own laboratory in the Parker Building in New York City. The Radio Telephone Company was incorporated in order to promote his inventions, with James Dunlop Smith, a former American DeForest salesman, as president, and de Forest the vice president (De Forest preferred the term radio, which up to now had been primarily used in Europe, over wireless).

Arc radiotelephone development

[edit]
Ohio Historical Marker. On July 18, 1907 Lee de Forest transmitted the first ship-to-shore messages that were sent by radiotelephone

At the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition, Valdemar Poulsen had presented a paper on an arc transmitter, which unlike the discontinuous pulses produced by spark transmitters, created steady "continuous wave" signals that could be used for amplitude modulated (AM) audio transmissions. Although Poulsen had patented his invention, de Forest claimed to have come up with a variation that allowed him to avoid infringing on Poulsen's work. Using his "sparkless" arc transmitter, de Forest first transmitted audio across a lab room on December 31, 1906, and by February was making experimental transmissions, including music produced by Thaddeus Cahill's telharmonium, that were heard throughout the city.

On July 18, 1907, de Forest made the first ship-to-shore transmissions by radiotelephone—race reports for the Annual Inter-Lakes Yachting Association (I-LYA) Regatta held on Lake Erie—which were sent from the steam yacht Thelma to his assistant, Frank E. Butler, located in the Fox's Dock Pavilion on South Bass Island.[15] De Forest also interested the U.S. Navy in his radiotelephone, which placed a rush order to have 26 arc sets installed for its Great White Fleet around-the-world voyage that began in late 1907. However, at the conclusion of the circumnavigation the sets were declared to be too unreliable to meet the Navy's needs and removed.[16]

The company set up a network of radiotelephone stations along the Atlantic coast and the Great Lakes, for coastal ship navigation. However, the installations proved unprofitable, and by 1911 the parent company and its subsidiaries were on the brink of bankruptcy.

Initial broadcasting experiments

[edit]
February 24, 1910 radio broadcast by Mme. Mariette Mazarin of the Manhattan Opera Company.[17]

De Forest also used the arc-transmitter to conduct some of the earliest experimental entertainment radio broadcasts. Eugenia Farrar sang "I Love You Truly" in an unpublicized test from his laboratory in 1907, and in 1908, on de Forest's Paris honeymoon, musical selections were broadcast from the Eiffel Tower as a part of demonstrations of the arc-transmitter. In early 1909, in what may have been the first public speech by radio, de Forest's mother-in-law, Harriot Stanton Blatch, made a broadcast supporting women's suffrage.[18]

More ambitious demonstrations followed. A series of tests in conjunction with the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City were conducted to determine whether it was practical to broadcast opera performances live from the stage. Tosca was performed on January 12, 1910, and the next day's test included Italian tenor Enrico Caruso.[19] On February 24, the Manhattan Opera Company's Mme. Mariette Mazarin sang "La Habanera" from Carmen and selections from the controversial "Elektra" over a transmitter located in de Forest's lab.[20] But these tests showed that the idea was not yet technically feasible, and de Forest would not make any additional entertainment broadcasts until late 1916, when more capable vacuum-tube equipment became available.

"Grid" Audion detector

[edit]

De Forest's most famous invention was the "grid Audion", which was the first successful three-element (triode) vacuum tube, and the first device which could amplify electrical signals. He traced its inspiration to 1900, when, experimenting with a spark-gap transmitter, he briefly thought that the flickering of a nearby gas flame might be in response to electromagnetic pulses. With further tests he soon determined that the cause of the flame fluctuations was due to air pressure changes produced by the loud sound of the spark.[21] Still, he was intrigued by the idea that, properly configured, it might be possible to use a flame or something similar to detect radio signals.

After determining that an open flame was too susceptible to ambient air currents, de Forest investigated whether ionized gases, heated and enclosed in a partially evacuated glass tube, could be used instead. In 1905 to 1906 he developed various configurations of glass-tube devices, which he gave the general name of "Audions". The first Audions had only two electrodes, and on October 25, 1906,[22] de Forest filed a patent for the diode vacuum tube detector, that was granted U.S. patent number 841387 on January 15, 1907. Subsequently, a third "control" electrode was added, originally as a surrounding metal cylinder or a wire coiled around the outside of the glass tube. None of these initial designs worked particularly well.[23] De Forest gave a presentation of his work to date to the October 26, 1906, New York meeting of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, which was reprinted in two parts in late 1907 in the Scientific American Supplement.[24] He was insistent that a small amount of residual gas was necessary for the tubes to operate properly. However, he also admitted that "I have arrived as yet at no completely satisfactory theory as to the exact means by which the high-frequency oscillations affect so markedly the behavior of an ionized gas."

De Forest grid Audion from 1906.

In late 1906, de Forest made a breakthrough when he reconfigured the control electrode, moving it from outside the tube envelope to a position inside the tube between the filament and the plate. He called the intermediate electrode a grid, reportedly due to its similarity to the "gridiron" lines on American football playing fields.[25] Experiments conducted with his assistant, John V. L. Hogan, convinced him that he had discovered an important new radio detector. He quickly prepared a patent application which was filed on January 29, 1907, and received U.S. patent 879,532 on February 18, 1908. Because the grid-control Audion was the only configuration to become commercially valuable, the earlier versions were forgotten, and the term Audion later became synonymous with just the grid type. It later also became known as the triode.

The grid Audion was the first device to amplify, albeit only slightly, the strength of received radio signals. However, to many observers it appeared that de Forest had done nothing more than add the grid electrode to an existing detector configuration, the Fleming valve, which also consisted of a filament and plate enclosed in an evacuated glass tube. De Forest passionately denied the similarly of the two devices, claiming his invention was a relay that amplified currents, while the Fleming valve was merely a rectifier that converted alternating current to direct current. (For this reason, de Forest objected to his Audion being referred to as "a valve".) The U.S. courts were not convinced, and ruled that the grid Audion did in fact infringe on the Fleming valve patent, now held by Marconi. In contrast, Marconi admitted that the addition of the third electrode was a patentable improvement, and the two sides agreed to license each other so that both could manufacture three-electrode tubes in the United States. (De Forest's European patents had lapsed because he did not have the funds needed to renew them).[26]

Because of its limited uses and the great variability in the quality of individual units, the grid Audion would be rarely used during the first half-decade after its invention. In 1908, John V. L. Hogan reported that "The Audion is capable of being developed into a really efficient detector, but in its present forms is quite unreliable and entirely too complex to be properly handled by the usual wireless operator."[27]

Employment at Federal Telegraph

[edit]
California Historical Landmark No. 836, located at the eastern corner of Channing Street and Emerson Avenue in Palo Alto, California, stands at the former location of the Federal Telegraph laboratory, and references Lee de Forest's development there, in 1911–1913, of "the first vacuum-tube amplifier and oscillator".

In May 1910, the Radio Telephone Company and its subsidiaries were reorganized as the North American Wireless Corporation, but financial difficulties meant that the company's activities had nearly come to a halt. De Forest moved to San Francisco, California, and in early 1911 took a research job at the Federal Telegraph Company, which produced long-range radiotelegraph systems using high-powered Poulsen arcs.

Audio frequency amplification

[edit]

One of de Forest's areas of research at Federal Telegraph was improving the reception of signals, and he came up with the idea of strengthening the audio frequency output from a grid Audion by feeding it into a second tube for additional amplification. He called this a "cascade amplifier", which eventually consisted of chaining together up to three Audions.

At this time the American Telephone and Telegraph Company was researching ways to amplify telephone signals to provide better long-distance service, and it was recognized that de Forest's device had potential as a telephone line repeater. In mid-1912 an associate, John Stone Stone, contacted AT&T to arrange for de Forest to demonstrate his invention. It was found that de Forest's "gassy" version of the Audion could not handle even the relatively low voltages used by telephone lines. (Owing to the way he constructed the tubes, de Forest's Audions would cease to operate with too high a vacuum.) However, careful research by Dr. Harold D. Arnold and his team at AT&T's Western Electric subsidiary determined that improving the tube's design would allow it to be more fully evacuated, and the high vacuum allowed it to operate at telephone-line voltages. With these changes the Audion evolved into a modern electron-discharge vacuum tube, using electron flows rather than ions.[28] (Dr. Irving Langmuir at the General Electric Corporation made similar findings, and both he and Arnold attempted to patent the "high vacuum" construction, but the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1931 that this modification could not be patented).

After a delay of ten months, in July 1913 AT&T, through a third party who disguised his link to the telephone company, purchased the wire rights to seven Audion patents for $50,000. De Forest had hoped for a higher payment, but was again in bad financial shape and was unable to bargain for more. In 1915, AT&T used the innovation to conduct the first transcontinental telephone calls, in conjunction with the Panama-Pacific International Exposition at San Francisco.

Reorganized Radio Telephone Company

[edit]

Radio Telephone Company officials had engaged in some of the same stock selling excesses that had taken place at American DeForest, and as part of the U.S. government's crackdown on stock fraud, in March 1912 de Forest, plus four other company officials, were arrested and charged with "use of the mails to defraud". Their trials took place in late 1913, and while three of the defendants were found guilty, de Forest was acquitted. With the legal problems behind him, de Forest reorganized his company as the DeForest Radio Telephone Company, and established a laboratory at 1391 Sedgewick Avenue in the Highbridge section of the Bronx in New York City. The company's limited finances were boosted by the sale, in October 1914, of the commercial Audion patent rights for radio signalling to AT&T for $90,000, with de Forest retaining the rights for sales for "amateur and experimental use".[29] In October 1915 AT&T conducted test radio transmissions from the Navy's station in Arlington, Virginia that were heard as far away as Paris and Hawaii.

Audion advertisement, Electrical Experimenter magazine, August 1916

The Radio Telephone Company began selling "Oscillion" power tubes to amateurs, suitable for radio transmissions. The company wanted to keep a tight hold on the tube business, and originally maintained a policy that retailers had to require their customers to return a worn-out tube before they could get a replacement. This style of business encouraged others to make and sell unlicensed vacuum tubes which did not impose a return policy. One of the boldest was Audio Tron Sales Company founded in 1915 by Elmer T. Cunningham of San Francisco, whose Audio Tron tubes cost less but were of equal or higher quality. The de Forest company sued Audio Tron Sales, eventually settling out of court.[30]

In April 1917, the company's remaining commercial radio patent rights were sold to AT&T's Western Electric subsidiary for $250,000.[31] During World War I, the Radio Telephone Company prospered from sales of radio equipment to the military. However, it also became known for the poor quality of its vacuum tubes, especially compared to those produced by major industrial manufacturers such as General Electric and Western Electric.

Regeneration controversy

[edit]

Beginning in 1912, there was increased investigation of vacuum-tube capabilities, simultaneously by numerous inventors in multiple countries, who identified additional important uses for the device. These overlapping discoveries led to complicated legal disputes over priority, perhaps the most bitter being one in the United States between de Forest and Edwin Howard Armstrong over the discovery of regeneration (also known as the "feedback circuit" and, by de Forest, as the "ultra-audion").[32]

Beginning in 1913 Armstrong prepared papers and gave demonstrations that comprehensively documented how to employ three-element vacuum tubes in circuits that amplified signals to stronger levels than previously thought possible, and that could also generate high-power oscillations usable for radio transmission. In late 1913 Armstrong applied for patents covering the regenerative circuit, and on October 6, 1914 U.S. patent 1,113,149 was issued for his discovery.[33]

U.S. patent law included a provision for challenging grants if another inventor could prove prior discovery. With an eye to increasing the value of the patent portfolio that would be sold to Western Electric in 1917, beginning in 1915 de Forest filed a series of patent applications that largely copied Armstrong's claims, in the hopes of having the priority of the competing applications upheld by an interference hearing at the patent office. Based on a notebook entry recorded at the time, de Forest asserted that, while working on the cascade amplifier, he had stumbled on August 6, 1912, across the feedback principle, which was then used in the spring of 1913 to operate a low-powered transmitter for heterodyne reception of Federal Telegraph arc transmissions. However, there was also strong evidence that de Forest was unaware of the full significance of this discovery, as shown by his lack of follow-up and continuing misunderstanding of the physics involved. In particular, it appeared that he was unaware of the potential for further development until he became familiar with Armstrong's research. De Forest was not alone in the interference determination—the patent office identified four competing claimants for its hearings, consisting of Armstrong, de Forest, General Electric's Langmuir, and a German, Alexander Meissner, whose application would be seized by the Office of Alien Property Custodian during World War I.[34]

The subsequent legal proceedings become divided between two groups of court cases. The first court action began in January 1920 when Armstrong, with Westinghouse, which purchased his patent, sued the De Forest Company in district court for infringement of patent 1,113,149.[35] On May 17, 1921, the court ruled that the lack of awareness and understanding on de Forest's part, in addition to the fact that he had made no immediate advances beyond his initial observation, made implausible his attempt to prevail as inventor.

However, a second series of court cases, which were the result of the patent office interference proceeding, had a different outcome. The interference board had also sided with Armstrong, and de Forest appealed its decision to the District of Columbia district court. On May 8, 1924, that court concluded that the evidence, beginning with the 1912 notebook entry, was sufficient to establish de Forest's priority. Now on the defensive, Armstrong's side tried to overturn the decision, but these efforts, which twice went before the U.S. Supreme Court, in 1928 and 1934, were unsuccessful.[36]

This judicial ruling meant that Lee de Forest was now legally recognized in the United States as the inventor of regeneration. However, much of the engineering community continued to consider Armstrong to be the actual developer, with de Forest viewed as someone who skillfully used the patent system to get credit for an invention to which he had barely contributed. Following the 1934 Supreme Court decision, Armstrong attempted to return his Institute of Radio Engineers (present-day Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) Medal of Honor, which had been awarded to him in 1917 "in recognition of his work and publications dealing with the action of the oscillating and non-oscillating audion", but the organization's board refused to let him, stating that it "strongly affirms the original award".[37] The practical effect of de Forest's victory was that his company was free to sell products that used regeneration, for during the controversy, which became more a personal feud than a business dispute, Armstrong tried to block the company from even being licensed to sell equipment under his patent.

De Forest regularly responded to articles which he thought exaggerated Armstrong's contributions with animosity that continued even after Armstrong's 1954 suicide. Following the publication of Carl Dreher's "E. H. Armstrong, the Hero as Inventor" in the August 1956 Harper's magazine, de Forest wrote the author, describing Armstrong as "exceedingly arrogant, brow beating, even brutal...", and defending the Supreme Court decision in his favor.[38]

Renewed broadcasting activities

[edit]
De Forest broadcasting Columbia phonograph records (October 1916)[39]

In the summer of 1915, the company received an Experimental license for station 2XG,[40] located at its Highbridge laboratory. In late 1916, de Forest renewed the entertainment broadcasts he had suspended in 1910, now using the superior capabilities of vacuum-tube equipment.[41] 2XG's debut program aired on October 26, 1916,[39] as part of an arrangement with the Columbia Graphophone Company to promote its recordings, which included "announcing the title and 'Columbia Gramophone [sic] Company' with each playing".[42] Beginning November 1, the "Highbridge Station" offered a nightly schedule featuring the Columbia recordings.

These broadcasts were also used to advertise "the products of the DeForest Radio Co., mostly the radio parts, with all the zeal of our catalogue and price list", until comments by Western Electric engineers caused de Forest enough embarrassment to make him decide to eliminate the direct advertising.[43] The station also made the first audio broadcast of election reports—in earlier elections, stations that broadcast results had used Morse code—providing news of the November 1916 Wilson-Hughes presidential election.[44] The New York American installed a private wire and bulletins were sent out every hour. About 2,000 listeners heard The Star-Spangled Banner and other anthems, songs, and hymns.

With the entry of the United States into World War I on April 6, 1917, all civilian radio stations were ordered to shut down, so 2XG was silenced for the duration of the war. The ban on civilian stations was lifted on October 1, 1919, and 2XG soon renewed operation, with the Brunswick-Balke-Collender company now supplying the phonograph records.[45] In early 1920, de Forest moved the station's transmitter from the Bronx to Manhattan, but did not have permission to do so, so district Radio Inspector Arthur Batcheller ordered the station off the air. De Forest's response was to return to San Francisco in March, taking 2XG's transmitter with him. A new station, 6XC, was established as "The California Theater station", which de Forest later stated was the "first radio-telephone station devoted solely" to broadcasting to the public.[46]

Later that year a de Forest associate, Clarence "C.S." Thompson, established Radio News & Music, Inc., in order to lease de Forest radio transmitters to newspapers interested in setting up their own broadcasting stations.[47] In August 1920, The Detroit News began operation of "The Detroit News Radiophone", initially with the callsign 8MK, which later became broadcasting station WWJ.

Phonofilm sound-on-film process

[edit]
Poster promoting a Phonofilm demonstration (December 1925)

In 1921, de Forest ended most of his radio research in order to concentrate on developing an optical sound-on-film process called Phonofilm. In 1919 he filed the first patent for the new system, which improved upon earlier work by Finnish inventor Eric Tigerstedt and the German partnership Tri-Ergon. Phonofilm recorded the electrical waveforms produced by a microphone photographically onto film, using parallel lines of variable shades of gray, an approach known as "variable density", in contrast to "variable area" systems used by processes such as RCA Photophone. When the movie film was projected, the recorded information was converted back into sound, in synchronization with the picture.

From October 1921 to September 1922, de Forest lived in Berlin, Germany, meeting the Tri-Ergon developers (German inventors Josef Engl (1893–1942), Hans Vogt (1890–1979), and Joseph Massolle (1889–1957)) and investigating other European sound film systems. In April 1922 he announced that he would soon have a workable sound-on-film system.[48] On March 12, 1923, he demonstrated Phonofilm to the press;[49] this was followed on April 12, 1923, by a private demonstration to electrical engineers at the Engineering Society Building's Auditorium at 33 West 39th Street in New York City.

In November 1922, de Forest established the De Forest Phonofilm Company, located at 314 East 48th Street in New York City. But none of the Hollywood movie studios expressed interest in his invention, and because at this time these studios controlled all the major theater chains, this meant de Forest was limited to showing his experimental films in independent theaters (The Phonofilm Company would file for bankruptcy in September 1926.).

After recording stage performances (such as in vaudeville), speeches, and musical acts, on April 15, 1923, de Forest premiered 18 Phonofilm short films at the independent Rivoli Theater in New York City. Starting in May 1924, Max and Dave Fleischer used the Phonofilm process for their Song Car-Tune series of cartoons—featuring the "Follow the Bouncing Ball" gimmick. However, de Forest's choice of primarily filming short vaudeville acts, instead of full-length features, limited the appeal of Phonofilm to Hollywood studios.

De Forest also worked with Freeman Harrison Owens and Theodore Case, using their work to perfect the Phonofilm system. However, de Forest had a falling out with both men. Due to de Forest's continuing misuse of Theodore Case's inventions and failure to publicly acknowledge Case's contributions, the Case Research Laboratory proceeded to build its own camera. That camera was used by Case and his colleague Earl Sponable to record Calvin Coolidge on August 11, 1924, which was one of the films shown by de Forest and claimed by him to be the product of his inventions.

Believing that de Forest was more concerned with his own fame and recognition than he was with actually creating a workable system of sound film, and because of his continuing attempts to downplay the contributions of the Case Research Laboratory in the creation of Phonofilm, Case severed his ties with de Forest in the fall of 1925. Case successfully negotiated an agreement to use his patents with studio head William Fox, owner of Fox Film Corporation, who marketed the innovation as Fox Movietone. Warner Brothers introduced a competing method for sound film, the Vitaphone sound-on-disc process developed by Western Electric, with the August 6, 1926, release of the John Barrymore film Don Juan.[50][51]

In 1927 and 1928, Hollywood expanded its use of sound-on-film systems, including Fox Movietone and RCA Photophone. Meanwhile, theater chain owner Isadore Schlesinger purchased the UK rights to Phonofilm and released short films of British music hall performers from September 1926 to May 1929. Almost 200 Phonofilm shorts were made, and many are preserved in the collections of the Library of Congress and the British Film Institute.

Later years and death

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In April 1923, the De Forest Radio Telephone & Telegraph Company, which manufactured de Forest's Audions for commercial use, was sold to a group headed by Edward Jewett of Jewett-Paige Motors, which expanded the company's factory to cope with rising demand for radios. The sale also bought the services of de Forest, who was focusing his attention on newer innovations.[52] De Forest's finances were badly hurt by the stock market crash of 1929, and research in mechanical television proved unprofitable. In 1934, he established a small shop to produce diathermy machines, and, in a 1942 interview, still hoped "to make at least one more great invention".[53]

De Forest was a vocal critic of many of the developments in the entertainment side of the radio industry. In 1940 he sent an open letter to the National Association of Broadcasters in which he demanded: "What have you done with my child, the radio broadcast? You have debased this child, dressed him in rags of ragtime, tatters of jive and boogie-woogie." That same year, de Forest and early TV engineer Ulises Armand Sanabria presented the concept of a primitive unmanned combat air vehicle using a television camera and a jam-resistant radio control in a Popular Mechanics issue.[54] In 1950 his autobiography, Father of Radio, was published, although it sold poorly.

De Forest visiting Beckman Industries in Germany, 1955

De Forest was the guest celebrity on the May 22, 1957, episode of the television show This Is Your Life, where he was introduced as "the father of radio and the grandfather of television".[55] He suffered a severe heart attack in 1958, after which he remained mostly bedridden.[56] He died in Hollywood on June 30, 1961, aged 87, and was interred in San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Los Angeles, California.[57] De Forest died relatively poor, with just $1,250 in his bank account.[58]

Legacy

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The DeForest Lofts at Santana Row, San Jose, California, are in this building named for Lee de Forest.

The grid Audion, which de Forest called "my greatest invention", and the vacuum tubes developed from it, dominated the field of electronics for forty years, making possible long-distance telephone service, radio broadcasting, television, and many other applications. It could also be used as an electronic switching element, and was later used in early digital electronics, including the first electronic computers, although the 1948 invention of the transistor would lead to microchips that eventually supplanted vacuum-tube technology. For this reason de Forest has been called one of the founders of the "electronic age".[59][60]

According to Donald Beaver, his intense desire to overcome the deficiencies of his childhood account for his independence, self-reliance, and inventiveness. He displayed a strong desire to achieve, to conquer hardship, and to devote himself to a career of invention. "He possessed the qualities of the traditional tinkerer-inventor: visionary faith, self-confidence, perseverance, the capacity for sustained hard work."[61]

De Forest's archives were donated by his widow to the Perham Electronic Foundation, which in 1973 opened the Foothills Electronics Museum at Foothill College in Los Altos Hills, California. In 1991 the college closed the museum, breaking its contract. The foundation won a lawsuit and was awarded $775,000.[62] The holdings were placed in storage for twelve years, before being acquired in 2003 by History San José and put on display as The Perham Collection of Early Electronics.[63]

Awards and recognition

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Personal life

[edit]

Marriages

[edit]
Mary Mayo, his third wife

De Forest was married four times, with the first three marriages ending in divorce:

  • Lucille Sheardown in February 1906. Divorced before the end of the year.[67]
  • Nora Stanton Blatch Barney (1883–1971) on February 14, 1908. They had a daughter, Harriet, but were separated by 1909 and divorced in 1912.[68][69]
  • Mary Mayo White (1891–1957), stage name Mary Mayo, in December 1912. According to census records, in 1920 they were living with their infant daughter, Deena (born c. 1919); divorced October 5, 1930 (per Los Angeles Times). Mayo died December 30, 1957, in a fire in Los Angeles.[70]
  • Marie Mosquini (1899–1983) on October 10, 1930; Mosquini was a silent film actress, and they remained married until his death in 1961.[71]

Politics

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De Forest was a conservative Republican and fervent anti-communist and anti-fascist. In 1932, in the midst of the Great Depression, he voted for Franklin Roosevelt, but later came to resent him, calling Roosevelt America's "first Fascist president". In 1949, he "sent letters to all members of Congress urging them to vote against socialized medicine, federally subsidized housing, and an excess profits tax". In 1952, he wrote to the newly elected Vice President Richard Nixon, urging him to "prosecute with renewed vigor your valiant fight to put out Communism from every branch of our government". In December 1953, he cancelled his subscription to The Nation, accusing it of being "lousy with Treason, crawling with Communism."[72]

Religious views

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Although raised in a strongly religious Protestant household, de Forest later became an agnostic.[73] In his autobiography, he wrote that in the summer of 1894 there was an important shift in his beliefs: "Through that Freshman vacation at Yale I became more of a philosopher than I have ever since. And thus, one by one, were my childhood's firm religious beliefs altered or reluctantly discarded."[74]

Quotes

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De Forest was given to expansive predictions, many of which were not borne out, but he also made many correct predictions, including microwave communication and cooking.

  • "I discovered an Invisible Empire of the Air, intangible, yet solid as granite."[75]
  • "I foresee great refinements in the field of short-pulse microwave signaling, whereby several simultaneous programs may occupy the same channel, in sequence, with incredibly swift electronic communication. [...] Short waves will be generally used in the kitchen for roasting and baking, almost instantaneously." – 1952[76]
  • "So I repeat that while theoretically and technically television may be feasible, yet commercially and financially, I consider it an impossibility; a development of which we need not waste little time in dreaming." – 1926[77]
  • "To place a man in a multi-stage rocket and project him into the controlling gravitational field of the moon where the passengers can make scientific observations, perhaps land alive, and then return to earth—all that constitutes a wild dream worthy of Jules Verne. I am bold enough to say that such a man-made voyage will never occur regardless of all future advances." – 1957[78]
  • "I do not foresee 'spaceships' to the moon or Mars. Mortals must live and die on Earth or within its atmosphere!" – 1952[76]
  • "As a growing competitor to the tube amplifier comes now the Bell Laboratories’ transistor, a three-electrode germanium crystal of amazing amplification power, of wheat-grain size and low cost. Yet its frequency limitations, a few hundred kilocycles, and its strict power limitations will never permit its general replacement of the Audion amplifier." – 1952[76]
  • "I came, I saw, I invented—it's that simple—no need to sit and think—it's all in your imagination."[citation needed]

Patents

[edit]

Patent images in TIFF format

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Lee de Forest entry (#20) in the 1900 U.S. Census (Milwaukee, Wisconsin)
  2. ^ Lee de Forest entry (#29) in the 1920 U.S. Census (Bronx, New York)
  3. ^ Father of Radio: The Autobiography of Lee de Forest, 1950, p. 88.
  4. ^ "De Forest—Father of Radio" by Hugo Gernsback, Radio-Craft, January 1947, p. 17.
  5. ^ "Lee de Forest: American inventor" by Raymond E. Fielding (britannica.com)
  6. ^ "De Forest Forecasts Boom in Use of Television" (AP), Washington (D.C.) Evening Star, April 7, 1943, p. B-11.
  7. ^ The two Institutes merged in 1940 to become the Illinois Institute of Technology physics department.
  8. ^ "Wireless Telegraphy That Sends No Messages Except By Wire", New York Herald, October 28, 1901, p. 4. (fultonhistory.com)
  9. ^ De Forest (1950) p. 126.
  10. ^ "Cuss Words in the Wireless", New York Sun, August 27, 1903, p. 1. (loc.gov)
  11. ^ "Wireless Telegraphy at the St. Louis Exposition", The Electrical Age, September 1904, p. 167.
  12. ^ A Modern Campaign: War and Wireless in the Far East by David Fraser, 1905.
  13. ^ Inventing American Broadcasting: 1899–1922 by Susan J. Douglas, 1987, p. 97.
  14. ^ Wireless Communication in the United States: The Early Development of American Radio Operating Companies by Thorn L. Mayes, 1989, p. 44.
  15. ^ "Reporting Yacht Races by Wireless Telephony", Electrical World, August 10, 1907, pp. 293–294. (archive.org)
  16. ^ History of Communications-Electronics in the United States Navy by Captain L. S. Howeth, USN (Retired), 1963, "The Radio Telephone Failure", pp. 169–172.
  17. ^ "A Review of Radio" by Lee de Forest, Radio Broadcast, August 1922, p. 333.
  18. ^ "Barnard Girls Test Wireless 'Phones", New York Times, February 26, 1909, p. 7. (nytimes.com)
  19. ^ "Metropolitan Opera House: January 13, 1910 Broadcast" (metoperafamily.org)
  20. ^ "Radio Telephone Experiments", Modern Electrics, May 1910, p. 63. (earlyradiohistory.us)
  21. ^ De Forest (1950) p. 114. The notebook recordings of the 1900 experiments, including the determination that the flickering was due to sound only, are reproduced on this page.
  22. ^ US 841387, De Forest, Lee, "Device for Amplifying Feeble Electrical Currents", published 1907-01-15 
  23. ^ "What Everyone Should Know About Radio History: Part II" by J. H. Morecroft, Radio Broadcast, August 1922, p. 299: "[De Forest] took out a patent in 1905 on a bulb having two hot filaments connected in a peculiar manner, the intended functioning of which is not at all apparent to one comprehending the radio art."
  24. ^ "The Audion: A New Receiver for Wireless Telegraphy" by Lee de Forest, Scientific American Supplement: No. 1665, November 30, 1907, pp. 348–350 and No. 1666, December 7, 1907, pp. 354–356.
  25. ^ An alternate explanation was given by early associate Frank Butler, who stated that de Forest coined the term because the control electrode looked "just like a roaster grid". ("How the Term 'Grid' Originated", Communications magazine, December 1930, p. 41.)
  26. ^ De Forest (1950) p. 322.
  27. ^ "The Audion; A Third Form of the Gas Detector" by John L. Hogan, Jr., Modern Electrics, October 1908, p. 233.
  28. ^ The Continuous Wave: Technology and American Radio, 1900–1932 by Hugh G. J. Aitken, 1985, pp. 235–244.
  29. ^ De Forest (1950) p. 327.
  30. ^ Tyne, Gerald E. J. (1977). Saga of the Vacuum Tube. Indianapolis, IN: Howard W. Sams & Company. ISBN 0-672-21471-7. pp. 119 and 162.
  31. ^ De Forest (1950) p. 340.
  32. ^ Armstrong, Edwin H. "Edwin Armstrong: Pioneer of the Airwaves". Living Legacies. Columbia University. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  33. ^ Empire of the Air by Tom Lewis, 1991, pp. 77, 87.
  34. ^ Ibid., p. 192.
  35. ^ US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. (1927). Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. De Forest Radio T. & T. Co., 21 F.2d 918 (3d Cir. 1927). Retrieved Nov. 2021.
  36. ^ Ibid., pp. 193–198, 203.
  37. ^ Lawrence P. Lessing. "Edwin H. Armstrong". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  38. ^ Lewis, Tom (1991). Empire of the Air (first ed.). Harper Collins. pp. 218–219. ISBN 0-06-018215-6.
  39. ^ a b "Columbia Used to Demonstrate Wireless Telephone", The Music Trade Review, November 4, 1916, p. 52. (arcade-museum.com)
  40. ^ "Special Land Stations: New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, July 1915, p. 3. The "2" in 2XG's callsign indicated that the station was located in the 2nd Radio Inspection district, while the "X" signified that it held an Experimental license.
  41. ^ De Forest (1950) p. 243. He noted that he had been "totally unaware of the fact that in the little audion tube, which I was then using only as a radio detector, lay dormant the principle of oscillation which, had I but realized it, would have caused me to unceremoniously dump into the ash can all of the fine arc mechanisms which I had ever constructed..."
  42. ^ De Forest (1950) p. 337.
  43. ^ Ibid., pp. 337–338.
  44. ^ "Election Returns Flashed by Radio to 7,000 Amateurs", The Electrical Experimenter, January 1917, p. 650. (archive.org)
  45. ^ De Forest (1950) p. 350.
  46. ^ "'Broadcasting' News by Radiotelephone" (letter from Lee de Forest), Electrical World, April 23, 1921, p. 936. (archive.org)
  47. ^ The initial advertisements for Radio News & Music, Inc., appeared on p. 20 of the March 13, 1920 The Fourth Estate, and p. 202 of the March 18, 1920 Printers' Ink.
  48. ^ "Lee de Forest and Phonofilm: Virtual Broadway" from The Talkies: American Cinema's Transition to Sound, 1926–1931 by Donald Crafton (1999)
  49. ^ "March 12, 1923: Talkies Talk... On Their Own" by Randy Alfred, Wired, March 12, 2008. (wired.com)
  50. ^ "The History of Sound in the Cinema" by Dion Hanson, Cinema Technology, July/August 1998, pp. 8–13.
  51. ^ Hollywood be Thy Name: The Warner Brothers Story by Cass Warner Sperling, Cork Millner and Jack Warner (1998), p. 111.
  52. ^ "DeForest Company Bought by Jewett", Radio Digest, April 21, 1923, p. 2.
  53. ^ "'Magnificent Failure'" by Samuel Lubell, Saturday Evening Post, January 31, 1942, p. 49.
  54. ^ "Robot Television Bomber", Popular Mechanics, December 1940, pp. 805–806.
  55. ^ Highlights of this episode, as well as a film clip of his 1940 NAB letter, are included in the 1992 Ken Burns PBS documentary Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio.
  56. ^ Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio. PBS: 1992.
  57. ^ "Dr. DeForest, Father of Radio, Dead at 87" (AP), Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 2, 1961, p. 4: "Hollywood, California, July 1, 1961. Dr. Lee de Forest, 87, the so-called 'father of radio', died at his home here Friday."
  58. ^ Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio
  59. ^ Quantum Generations: A History of Physics in the Twentieth Century by Helge Kragh, 2002, p. 127: "...De Forest's invention of the triode (or "audion") was the starting point of the electronic age."
  60. ^ Dawn of the Electronic Age by Frederick Nebeker, 2009, p. 15: "The triode vacuum-tube is one of the small number of technical devices... that have radically changed human culture. It defined a new realm of technology, that of electronics..."
  61. ^ John A. Garraty, ed., encyclopedia of American biography 1974 pp 268–269.
  62. ^ Millard, Max (October 1993). "Lee de Forest, Class of 1893: Father of the Electronics Age". Northfield Mount Hermon Alumni Magazine. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  63. ^ "The Perham Collection of Early Electronics at History San José" (perhamcollection.historysanjose.org)
  64. ^ "IRE Medal of Honor Recipients 1917–1963" (ethw.org)
  65. ^ "The 32nd Academy Awards: Memorable Moments" (oscars.org)
  66. ^ "Hollywood Walk of Fame: Lee De Forest" (walkoffame.com)
  67. ^ Sterling, C.H. (2004). Encyclopedia of Radio 3-Volume Set. Taylor & Francis. p. 980. ISBN 978-1-135-45648-1. Retrieved 20 May 2021. The first of these, in 1906, was to a Lucille Sheardown, a marriage thatended in divorce the same year.
  68. ^ Publishing, B.E.; Hollar, S. (2012). Pioneers of the Industrial Age: Breakthroughs in Technology. Inventors and Innovators. Rosen Publishing Group. p. 113. ISBN 978-1-61530-745-6. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  69. ^ Bailey, M.J. (1994). American Women in Science: A Biographical Dictionary. ABC-CLIO. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-87436-740-9. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  70. ^ "Second Wife of De Forest Dies in Blaze", Los Angeles Times, December 31, 1957, part III, p. 2.
  71. ^ Froehlich, F.E.; Kent, A. (1992). The Froehlich/Kent Encyclopedia of Telecommunications: Volume 5 – Crystal and Ceramic Filters to Digital-Loop Carrier. Taylor & Francis. p. 288. ISBN 978-0-8247-2903-5. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  72. ^ James A. Hijya, Lee de Forest and the Fatherhood of Radio (1992), Lehigh University Press, pp. 119–120.
  73. ^ Adams, M. (2011). Lee de Forest: King of Radio, television, and Film. SpringerLink : Bücher. Springer New York. p. 31. ISBN 978-1-4614-0418-7. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  74. ^ De Forest, L. (1950). Father of Radio: The Autobiography of Lee De Forest. Wilcox & Follett. p. 71. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  75. ^ Campbell, Richard, Christopher R. Martin, and Bettina Fabos. "Sounds and Images." Media and Culture: An Introduction to Mass Communication. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2000. 113, additional text.
  76. ^ a b c "Dawn of the Electronic Age" by Lee de Forest, Popular Mechanics, December 1940, pp. 154–159, 358, 360, 362, 364.
  77. ^ Gawlinski, Mark (2003). Interactive television production. Focal Press. p. 89. ISBN 0-240-51679-6.
  78. ^ "De Forest Says Space Travel Is Impossible" (AP), Lewiston (Idaho) Morning Tribune, February 25, 1957.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Adams, Mike. Lee de Forest: King of Radio, Television, and Film (Springer Science & Business Media, 2011).
  • Adams, Mike. "Lee de Forest and the Invention of Sound Movies, 1918–1926" The AWA Review (vol. 26, 2013).
  • Aitken, , Hugh G. J. The Continuous Wave: Technology and American Radio, 1900–1932 (1985).
  • De Forest, Lee. Father of Radio: the Autobiography of Lee de Forest' (Wilcox & Follett, 1950).
  • Chipman, Robert A. "De Forest and the Triode Detector" Scientific American, March 1965, pp. 93–101.
  • Hijiya, James A. Lee de Forest and the Fatherhood of Radio (Lehigh UP, 1992).
  •  Homans, James E., ed. (1918). "De Forest, Lee" . The Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: The Press Association Compilers, Inc.
  • Lubell, Samuel. "'Magnificent Failure'" Saturday Evening Post, three parts: January 17, 1942 (pp. 9–11, 75–76, 78, 80), January 24, 1942 (pp. 20–21, 27–28, 38, and 43), and January 31, 1942 (pp. 27, 38, 40–42, 46, 48–49).
  • Tyne, Gerald E. J. Saga of the Vacuum Tube (Howard W. Sams and Company, 1977). Tyne was a research associate with the Smithsonian Institution. Details de Forest's activities from the invention of the Audion to 1930.
  • Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio by Ken Burns a PBS Documentary Video 1992. Focuses on three of the individuals who made significant contributions to the early radio industry in the United States: De Forest, David Sarnoff and Edwin Armstrong. LINK Archived 2018-12-06 at the Wayback Machine
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