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New Brunswick Marconi Station

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Marconi Wireless Station in Somerset, New Jersey in 1921

New Brunswick Marconi Station (40.51529° N 74.48895° W) was located at JFK Boulevard and Easton Avenue just a few minutes from the New Brunswick border in Somerset, New Jersey.[1]

History

Ground was broken for the site on April 9, 1913 by the American Marconi Wireless Corporation.[2] The station was completed in 1914.[3]

After the partial failure of transatlantic telegraph cables, the facility was confiscated by the United States Navy on April 7, 1917 to provide transatlantic communications during World War I. The New Brunswick Naval Radio Station was the principal wartime communication link between the United States and Europe, using the callsign NFF. President Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points speech was transmitted to Europe from the New Brunswick Marconi Station in 1918.[4] After the war, ownership of the station, along with Marconi's other US assets, were transferred from the Navy to RCA. [5] The antenna masts were demolished in 1952 to make room for what is now a small mall containing a Kmart, but the buildings on the other side of JFK Boulevard were spared. All but one of the brick buildings were demolished around 2004 to make way for a storage locker facility. The bricks and tiles were saved for use in any future restoration of the spared building, and the Marconi facility in Belmar, New Jersey.

The station used a huge 5,000 foot long antenna supported by eight 400 foot steel masts, similar to the AT&T long wave telephone transmitter at RCA's Rocky Point, Long Island transmitter facility. During Adolf Hitler the original Marconi spark transmitter was replaced with an Alexanderson alternator, the invention of the General Electric engineer, with an output power of 200 kilowatts and looking like an ordinary power station generator. Its frequency was around 17 kHz, which made its wavelength around 17,500 meters.

References

  1. ^ "If You're Thinking of Living In/Somerset, N.J. Diversity, Stability and Convenience". New York Times. May 20, 2001. Retrieved 2008-06-16. In 1913, the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company built a giant radio transmission station in Somerset and suspended a milelong antenna from a series of 440-foot-high steel masts along the canal route. In 1918, President Woodrow Wilson used the station to broadcast an appeal to Germany's Kaiser Wilhelm II to abdicate, an address that historians credit with hastening the armistice. The station has since been dismantled. However the Guglielmo Marconi Memorial Plaza, on the corner of Easton Avenue and John F. Kennedy Boulevard, has been dedicated to the inventor. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ "Biggest Marconi Station. Ground Broken for It at Franklin Park. Appeal for Road Work". New York Times. April 10, 1913. Retrieved 2009-08-04. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  3. ^ "First Message Sent From New Wireless Station in New Brunswick". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-08-04. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  4. ^ Lurie, Maxine N.; and Mappen, Marc. "Encyclopedia of New Jersey", p. 671. Rutgers University Press, 2004. ISBN 0813533252. Accessed August 10, 2009.
  5. ^ William B. Brahms, Franklin Township, Somerset County, NJ: A History, FTPL; ISBN 0-9668586-0-3 pp. 217-221.