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Charles E. Apgar (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) references

Undated

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  • "Charles E. Apgar Material, 1880, 1906". Mount Holyoke and Hampshire College archives. Five College Consortium. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  • "Interview with Charles E. Apgar". SONIC – Sound ONline Inventory Catalog. Library of Congress. Retrieved 28 December 2019. Interview with Charles E. Apgar who for fourteen nights around June 18, 1915 recorded messages broadcast by a German owned and operated radio station in Sayville, Long Island. The U.S. government asked Apgar to do this because the station was broadcasting encoded information to Germany about American shipping for German submarines off-shore. Based on Apgar's recordings, the government seized the station on July 8, 1915. Apgar used his homemade radio receiver and an Edison cylinder phonograph to record the messages. During the interview he plays two of the original cylinders.
    This audio cassette was copied from two 12-inch 78rpm aluminum discs which the Library does not own.
    {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  • "Mayes Tape Library Index". Antique Wireless Society. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  • "Digital Collections". Benson Ford Research Center. The Henry Ford. Retrieved 27 December 2019.
  • McLeod, Elizabeth. "Documenting Early Radio: A Review of Existing Pre-1932 Radio Recordings". Old Time Radio Library. Retrieved 2016-01-24.

1900s

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1910s

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1920s

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1930s

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1940s

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1950s

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1960s

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1970s

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  • Biel, Michael Jay (1978). The Making and Use of Recordings in Broadcasting Before 1936 (Doctoral dissertation). Northwestern University.

2000s

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2010s

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New

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