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Bell 1
Valerie Bell
COM 230
20 June 2016
The Importance of Frank Conrad’s Contributions to Electronic Media
Frank Conrad was a pioneer of radio technologies. Born in Pittsburgh, PA, this fledgling
teenager left school at the age of 16 to pursue an apprenticeship at Westinghouse. He began
moving up the corporate ladder, and seven years later, when he turned 23, “…because of his
mechanical abilities, Conrad was promoted and began working in the Westinghouse Testing
Department,” (Powell). With this promotion, he had more access to various technologies. This is
where his inventions and experimentations truly began to take off. “Conrad designed a disk-type
watt-hour meter, which was used in homes throughout the United States,”
(Explorepahistory.com). This particular type of meter measured the amount of electricity that
each household consumed. Conrad invented this device during his time inside the Westinghouse
Testing Department. Then, at the age of 30, the Westinghouse Company promoted him to
engineer. This new promotion gave him access to more tools, and sparked his creativity.
At the age of 38, his interests in radio were piqued after he entered into a bet regarding
the accuracy of a watch. He successfully “…built a wireless receiver to transmit time signals
from the Naval Observatory…He then constructed his own transmitter, which enabled his
amateur station in his garage to be licensed as 8XK,” (Powell). Conrad had been toying around
with radio and broadcasted music from his very own garage and transmitted the signals
throughout Pittsburgh. His show took place on Wednesday and Friday nights, and the music he
played was from phonograph records. At one point, he had exhausted all of his records, and
Bell 2
mentioned this dilemma to his listeners. The audience then sent Conrad approximately 500
records. The audience enjoyed Conrad’s broadcasts and wanted them to continue, so the records
were their way of putting their input into the type of music they wanted to hear. His listeners
requested popular songs. Keeping in theme, Conrad’s show advertised a local record store in
Wilkinsburg, PA.
“This was the first radio advertising,” (McCoy). Conrad’s station spread awareness of the
record store, and listeners could purchase songs they heard on his broadcasts at the shop. This
added traffic and business to the record store. When he was not receiving records from listeners,
Conrad would also accumulate the records he played on the show from the store, which again,
provided content for his station. Local retailers advertised radio sets that could receive and
transmit Conrad’s broadcasts. One day, H.P. Davis, who was the vice president of Westinghouse,
passed by an advertisement for these sets and an idea emerged. “Davis was convinced that radio
was unlimited and could be used as a medium for mass communication,” (Pfaltz). Davis saw
radio in a way that was unique from Conrad’s own view.
From an invention side of things, Conrad saw the power of radio from a more behind-the-
scenes approach. As the vice president of Westinghouse, Davis had a different outlook and
approached radio from a business perspective. Conrad’s broadcasts persuaded people to purchase
radio sets, so they could hear the broadcasts. Davis could tell that Conrad was onto something
genius with his broadcasts, and wanted to become a part of this exciting new step in electronic
media history. With all of this in mind, Davis began making plans to move the location of the
radio broadcasts away from Conrad’s garage and into the Westinghouse plant. However, a
change in location was not the only alteration Davis had in mind for the station. The radio station
also needed a license from the government “In 1920, Conrad applied to the Department of
Bell 3
Commerce for a special type of license to begin a broadcasting service. This station was
authorized to use a frequency away from amateur interference,” (Gross). The station was given
the call letters KDKA, though the reason behind these exact letters is still unknown. Davis also
wanted to add some programming changes and decided that the first program of the redesigned
radio show should be the results of the Harding-Cox election. “On November 2, 1920, KDKA
broadcasted the results of the Harding-Cox election, which Harding won. This was the first
regularly scheduled broadcast ever made,” (Nation’s Broadcast). KDKA was the first radio
station. A controversy does remain, however, because there were other amateur radio stations
around at the time.
But because KDKA made the first regularly scheduled broadcast, it cemented its
reputation as the first radio station in history. In 1921, KDKA accomplished another milestone
when it became “…the first radio station to offer play-by-play coverage of a baseball game. The
game that it covered was an 8-5 Pittsburgh Pirates win over the Philadelphia Phillies,” (Dreazen).
As KDKA was building its programming executives chose to broadcast religious services. They
took a risk when they chose to design equipment that could broadcast mass services over the
radio. With these types of broadcasts, Westinghouse wanted to transmit all aspects of the service,
from the music to the readings over the air. “Therefore, Westinghouse successfully designed
equipment that was installed inside of a church. After proper installation, the technology had the
capability to detect the choir and congregation singing and the sermon and spoken word portions
of the mass.
After picking up the frequencies of these different sounds, the technology was also
powerful enough to amplify all of these various components and send it out through a radio
broadcast with clarity,” (Earlyradiohistory.us). Listeners who heard the broadcast could easily
Bell 4
distinguish each portion of the mass and had an easy time following along with the service. This
risk paid off in the long run, and listeners who could not attend services in person were happy
they could listen along instead. The station in Pennsylvania was so successful, that executives at
Westinghouse knew they wanted even more stations. In the fall of 1921, two new stations
emerged. Westinghouse built a radio station at one of their factories in East Springfield,
Massachusetts, known as WBZ.
Employees of Westinghouse built the other radio station at the factory in Newark, New
Jersey, and this station used the call letters of WJZ. Aside from stations in Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, and Massachusetts, Westinghouse also wanted to transmit broadcasts in the west.
The specific strategy in mind was to broadcast throughout the United States, moving
from east to west. Therefore, Westinghouse added a station in the city of Chicago, Illinois. “This
station began operation from the Commonwealth Edison Building on November 11, 1921.
Westinghouse opened this station through an arrangement with the Chicago Edison Company.
The Chicago Edison Company wanted to broadcast complete grand opera from the Auditorium
Theatre in Chicago,” (Earlyradiohistory.us).
The Chicago Edison Company was familiar with Westinghouse’s radio technology, and
knew that the company had the capabilities to broadcast the opera with clarity. On the other end,
Westinghouse entered into an arrangement with the Chicago Edison Company, because
Westinghouse wanted to broaden its content offerings as a way to grow its listening audience.
“On Monday, November 14, 1921, the opera season officially began and KYW
broadcasted this opera. This was the first time in recorded history that a complete opera, from the
overture to the final chorus, was transmitted through radio,” (Earlyradiohistory.us). The
incorporation of opera brought in a whole other audience of listeners and showed the diversity of
Bell 5
content that Westinghouse could broadcast to its listeners. From baseball to political elections, to
the arts, the power that radio had for niche groups of listeners was monumental. Radio had
content for everyone, and Westinghouse wanted to offer a wide array of programming.
Meanwhile, Conrad moved up the corporate ladder and eventually made his way to
becoming the engineering chief at Westinghouse. He remained at the factory in Pittsburgh and
worked behind-the-scenes on various inventions. Conrad was mostly involved with the tactical
side of things and used his creativity to produce great technologies. He worked on perfecting
KDKA, and the transmission process of broadcast. “In 1924, Conrad attended an international
conference in London regarding the formation of a radio link between Europe and South
America. By using a shortwave receiver and a hotel hanger as an antenna, Conrad transmitted
extracts from newspapers in code, while colleague David Sarnoff copied them down. The next
day, Sarnoff presented the copied code, which revealed the effectiveness of shortwave. As a
result of this, a proposed long-wave system was replaced by short-wave transmitters,” (Powell).
After this discovery, Conrad went on to accumulate over 200 different patents from
England, America, and even Germany. He also received the Edison Medal from the American
Institute of Electrical Engineers in 1930. Eleven years later, in 1941, he retired to Miami,
Florida. But Before he even made his way to the sunshine state, he became ill. Only five weeks
into his Miami retirement, Conrad passed away from a heart attack on December 11, 1941 at
exactly 1:10 a.m.
I chose to write about Frank Conrad and the evolution of KDKA because his inventions
changed the face of radio. Radio technology has drastically evolved, but it still plays a role in
society. I am an avid fan of Rider’s very own 107.7 the Bronc, and recently the Bronc won
“…Best Student Station of the Year, according to the New Jersey Broadcasters Association,”
Bell 6
(The Bronc). Without Conrad’s inventions, there may not have been a student radio station. To
this day, modern radio stations still play music and have similar formats to Conrad’s station.
Radio has become a staple of my daily routine, and it has changed the face of electronic
history. Conrad’s technological contributions have molded the audio landscape, and placed
radios in countless homes throughout the nation. His discovery regarding short-waves enabled
international radio to evolve in new ways and produced a more effective radio transmission
system. Although radio has made a transition to the Internet, such as Spotify and Pandora, all of
these technologies began from the same place and started out the same way. Arguably, without
the likes of KDKA and its predecessors, there would not be a Q-102 or even Pandora.
What began as a small little broadcast inside of a garage quickly became the start of a
radio empire, and it is fascinating to look back and see how far radio has come in the past
century. If Conrad was alive today and saw the state of radio technology, I am sure he would be
proud to learn about Sirius XM radio. The content and programming of radio may have changed,
but the ability of millions of listeners to all sing along to the same songs at the same point in time
is still something worth being impressed by. Conrad engineered an empire and his legacy still
stands even today. It is fascinating how one inventive mind transformed the ways in which
people consume audio media.
Bell 7
Works Cited
The Bronc, 107.7 WRRC. "We are officially The Best Student Station Of The Year according to
the New Jersey Broadcasters Association. We are so honored to have received this award.
A special thank you to General Manager John Mozes, our sponsors, the Rider
Community, our hard working staff, and all who support us each day. This would not be
possible if it weren't for you. Thank you, and please tune in to 107.7 The Bronc ?#NJBA?
?#BestStudentStation? ?#NJBA69thConference? ?#CollegeRadio? ?#1077TheBronc?."
23 June 2016, 1:31 p.m. Facebook update. <https://www.facebook.com/1077thebronc>.
"Development of Radiophone Broadcasting." Earlyradiohistory.us. N.p., n.d. Web. 27 June
2016. <http://earlyradiohistory.us/1922dev.htm>.
Dreazen, Yochi J. "Strong Signal: Pittsburgh's KDKA Tells Story of how Radio has Survived ---
Changing Continually, Station Battled TV, Tapes, CDs; Now, a Satellite Threat --- Mr.
Conrad's Garage Sessions." Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition ed.May 15 2001.
ProQuest. Web. 20 June 2016 .
"Frank Conrad". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2016. Web. 20 Jun. 2016
<http://www.britannica.com/biography/Frank-Conrad>.
"Frank Conrad Historical Marker." Explorepahistory.com. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 June 2016.
<http://explorepahistory.com/hmarker.php?markerId=1-A-3A4>.
"Frank Conrad, KDKA Founder, Dies in Miami." Pittsburgh Press [Pittsburgh] 11 Dec. 1941: n.
pag. Rpt. in Google News. N.p.: n.p., n.d. N. pag. Print.
Gross, Lynne S. "Chapter 5: Radio and Audio." Electronic Media: An Introduction. 11th ed.
New York: McGraw, 2013. 117-19. Print.
Bell 8
"Leaders in the March of Business." Nation's Business (pre-1986) 11 1940: 50.ProQuest. Web.
26 June 2016 .
McCoy, Adrian, and Maria Sciullo. "The Rise and Fall of AM Radio." McClatchy - Tribune
Business News Oct 13 2013. ProQuest. Web. 26 June 2016 .
Pfaltz, Albert. "KDKA: Radios New 500 Horsepower Voice." Antiqueradios.com. Antique
Radios, Apr. 1931. Web. 26 June 2016.
<http://www.antiqueradios.com/features/kdka.html>.
Powell, Casey. "Conrad, Frank." Pabook2.libraries.psu.edu. Pennsylvania State University,
2006. Web. 20 June 2016.
<http://pabook2.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/bios/Conrad__Frank.html>.

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Final Paper_June 17

  • 1. Bell 1 Valerie Bell COM 230 20 June 2016 The Importance of Frank Conrad’s Contributions to Electronic Media Frank Conrad was a pioneer of radio technologies. Born in Pittsburgh, PA, this fledgling teenager left school at the age of 16 to pursue an apprenticeship at Westinghouse. He began moving up the corporate ladder, and seven years later, when he turned 23, “…because of his mechanical abilities, Conrad was promoted and began working in the Westinghouse Testing Department,” (Powell). With this promotion, he had more access to various technologies. This is where his inventions and experimentations truly began to take off. “Conrad designed a disk-type watt-hour meter, which was used in homes throughout the United States,” (Explorepahistory.com). This particular type of meter measured the amount of electricity that each household consumed. Conrad invented this device during his time inside the Westinghouse Testing Department. Then, at the age of 30, the Westinghouse Company promoted him to engineer. This new promotion gave him access to more tools, and sparked his creativity. At the age of 38, his interests in radio were piqued after he entered into a bet regarding the accuracy of a watch. He successfully “…built a wireless receiver to transmit time signals from the Naval Observatory…He then constructed his own transmitter, which enabled his amateur station in his garage to be licensed as 8XK,” (Powell). Conrad had been toying around with radio and broadcasted music from his very own garage and transmitted the signals throughout Pittsburgh. His show took place on Wednesday and Friday nights, and the music he played was from phonograph records. At one point, he had exhausted all of his records, and
  • 2. Bell 2 mentioned this dilemma to his listeners. The audience then sent Conrad approximately 500 records. The audience enjoyed Conrad’s broadcasts and wanted them to continue, so the records were their way of putting their input into the type of music they wanted to hear. His listeners requested popular songs. Keeping in theme, Conrad’s show advertised a local record store in Wilkinsburg, PA. “This was the first radio advertising,” (McCoy). Conrad’s station spread awareness of the record store, and listeners could purchase songs they heard on his broadcasts at the shop. This added traffic and business to the record store. When he was not receiving records from listeners, Conrad would also accumulate the records he played on the show from the store, which again, provided content for his station. Local retailers advertised radio sets that could receive and transmit Conrad’s broadcasts. One day, H.P. Davis, who was the vice president of Westinghouse, passed by an advertisement for these sets and an idea emerged. “Davis was convinced that radio was unlimited and could be used as a medium for mass communication,” (Pfaltz). Davis saw radio in a way that was unique from Conrad’s own view. From an invention side of things, Conrad saw the power of radio from a more behind-the- scenes approach. As the vice president of Westinghouse, Davis had a different outlook and approached radio from a business perspective. Conrad’s broadcasts persuaded people to purchase radio sets, so they could hear the broadcasts. Davis could tell that Conrad was onto something genius with his broadcasts, and wanted to become a part of this exciting new step in electronic media history. With all of this in mind, Davis began making plans to move the location of the radio broadcasts away from Conrad’s garage and into the Westinghouse plant. However, a change in location was not the only alteration Davis had in mind for the station. The radio station also needed a license from the government “In 1920, Conrad applied to the Department of
  • 3. Bell 3 Commerce for a special type of license to begin a broadcasting service. This station was authorized to use a frequency away from amateur interference,” (Gross). The station was given the call letters KDKA, though the reason behind these exact letters is still unknown. Davis also wanted to add some programming changes and decided that the first program of the redesigned radio show should be the results of the Harding-Cox election. “On November 2, 1920, KDKA broadcasted the results of the Harding-Cox election, which Harding won. This was the first regularly scheduled broadcast ever made,” (Nation’s Broadcast). KDKA was the first radio station. A controversy does remain, however, because there were other amateur radio stations around at the time. But because KDKA made the first regularly scheduled broadcast, it cemented its reputation as the first radio station in history. In 1921, KDKA accomplished another milestone when it became “…the first radio station to offer play-by-play coverage of a baseball game. The game that it covered was an 8-5 Pittsburgh Pirates win over the Philadelphia Phillies,” (Dreazen). As KDKA was building its programming executives chose to broadcast religious services. They took a risk when they chose to design equipment that could broadcast mass services over the radio. With these types of broadcasts, Westinghouse wanted to transmit all aspects of the service, from the music to the readings over the air. “Therefore, Westinghouse successfully designed equipment that was installed inside of a church. After proper installation, the technology had the capability to detect the choir and congregation singing and the sermon and spoken word portions of the mass. After picking up the frequencies of these different sounds, the technology was also powerful enough to amplify all of these various components and send it out through a radio broadcast with clarity,” (Earlyradiohistory.us). Listeners who heard the broadcast could easily
  • 4. Bell 4 distinguish each portion of the mass and had an easy time following along with the service. This risk paid off in the long run, and listeners who could not attend services in person were happy they could listen along instead. The station in Pennsylvania was so successful, that executives at Westinghouse knew they wanted even more stations. In the fall of 1921, two new stations emerged. Westinghouse built a radio station at one of their factories in East Springfield, Massachusetts, known as WBZ. Employees of Westinghouse built the other radio station at the factory in Newark, New Jersey, and this station used the call letters of WJZ. Aside from stations in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Massachusetts, Westinghouse also wanted to transmit broadcasts in the west. The specific strategy in mind was to broadcast throughout the United States, moving from east to west. Therefore, Westinghouse added a station in the city of Chicago, Illinois. “This station began operation from the Commonwealth Edison Building on November 11, 1921. Westinghouse opened this station through an arrangement with the Chicago Edison Company. The Chicago Edison Company wanted to broadcast complete grand opera from the Auditorium Theatre in Chicago,” (Earlyradiohistory.us). The Chicago Edison Company was familiar with Westinghouse’s radio technology, and knew that the company had the capabilities to broadcast the opera with clarity. On the other end, Westinghouse entered into an arrangement with the Chicago Edison Company, because Westinghouse wanted to broaden its content offerings as a way to grow its listening audience. “On Monday, November 14, 1921, the opera season officially began and KYW broadcasted this opera. This was the first time in recorded history that a complete opera, from the overture to the final chorus, was transmitted through radio,” (Earlyradiohistory.us). The incorporation of opera brought in a whole other audience of listeners and showed the diversity of
  • 5. Bell 5 content that Westinghouse could broadcast to its listeners. From baseball to political elections, to the arts, the power that radio had for niche groups of listeners was monumental. Radio had content for everyone, and Westinghouse wanted to offer a wide array of programming. Meanwhile, Conrad moved up the corporate ladder and eventually made his way to becoming the engineering chief at Westinghouse. He remained at the factory in Pittsburgh and worked behind-the-scenes on various inventions. Conrad was mostly involved with the tactical side of things and used his creativity to produce great technologies. He worked on perfecting KDKA, and the transmission process of broadcast. “In 1924, Conrad attended an international conference in London regarding the formation of a radio link between Europe and South America. By using a shortwave receiver and a hotel hanger as an antenna, Conrad transmitted extracts from newspapers in code, while colleague David Sarnoff copied them down. The next day, Sarnoff presented the copied code, which revealed the effectiveness of shortwave. As a result of this, a proposed long-wave system was replaced by short-wave transmitters,” (Powell). After this discovery, Conrad went on to accumulate over 200 different patents from England, America, and even Germany. He also received the Edison Medal from the American Institute of Electrical Engineers in 1930. Eleven years later, in 1941, he retired to Miami, Florida. But Before he even made his way to the sunshine state, he became ill. Only five weeks into his Miami retirement, Conrad passed away from a heart attack on December 11, 1941 at exactly 1:10 a.m. I chose to write about Frank Conrad and the evolution of KDKA because his inventions changed the face of radio. Radio technology has drastically evolved, but it still plays a role in society. I am an avid fan of Rider’s very own 107.7 the Bronc, and recently the Bronc won “…Best Student Station of the Year, according to the New Jersey Broadcasters Association,”
  • 6. Bell 6 (The Bronc). Without Conrad’s inventions, there may not have been a student radio station. To this day, modern radio stations still play music and have similar formats to Conrad’s station. Radio has become a staple of my daily routine, and it has changed the face of electronic history. Conrad’s technological contributions have molded the audio landscape, and placed radios in countless homes throughout the nation. His discovery regarding short-waves enabled international radio to evolve in new ways and produced a more effective radio transmission system. Although radio has made a transition to the Internet, such as Spotify and Pandora, all of these technologies began from the same place and started out the same way. Arguably, without the likes of KDKA and its predecessors, there would not be a Q-102 or even Pandora. What began as a small little broadcast inside of a garage quickly became the start of a radio empire, and it is fascinating to look back and see how far radio has come in the past century. If Conrad was alive today and saw the state of radio technology, I am sure he would be proud to learn about Sirius XM radio. The content and programming of radio may have changed, but the ability of millions of listeners to all sing along to the same songs at the same point in time is still something worth being impressed by. Conrad engineered an empire and his legacy still stands even today. It is fascinating how one inventive mind transformed the ways in which people consume audio media.
  • 7. Bell 7 Works Cited The Bronc, 107.7 WRRC. "We are officially The Best Student Station Of The Year according to the New Jersey Broadcasters Association. We are so honored to have received this award. A special thank you to General Manager John Mozes, our sponsors, the Rider Community, our hard working staff, and all who support us each day. This would not be possible if it weren't for you. Thank you, and please tune in to 107.7 The Bronc ?#NJBA? ?#BestStudentStation? ?#NJBA69thConference? ?#CollegeRadio? ?#1077TheBronc?." 23 June 2016, 1:31 p.m. Facebook update. <https://www.facebook.com/1077thebronc>. "Development of Radiophone Broadcasting." Earlyradiohistory.us. N.p., n.d. Web. 27 June 2016. <http://earlyradiohistory.us/1922dev.htm>. Dreazen, Yochi J. "Strong Signal: Pittsburgh's KDKA Tells Story of how Radio has Survived --- Changing Continually, Station Battled TV, Tapes, CDs; Now, a Satellite Threat --- Mr. Conrad's Garage Sessions." Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition ed.May 15 2001. ProQuest. Web. 20 June 2016 . "Frank Conrad". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2016. Web. 20 Jun. 2016 <http://www.britannica.com/biography/Frank-Conrad>. "Frank Conrad Historical Marker." Explorepahistory.com. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 June 2016. <http://explorepahistory.com/hmarker.php?markerId=1-A-3A4>. "Frank Conrad, KDKA Founder, Dies in Miami." Pittsburgh Press [Pittsburgh] 11 Dec. 1941: n. pag. Rpt. in Google News. N.p.: n.p., n.d. N. pag. Print. Gross, Lynne S. "Chapter 5: Radio and Audio." Electronic Media: An Introduction. 11th ed. New York: McGraw, 2013. 117-19. Print.
  • 8. Bell 8 "Leaders in the March of Business." Nation's Business (pre-1986) 11 1940: 50.ProQuest. Web. 26 June 2016 . McCoy, Adrian, and Maria Sciullo. "The Rise and Fall of AM Radio." McClatchy - Tribune Business News Oct 13 2013. ProQuest. Web. 26 June 2016 . Pfaltz, Albert. "KDKA: Radios New 500 Horsepower Voice." Antiqueradios.com. Antique Radios, Apr. 1931. Web. 26 June 2016. <http://www.antiqueradios.com/features/kdka.html>. Powell, Casey. "Conrad, Frank." Pabook2.libraries.psu.edu. Pennsylvania State University, 2006. Web. 20 June 2016. <http://pabook2.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/bios/Conrad__Frank.html>.