I am in the process of updating my "Marconi" web site. This is a fairly time consuming process, as is with anything to do with computers. Pages that are not yet completed have the suffix (UC) "Under Construction" on the Navigation Bar.

100 years Ago

    • 1909 - A serious accident is averted when the White Star liner Republic, is in collision with the Italian vessel Florida. The Marconi operator Jack Binns sends out CQD
    • 1909 - Godfrey Isaacs becomes Managing Director.
    • 1909 - The public wireless service between Clifden and Glace Bay is interrupted when the Glace Bay station is destroyed by fire.
    • 1909 - The first 200 ft. mast is erected at the Chelmsford Hall Street Works.
    • 1909 - the Nobel Prize in physics is awarded jointly to Marconi and Professor Braun of the Telefunken Company
    • 1909 - The nine British coastal wireless stations which handled messages for ships were transferred to the Post Office together with a licence on all existing and future Marconi patents relevant to ship-shore operation.
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I first launched this website on the Marconi Company in 1998, at that time there was very little on the internet about the company, and almost nothing originating from Chelmsford in England, where the world's first company for the manufacture of radio kit was founded. Today the numbers of websites on Marconi go into tens of thousands, although still very little from Chelmsford. The company is no more, and the factory he built in Chelmsford will be taken over by the "developers" in 2008. I started this website just before the GEC company re-launched with the Marconi brand name. At that time the company had branches worldwide and a total staff running into many thousands. Who could have believed that in less than a decade the Company would be no more?

In view of this, I decided it was time I updated this website. Over the last 9 years I have accumulated a massive amount of data on Marconi, and it will take a time to organise. For the next few months you may follow links that go to the dreaded "Under Construction" sign, for which I can only apologise.

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The Marconi Company

I first joined the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company in 1958, at the factory in New St. to work in their test department. Here I continued until 1968 when the start of a newly formed "Space Division" covering satellite communication, gave me an opening to join their Installation department. I stayed in "Installations" for fifteen years where I initially worked on SHF transmitters, at earth stations at Goonhilly Downs in Cornwall, Jamaica, Hong Kong and Singapore. I then broadened my horizons by going into computer applications and their use in message switching. After working on computer systems at the Croydon Aeronautical Centre, Whitehall and the Met office at Bracknell, I travelled with my family to Chile in South America, where I spent three years working on message switching for the Chilean Navy. In 1983. I returned to work at the factory in Chelmsford as a Systems Engineer. Here I helped in the design of communication systems in the Falkland Islands Malaysia and Oman. I left the Marconi New Street works in July 2003 to take up contract work, bur still installing Marconi equipment.

A history of The Marconi Company in Chelmsford
Guglielmo Marconi 1896 - Courtesy GEC Archives

Radio waves form the basis Radio, Television, Satellite broadcast and Radar. The invention of radio may be contributed to the work of a number of people, Michael Faraday, who pioneered the basics of lines of force for magnets, the brilliant mathematician James Clerk Maxwell who developed the mathematical basics of the Electromagnet theory, as we know it today. Heinrich Hertz was able to put Maxwell's theories into practice and first demonstrated the production of what he then called Hertzian vibrations in 1886. The term "Hertz" (Hz.) is used to this day as the unit of frequency for an electromagnetic vibration. The young Marconi first began experimenting with the transmission of radio waves in 1894 from his home in Bologna, Italy to a receiver placed about 2 miles away, the other side of a hill. He enlisted the help of his servant Mignani to fire a rifle whenever he received the letter "S" in Morse. In 1896 Marconi moved to Hereford road in London where he filed a patent. This followed with Marconi carrying out a number of demonstrations on Salisbury Plain and then across the Bristol Channel. In July1897 the Wireless Telegraph Trading Signal Company was formed with their headquarters in Mark Lane in London. In 1898 the first wireless factory was established in Hall Street, employing around 50 people. The factory was built in what was initially a silk factory. This building still stands today and is used by the Essex and Suffolk. Water Co.

In 1900 the companies name was altered to Marconi Wireless Telegraph Co. The Marconi International Marine Communication Co. Ltd. was also formed. In the same year Marconi patented the use of tuned circuits enabling simultaneous transmissions from more stations. By then Marconi had his eye on transatlantic communication, despite the claims of many that over the horizon communication by radio waves was impossible. Building of the Poldhu Wireless Station commenced on October 1900, it was operational by January 1901. On December 12th of that year the letter in Morse was transmitted from Poldhu and received by Marconi personnel in St. John's. In 1902 at the invitation of the Canadian government Marconi travelled to Cape Breton, Nova Scotia and begin the building of a large radio station there.

Marconi Mast construction at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia in 1902 Marconi Mast construction at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia in 1902 Marconi Mast construction at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia in 1902 Marconi Mast construction at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia in 1902 Marconi Mast construction at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia in 1902 Marconi Mast construction at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia in 1902 Marconi Mast construction at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia in 1902

Views of the wooden masts being constructed in 1902 at Cape Breton in Nova Scotia .
An idea of scale can be had from the height of the men and horses in the pictures.

John Ambrose Fleming made the next major development with the invention of the Thermionic Diode. Working with the Marconi Wireless and Telegraph Company in 1904 this led to a much improved detection device for the electromagnetic waves. The use of the Valve detector was patented in 1905. Improvements followed in rapid succession with improved antennas, understanding of impedance matching, development of the thermionic triode valve by Lee de Forest and Fleming to be used as both an amplifier and a source of radio wave generation. By 1912 it was mandatory for large ocean-going vessels to carry radio equipment saving the lives of 705 people on board the Titanic.

By now the works at Hall Street was becoming too small and Marconis decided to move into a new purposely built building. This was to be established on the site of Chelmsford Athletics Ground. In spite of a strike, the building was completed in 17 weeks in time for the International Telegraphic Conference where a special train brought delegates to Chelmsford for the Grand Opening; - Follow the links from the drop-down menu above to see how the new factory was laid out. It is interesting to note how the men and women have separate dining quarters; These can be seen on the bottom right near to New Street; Typically Men worked on machine tools in the machine shop or in carpenter's shops, whilst the women worked in producing induction coils for the spark transmitters; The Marconi Works in New Street was situated alongside the main train line to London. A railway siding ran alongside the works adjacent to the packing section so that completed equipment could be packed and loaded directly onto rail trucks. Also in 1912, the company obtained a suite of offices in the Strand, to be called Marconi House. This was to be the administration centre for the company. By 1919 a 6.5 kW experimental transmitter had been established at New St. to be superseded the following year by one of 15kW. Lauritz Melchior Makinga broadcasts from the Marconi Chelmsford Works in 1920This was used when the opera singer Lauritz Melchior made a broadcast from the New Street Works in March 1920; by now the Marconi Company was getting world recognition. At about this time Mr. Dockray went to China to install three 25kW telegraphy transmitters. Tales by installation personnel are always prone to exaggeration, so I cannot vouch for the following tale that comes courtesy of The Marconi archives in Chelmsford. It does however make very interesting reading. View of the 2MT hut and antennas in WrittleBy 1922 the first regular wireless broadcast for purely entertainment purposes was to take place from the station Two Emma Toc (2MT) at the newly formed Marconi Research Centre at Writtle, 2LO antenna on the roof of Marconi House Strand, 1923 (Courtesy BBC)Shortly after this a second station 2LO opened at Marconi House in the Strand.