Dr. Frank Conrad (1874-1941) was a radio broadcasting pioneer who worked as the Assistant Chief Engineer for the Westinghouse Electric Company in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He began what are considered the first regular radio broadcasts from his Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania garage in 1920, and is responsible for the founding of the first broadcast station in the world: KDKA.
Conrad resumed his amateur radio broadcasts in October 1919. Most of the content of these early broadcasts were music: Conrad's sons were talented musicians and Conrad played numerous songs from his record collection. He soon ran out of records, however, and struck a deal with a local music store: if they supplied him with records he would give them on-air promotions. This exchange is arguably the first broadcast commercial in airwave history. There are also reports of football scores reported, as well as some talk programming. The Vice President of Westinghouse soon saw an ad in the newspaper for a toy store advertising radio sets that could receive Conrad's broadcasts. He saw the potential for mass communication that radio offered, and as a result Westinghouse began manufacturing radio receivers.
Radio pioneers | Electrical engineers | People from Pittsburgh | 1874 births | 1941 deaths
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