|
* |
LOUISBOURG
RECEIVING STATION
HIGHLIGHTS |
|
1912
/
1913 |
Transatlantic business had grown enough to warrant
receiving stations being opened at Letterfrack, Ireland, and at Louisbourg, Nova
Scotia and the duplex trans-Atlantic service began in 1913 |
|
1914
/
1918 |
(1)The station,
with its staff of twenty-five, including censors, was considered to be an important military target, and was guarded by the 94th
Highlanders
(2) Vacuum tubes were introduced into
its receiving circuits, but cautiously at first, keeping the older crystal detectors and Brown
available as back-ups at the flip of a switch
(3) The receiver house was renovated and modified structurally to reflect these new
arrangements |
|
1915 |
The
CW system was used at Louisbourg in a successful experiment to receive CW signals from the U.S. naval radio station in Arlington,
Virginia |
|
1916 |
Electric typewriter punches replaced the hand punch to produce perforated paper
tapes |
|
1919 |
The first east-to-west transatlantic voice transmission
was made from a Marconi station in Ballybunion, Ireland (using only three high powered vacuum tubes in the
transmitter) to the Louisbourg
receiving station |
1920 |
Staff of twenty-two at Louisbourg
|
|
1926 /
1927 |
The long wave transatlantic service with
its Cape Breton stations was now obsolete, and was closed (The closing of the Louisbourg station was hastened by a fire that destroyed the receiver building in
1927) |
Post 1926
/ 1927 |
The residential buildings were dismantled and used for houses
elsewhere |
|
Post
1960 |
The site of Louisbourg station is now a picnic area in the Fortress of Louisbourg National Historic
Park |