The Radio
Act of 1912 was hopelessly obsolete by the early 1920's. Conceived in
an
era of long and medium wave spark telegraphy, the Act was totally
inadequate
when it came to broadcasting and the shortwaves. The Department of
Commerce
gamely tried to stretch the Act to meet new requirements; the 1922 and
1924 "regulations" that banned broadcasting by amateurs, set up the
broadcast
band, and carved out the 160, 80, 40, 20, and 5 meter bands, were
really
nothing more than "gentlemen's agreements", valid as long as they
weren't
challenged.
For a time, they worked. Amateurs enthusiastically settled in on their
new
bands and began working the world, while the number of broadcasters in
the new 550 to 1500 kc region jumped from 30 to almost 600 in just 3
years.
Technical advances had not kept up with this growth, however, and there
were problems. Crystal control of transmitters was still a couple of
years
away, and the unstable broadcasting stations drifted from their
assigned frequencies, sometimes to the point of interfering with
adjacent channels.
Even stations off frequency by 400-600 cycles could cause ear splitting
heterodynes. Most receivers of the 1920's were either regenerative or
TRF
(Tuned Radio Frequency), good on sensitivity, poor on selectivity. As a
result, the 1920's broadcast band was saturated with only 600 stations.
(Compare that to today's medium wave where tight frequency control of
20 Hz, coupled with directional antennas and selective superheterodyne
receivers,
allows over 4000 stations to occupy the AM broadcast band without undue
interference).
The Department of Commerce, therefore, issued regulations mandating
such
solutions as time sharing (where two or more stations occupied the same
frequency at different times of the day), and daytime only operations.
Stations
were constantly moved to another frequency, or told to decrease power,
in order to minimize interference. The Department also went after
stations
whose transmitters drifted onto adjacent channels. An interesting
example
of this was the Los Angeles station of "Sister" Aimee Semple McPherson,
an evangelist who was the leader of the International Church of the
Foursquare
Gospel. Her station was notorious for drifting up and down the
broadcast
band. When the Federal Radio Inspectors tried to keep her on frequency,
she imperiously wrote to Secretary Hoover, demanding that his "Minions
of
Satan" stay away from her transmitter. The Almighty would choose her
Wavelength,
she wrote, not the Department of Commerce.
Many of the stations that had been moved, told to reduce power, or
share
their frequency, did what any patriotic American would do--hire a
lawyer.
Once the legal bloodhounds began digging, certain things came to light.
Article I, Section 8, of the Constitution allows the Federal Government
to regulate INTERSTATE commerce. Furthermore, it is an accepted fact
that
a Federal Agency cannot issue any regulations, unless it was given the
power
to do so by Congress. Thus, the lawyers for the disgruntled stations
challenged
the Secretary's "regulations" on two fronts, first, that the Radio Act
of 1912 gave the Department no authority to regulate broadcasting
stations,
and second, that since many stations could not be heard across state
lines,
there was no "interstate commerce" and therefore no Federal
jurisdiction.
(This is the argument used by "Radio Free Berkley" and other low power
pirate stations).
The Day of Reckoning arrived in 1926 when an Illinois District Court
held
that there was no Federal Law to permit the Secretary of Commerce to
assign
broadcasting licenses or frequencies. The Attorney-General admitted
that
the Federal Government had no control over radio, except what was
specifically
authorized in the 1912 Act.
Pandemonium broke out. Stations, liberated from all Federal control,
upped
their power, jumped frequency, and/or began full time operations on
daytime
or time shared frequencies. Smaller stations were jammed off the air.
Unlicensed
transmitters appeared out of nowhere, dropped down on any convenient
(or
inconvenient) frequency, and began broadcasting. Anarchy was King.
Amateurs, of course, could have legally joined in this RF orgy. There
was
nothing preventing them from going back to broadcasting, moving to new
frequencies,
exceeding the one kW limit, or anything else they desired. To their
credit,
they did nothing of the sort. One reason was the immense respect they
felt
for Secretary Hoover, a man who over and over publicly supported
amateur
radio in any way possible. They would abide by their "gentleman's
agreement"
with him. The other reason was common sense. They knew that Congress
would
soon rectify the problem by passing appropriate legislation. The
broadcasters
were "big boys" with a lot of money, powerful corporate backers, and 6
million listeners; they could afford to violate the spirit of the law
and
get away with it. Amateurs did not have this luxury. They realized that
any violations of the 1922 and 1924 agreements, even if they were
legally
unenforceable, would cost them dearly in political support. So, while
the
550 to 1500 kc segment was a free for all, the amateur bands were
disciplined
and orderly, as hams mastered the art of crystal control, and improved
their operating skills.
Incidentally, one area in which those skills were honed was
expeditions.
From the Arctic to the Antarctic, from MacMillan to Byrd, amateurs
provided
the necessary communications of almost every major explorer. Also, in
the
area of emergencies, amateurs provided communications during snow and
ice
storms, hurricanes, earthquakes, and floods.
The Federal Government quickly moved to end the chaotic mess on the
broadcast
band. The Radio Act of 1927 was approved on February 23. This law
defined
"amateur radio" for the first time in a Federal statute, and created
the
Federal Radio Commission, which was given the power to classify and
regulate
all aspects of all radio stations for "the public interest, convenience
or necessity". Criminal penalties were written into the 1927 Act for
violations
of the Act, or any regulation thereunder.
The Commission immediately went to work. "Minions of Satan" got Sister
Aimee's station back on frequency, and shut down the transmitter of
KFKB, the station
of "Dr." John Brinkley, graduate of the Eclectic Medical School and
proponent
of prostate operations and (get this) goat gland transplants to cure
all
medical ills. Patients by the thousands listened to KFKB's broadcasts,
and flocked to Kansas to have the operations, picking out their goat
from
the pens next to the hospital as they went in. (Do you think I could
make
this up?) Unfortunately, after the Commission shut him down, "Dr."
Brinkley
went to Mexico by the Texas border, set up a 150,000 watt station, and
continued his fraudulent operations.
In regards to amateur radio, the Commission, in effect, kept the status
quo for the 15,000 hams. All agreements and regulations enacted by the
Department
of Commerce were maintained and incorporated into current regulations.
The
only change that hams noticed was the addition of a prefix on their
calls,
thus 1AW became W1AW, 1JS became W1JS, etc.
However, the existence of a sympathetic Commission and friendly
regulations
wasn't enough. Radio was truly international, and, as a result, an
International
Radiotelegraph Conference was scheduled in Washington, D.C., for
October
4, 1927. Word was filtering out of Europe and the Far East that many
governments
were anti-amateur radio.
How would our hobby fare at this conference? Join us next time as "The
Wayback Machine" shows us the answers.