Monday, February 01, 2021

The Last US States Without Radio

To be clear, there was no way in 1913 that the Department of Commerce could produce a canonically complete list of every U.S. entity with a radio transmitter, licensed or not. So I argue that even in 1913 there were probably a large number unlicensed radio stations excluded from this accounting. The Department of Commerce Report for July 1913 listed a mere 168 land radio stations, and just 22 special land stations. I list the latter ones below for reference:


CALLS
FREQ
CITY STATE Owner
9YI
-
Ames
IA
Iowa State College of Agriculture
1XA 600 Amesbury
MA Wireless Specialty Apparatus Co.
8XA -
Ann Arbor
MI University of Michigan
3ZH 300
Atlanta
GA Georgia School of Technology
9XB Variable
Beloit
WI Beloit College
6XR -
Berkley
CA Frank Rieber
1XB
Variable Boston
MA
Wireless Specialty Apparatus Co.
1XH - Boston MA Holtzer - Cabot Electric Co.
1YH Variable Cambridge
MA Harvard University
1XP 300, 550, 600
Cambridge MA George W. Pierce
1XC
-
Chelsea
MA William J. Murdock Co.
8YD 300, 400, 600
Detroit
MI
William J. Meisenheimer
9YN Variable Grand Forks
ND University of North Dakota
3XR -
Hyattsville
MD
J. Harris Rogers
6YL -
Los Angeles
CA
High School
2YN -
New York
NY
College of the City of New York
2ZH -
Nutley
NJ
Arthur A Herbert
3XC
480
Philadelphia PA Frank B. Chambers
3XJ 500
Philadelphia
PA
St. Joseph's College
3ZS 450
St. Davids
PA Chas. H. Stewart
9YC -
St. Louis
MO
Christian Brothers College
3ZH -
Washington
DC H.B. DeGroot

You will note a concentration around the major metropolitan centers of the day: New York, Boston, Philadelphia, etc. But relatively speaking 9YN and 9XB were in the middle of nowhere. The population of Grand Forks for example was only about 13,000, Beloit was hardly larger.  That's about a mere 2% of the population of Boston at that same time. Educational institutions were the foundation of experimental radio technology in that era. So their stations existing outside what might be otherwise supported by the urban density of radio consumers.

But this distribution begets the question: What were the last places in America to have radio? Well if we go by something very very granular like zip code or township there are places today still unserved by local radio. (I can personally attest to the large areas of the Southwest today without any radio at all; local or otherwise.) But if we go by state, we get some more interesting data, as each state contains multiple MSAs; even in Nebraska —where cows outnumber people more than 5:1. 

While in 1913 there were only 48 states in the union, our Department of Commerce (DOC) source data includes territories. Cuba, Samoa, Guam, Peking (China) and Puerto Rico all also appear on the DOC lists. So if 13 states special land stations already constituted > 27% of US states, where are the other 168 land radio stations?  At that time less than half of US states had radio stations. Two years later that list of land stations had grown to 192, and the list of Special land stations had grown to 118, spanning 29 states.

Below is a chart of the 1913 and 1915  Land Radio Stations (abbreviated LRS for space) and their totals by state. You can readily see that while the total count grows the total number of states had not changed significantly. We see that the US radio footprint was geographically consolidated.

State
Abbreviation
1913 LRS
1915 LRS
Alabama
AL
2
1
Alaska
AK
29
35
Arizona AZ
2
2
Arkansas AR
-
-
California CA 11
21
Colorado CO -
2
Connecticut CT 1
2
District of Columbia DC 3
4
Delaware DE -
-
Florida FL 6
10
Georgia GA 1
2
Hawaii
HI (TH)
9
12
Idaho
ID
-
-
Illinois
IL
1
1
Indiana IN
-
-
Iowa IA -
-
Kansas KS
3
3
Kentucky KY
-
-
Louisiana LA
3
4
Maine ME
2
1
Maryland
MD
2
3
Massachusetts MA
8
9
Michigan MI
8
10
Minnesota MN
3
1
Mississippi MS
-
-
Missouri MO
-
-
Montana MT
-
-
Nebraska NB
1
-
Nevada NV
-
-
New Hampshire
NH
1
1
New Jersey
NJ
3
6
New Mexico
NM
-
-
New York
NY
13
16
North Carolina
NC
4
5
North Dakota
ND
-
-
Ohio OH
3
5
Oklahoma OK
-
-
Oregon OR
3
6
Pennsylvania PA
2
3
Rhode Island
RI
2
4
South Carolina
SC
1
2
South Dakota
SD
-
-
Tennessee TN
-
-
Texas TX
5
5
Utah UT
-
-
Vermont VT
-
-
Virginia VA
4
5
Washington WA
6
9
West Virginia
WV
-
-
Wisconsin WI
2
2
Wyoming WY
-
-

The difference between land stations and special land stations is mostly nuance. In 1913 the Department of Commerce described these special classes collectively as "experiment stations for the development of radio communications technical and training school stations..." But they established a call sign format for these sub-types "The first letter will be X, for experiment stations; Y, technical and training schools; Z, special amateur stations." All of these, at least generally speaking, are still radio stations. Many in each category later became recognizable, entertainment-focused radio stations. But many others ceased to exist entirely.

The year 1922 was the tipping point. There is a 1922 reference in a Radio World article identifying Mississippi as the last US state with no radio stations. In September of 1922, Radio News reported that the states of Kentucky and Mississippi got their first stations with WHAS, and WHAU respectively leaving only two states —Delaware and Wyoming, without radio stations. That Summer they excitedly reported that Wyoming was the last, after the sign on of WHAV in Delaware. Wyoming joined the club on October 3rd with the sign on of KFBU. More here.

But by November of that year WHAU in Corinth, MS shut down. Owned by the Corinth Radio Supply company, this had been the first, and only licensed radio station in Mississippi. So Mississippi slipped behind Wyoming and became the last US state with no radio stations, albeit only briefly. In 1923; the Department of Commerce licensed four more radio stations in Mississippi: KFNG, Coldwater; WCBH, Oxford; WDBT; Hattiesburg; and WCBG, Pascagoula, closing the issue. More here.

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