Sunday, February 12, 2017

The 1933 Century of Progress International Exposition in Chicago Demonstrates the Mechanical Television.

An early form of television known as “mechanical” television was demonstrated at Chicago's Century of Progress World's Fair in 1933. Mechanical television used a perforated spinning disc illuminated from behind to create an image.

Mechanical Television Explained.

The 1939 World's Fair in New York City is usually associated with early television demonstrations in the United States. RCA’s splashy display introduced a fully electronic form of television to America. This is the version of television that focused a stream of electrons on a cathode ray tube and became the world's standard for television.
The Century of Progress demonstration took place in the small Television Theater in the Fair’s Electrical Building. Volunteers would appear before a primitive camera and the image would be displayed live on a large screen to the astonished audience.
The volunteer would get a card afterward saying they had personally appeared in a television demonstration. This gimmick was copied by RCA at their demonstration at the 1939 New York World's Fair.

The technology shown at the Century of Progress was developed by Chicagoan Ulises Sanabria, whose experiments in television go as far back as the mid-1920s. Sanabria demonstrated his invention at stores and conventions across the country culminating in his 1933 World’s Fair display sponsored by the Hudson-Essex Motor Company as a way to promote their own products at the fair.
Watching a homemade mechanical-scan television receiver in 1928. The "televisor" (right) which produces the picture uses a spinning metal disk with a series of holes in it, called a Nipkow disk, in front of a neon lamp. Each hole in the disk passing in front of the lamp produces a scan line which makes up the image. The video signal from the television receiver unit (left) is applied to the neon lamp, causing its brightness to vary with the brightness of the image at each point. This system produced a dim orange image about 1 1/2 inches square.
Sanabria, who taught himself electronics as a teenager, went on to found the American Television Institute in Chicago, a technical school where students were trained in the electronic television that was later adopted by the industry. Sanabria also worked with inventor Lee deForest, a pioneer in ship-to-shore radio broadcasts, to build a flying torpedo controlled by television (an early military drone).

Also at the 1933 Century of Progress World's Fair was a demonstration of a device called a two-way telephone-television, which allowed people to see each other while speaking on the telephone.
Patricia Marquam, Fair beauty queen, and Phil Baker, Armour's star jester on the radio, see and hear each other over the very latest in two-way telephone-television at the Television theater in the Electrical Building at the new World's Fair in Chicago. This picture shows the manner in which the telephone booths are equipped and the image each saw. Patricia has just interrupted one of Phil's jokes with a merry quip of her own which, as can be seen, beings a broad grin to Phil's face.
Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D. 

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Looking Northwest at the Buckingham Fountain, Chicago, Illinois.

Looking Northwest at the Buckingham Fountain, Chicago, Illinois.

Why is there a statue of Chicago's Mayor Richard J. Daley in the Springfield, Illinois' State Capitol?

On December 20, 1976,  Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley died suddenly. His death marked the end of his 21-year tenure as mayor and of an even longer career in public service that dated back to at least 1930, when he became deputy county treasurer in 1930.

There’s probably no one better remembered as the embodiment of Democratic Party power in Chicago than Daley, who served more than two decades as mayor. It might be a surprise to some that before he was Chicago’s Democratic Mayor, he was elected as a Republican to the Illinois House of Representatives.

In 1936 the Republican candidate from Bridgeport, David Shanahan, was running for his 22nd term when he died just before the general election with his name still on the ballot. Daley ran for his seat on the Republican line, but he immediately switched sides upon taking office the following year.

Two years later he was elected to the Illinois State Senate, where he served for an additional eight years. During that time, he championed a bill to create a branch of the University of Illinois in Chicago. He also served as the State Revenue Director under Governor Adlai Stevenson and as Cook County Clerk before being elected mayor in 1955.

After Daley died in 1976, State Representative John Vitek, a native of Daley’s Bridgeport neighborhood, began campaigning for a memorial in the State Capitol to the man he said "represented the voice of all the people of the city of Chicago and throughout the state.” Three years later, Illinois lawmakers agreed and sculptor Peter Fagan was hired to do the work on a lifesize bronze statue.

Daley’s statue in the capitol was dedicated in 1981 and was placed alongside other famous Illinois state legislators, including Abraham Lincoln, Stephen A. Douglas, first African-American Illinois Sen. Adelbert Roberts, first woman Illinois legislator Lottie Halman O’Neill, and the man whose death opened the door to the Daley dynasty, David Shanahan.

So, why isn’t there a statue of Mayor Daley in Chicago? For one thing, there aren’t many statues of Chicago mayors in the city at all. In fact, there are only two – Carter Harrison in Union Park and Harold Washington outside the Washington Cultural Center. 

WTTW Chicago