Whole Number 51 - August 1991
excerpted from: Whole Number 51 - August 1991
Chaos In The Air :
Voluntaryism or Statism in the Early Radio Industry?
By Carl Watner

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Historical Overview
In the history of technology in the 20th Century, one of the most
rapidly developed and marketed scientific advances was the radio,
or the wireless, as it was originally called. Invented by
Guglielmo Marconi in the late 1890s, the commercial value of
wireless telegraphy was at first believed to be in the
transmission of Morse code in ship-to-shore communications.
Government intervention from the very beginning influenced how
the wireless evolved. In the United States, the laws regulating
the radio industry eventually became some of the most severe, the
most drastic, and most confining of those affecting any American
business. nevertheless, the history of the radio industry is an
interesting example of voluntaryism at work. Never in his
wildest dreams did Marconi imagine the development of commercial
voice radio broadcasting as it emerged in the United States by
1930, with hundreds of stations transmitting into millions of
homes. Nor did Marconi or others understand the homesteading
process by which the free market was developing property rights
(freedom from interference) in the radio spectrum. Whatever
progress was being made in this direction was destroyed by
federal legislation in the late 1920s. "Chaos in the air," an
expression some historians have used to label the early phases
of the radio industry, was really the result of statism, not voluntaryism.
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The invention Of The Wireless And Its early Development
Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937) was the Italian inventor-
entrepreneur who came to England in 1896, and took out the world's
first (British) patent for wireless telegraphy based on the use
of electric waves. A year later, he and his relatives formed the
Wireless Telegraph and Signal Company. From the very start of
his experiments in England, Marconi recognized the commercial and
military value of his invention. He provided wireless
demonstrations to officials of the British Post Office, and other
countries. By 1898, he had established communication between
England and France across the English Channel, utilized wireless
in naval maneuvers, and seen the first military application of
his invention in the Boer War.
In order to commercially exploit his invention, at the turn of
the century Marconi formed a subsidiary company, called Marconi
International Communications, which leased trained operators and
equipment, rather than charging for individual messages which
those operators transmitted. Not charging for messages allowed
Marconi to circumvent telegraph monopoly restrictions of the
British Post Office that "prohibited a private company from
sending telegraphic messages for monetary gain." In 1901, he
signed an exclusive 14 year contract with Lloyd's of London.
Marconi operators and Marconi equipment were used by Lloyd's to
keep the home office advised about the status of insured ships.
Thus Marconi established a presence in all the major seaports of
the world. Meanwhile, since competitors from America and Germany
had appeared, the Marconi Company established its most
controversial policy, known as the nonintercommunication rule.
Marconi operators on ship or shore, could only communicate with
other Marconi operators. Clients using other apparatus were
excluded from the Marconi network. Only in the event of a
serious emergency was this rule to be suspended.
The nonintercommunication rule was the only way Marconi could
benefit from his efforts, given the British Postal regulations
that prevented him from sending messages for profit.
Nonetheless, when put into practice, it was to have serious
international repercussions. In March 1902, Prince Henry of
Germany, the Kaiser's brother, was returning to Germany after a
highly publicized visit to the United States. He was sailing
aboard a German liner, the "Deutschland", which was equipped with
wireless equipment made by a German company, Slaby-Arco. None of
the Marconi stations on either side of the Atlantic would
communicate with the ship because of its rival apparatus. Prince
Henry, who tried to send wireless messages to both the US and
Germany, was outraged. The ship might as well not have had any
wireless equipment on board.
This was just the beginning of "malignant Marconiphobia" on the
part of the Germans. In July 1903, a month before the first
international wireless conference in Berlin, two competing German
firms, Slaby-Arco and Braun-Siemens-Halske, merged to form
Telefunken in order to present a united German front against
Marconi. This was done with the full support of the German
government. Although the Conference was supposed to address a
number of wide-ranging issues, the only real issue was the
Marconi Company's refusal to communicate with other systems. All
the countries at the conference, with the exception of Italy and
Great Britain, favored compelling Marconi to communicate with all
ships because they opposed his 'de facto' monopolization of the
air waves.
"Although the 'Deutschland' incident appeared at first to be
a petty confrontation between two rival companies and their
respective countries, it was actually a watershed in the early
history of wireless. The emerging problems surrounding the
technology and its financing and regulation, and the sanctity of
each country's territorial air were embodied in the Marconi German
clash. Could a private company, whether it had technical
priority or not, gain dominance over a resource such as the
airwaves and become arbiter of who could use them and who could
not?" Most of the European countries represented at the
Conference (Germany, France, Spain, and Austria) had all assumed
control of wireless in their own countries-under the guise of its
military significance. Whereas Marconi was involved in
commercial exploitation, the governments of these countries saw
huge strategic value in the airwaves. The American delegates
were at a loss since their own government had done so little "to
promote or gain jurisdiction over the American wireless
situation."
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The U.S. Government And Other International Regulation
It was not until a year after the conference that the United States
government took concerted action to address itself to the
benefits of wireless. On June 26, 1904 Teddy Roosevelt appointed
the Interdepartmental Board of Wireless Telegraphy, better known
as the Roosevelt Board. Its purpose was to report on the
consolidation and management of wireless for the government. The
board was also to determine how private and government stations
could operate without interference. The board submitted their
report in August 1904. It suggested that the Navy take
responsibility for operating the government's wireless system and
begin establishing a complete country-wide radio telegraphy
system. The Navy was to receive and send messages free of
charge, except it was not to compete with commercial stations.
It also recommended licensing of all private stations and supervision of them by the Department of Commerce and labor to prevent "exploitation" and "control by monopolies and trust."
The Navy's attitude was best explained by its attitude
toward monopoly. The naval officers on the Roosevelt Board were
not opposed to monopoly, per se, for they favored naval control
of wireless. They simply opposed civilian or commercial monopoly
which would take control out of their hands.
The U.S. Navy displayed a cavalier attitude towards wireless from
the very first. American inventors, such as John Stone, Reginald
Fessenden, and Lee De Forest, had formed their own companies to
compete against Marconi, and produce their own wireless
apparatus. All of them encountered a naval attitude that was
"inhospitable to inventors, and unappreciative of their technical
goals and financial needs." In August 1904, when the Navy
scheduled its first wireless trials, it set impossible
requirements, such as requiring guarantees that apparatus built
by one company would communicate with another. After inspecting
the equipment supplied by various companies, the Navy refused to
respect their patents. In the case of Reginald Fessenden, he
advised the Navy in late 1904, that they were infringing on his
patent for the electrolytic detector. The Navy considered itself
under no obligation to respect his patent, even after Fessenden
won numerous court decisions in his favor. Ultimately he had to
obtain an injunction and a contempt of court citation to prevent
one of his competitors from supplying the Navy with pirated
copies of his apparatus.
In October 1906, the second International Wireless Conference
took place in Berlin. The second conference was again called by
Germany, because nothing had been solved by the first conference.
Twenty-seven countries sent delegates. Again, as at the first
conference, the nonintercommunication policy of the Marconi
Company was the primary issue. The American delegates introduced
a resolution endorsing compulsory intercommunication, whether it
be ship-to-ship, or ship-to-shore. All but the delegates of
Britain, Italy, and Japan accepted these resolutions. The
compromise that emerged from the conference required every public
shore station to communicate with every wireless-equipped ship,
and vice versa, without regard to the system of wireless
telegraphy used by either. With this major issue out of the way,
both the German and American delegates went on to tackle other
issues which would bolster military control. "To that end they
supported the revolutionary German proposal that the ether be
divided into regions by wave lengths, with the military getting
the largest and best tracts." The Germans recommended a range of
600 to 1600 meters for naval and governmental use, and 300 to 600
meters for commercial stations and merchant ships. In Germany,
where all the stations were government-owned and -operated, this
division made no real difference. But in England and America
where all the stations were private, except for a few naval
stations, this would impose a great hardship on Marconi by
relegating all private stations, to an inferior portion of the
spectrum. This proposal was supported by the American delegates,
"hoping it would ease the U.S. Navy into a preeminent position in
American Wireless: the Navy hoped to gain through regulation what
it had failed to achieve technically."
Other regulations were worked out at the conference. All
shipboard stations were to be licensed by the country under whose
flag they sailed. Shipboard operators were also to be licensed.
It was at this conference that the international distress code
was decided upon. Britain preferred its own CQ (supposedly from
'seek you'), but the Germans insisted on their SOE. Since the
letter 'e' was only one dot and could get easily lost, it was
decided to use SOS. When Great Britain ratified the treaty in
1908, Parliament agreed to compensate the Marconi Company through
a three year subsidy, that would make up for any loss it would
suffer as a result of the abridgement of its nonintercommunication policy.
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Developments In American Radio
When the American delegates to the second International Wireless
Conference returned home, they were surprised that public
sentiment was against ratification of the treaty. By late 1906,
numerous developments, unique to the American radio scene had
taken place. For one thing, American wireless activity had not
been confined to the military or to business. The ubiquitous
amateur had appeared, prompted by the discovery of the crystal
detector which made possible a sensitive, durable, and
inexpensive receiving apparatus. The father of science fiction
and an avid promoter of wireless as a hobby, Hugo Gernsback had
already opened his radio emporium, Electro-Importing Company, in
New York City, for the amateur. His shop was the first in the
United States to sell wireless apparatus appropriate for home use
directly to the public. By 1910, the amateurs surpassed both the
US Navy and United Wireless (the largest private wireless
company) in both quantity of operators, and usually in the
quality of apparatus. The Wireless Association of America, which
Hugo Gernsback had also started, claimed ten thousand members by
1910, and the NEW YORK TIMES estimated that 122 wireless clubs
existed in America by 1912.
Another development, to have more impact in the future, was that
Reginald Fessenden had reported the first successful voice
transmission by wireless in October 1906. At the same time, Lee
De Forest announced the invention of his new receiver, the
audion, an early version of the radio vacuum tube. Both of these
inventors foresaw the possibilities of radiotelephony (wireless
voice transmission), not only for point-to-point messages, but
for broadcasting speech and music. This conception of radio was
"original, revolutionary, and quite different." Instead of
offering institutional customers a substitute system similar to
one they already had, De Forest (in particular) was suggesting a
new technical and entertainment system to be marketed to ordinary
people. De Forest envisioned using wireless telephony as a means
of making money for himself by delivering entertainment to people
in their homes. His idea was buttressed by the occurrence of the
first true radio broadcast in American history, which took place
on Christmas Eve, 1906. This was done by a competitor, Reginald
Fessenden, and the program included music from phonograph
records, live violin music, singing and live speech. A similar
program was repeated on New Year's Eve.
The collision of two ships, the REPUBLIC and the FLORIDA, in
January 1909, precipitated the first government regulation of
wireless in America. The two ships, carrying over 1200
passengers, rammed one another 26 miles south of Nantucket. Two
people were killed, and hundreds injured, but the remainder were
saved as a result of the efforts of Jack Binns, wireless operator
on the REPUBLIC, who transmitted SOS messages until a rescue ship
arrived. Realizing that the wireless provided a safety net to
ships at sea, Congress passed the Wireless Ship Act on June 24,
1910. "It provided that any ocean-going steamer sailing in or
out of United States ports, carrying fifty or more persons, and
plying between ports two hundred miles or more apart, be equipped
with 'efficient apparatus for radio-communication, in good
working order, in charge of a person skilled in the use of such
apparatus'."
By l9lO, wireless had existed in America for a decade.The US Congress had
not ratified either of the international treaties of 1903 or
1906, and the commercial companies had lobbied against any type
of regulation whatsoever. The increased use of the air waves led
to a three-way struggle between the amateur radio enthusiasts,
the U.S. Navy (representing the American military establishment)
and the commercial business interests. As radio was uncharted
ground (and at this point in time not yet regulated domestically
by the federal government) there were no guidelines for doing
away with interference or establishing priority to portions of
the airwaves. The commercial companies were loath to take this
dispute into the public arena for fear of suggesting that
wireless was still unreliable and needed public regulation. If
the commercial companies could not overpower their competitors,
they resorted to gentlemen's agreements among themselves. "For
example, the one hundred members of a wireless club in Chicago
worked out an air-sharing agreement with the local commercial
operators which was designed to reduce interference for both
groups."
Military officials began lobbying in Washington, as early as
1909, for stricter regulations or elimination of the amateur on
the grounds of safety at sea and national security. Amateur
interference with Navy ships at sea, as well as base naval
stations rankled the Navy to no end. The amateurs issued charges
of their own against the Navy: that many naval operators were
incompetent and that the Navy used antiquated equipment. The
amateurs were not willing to accept the national security
argument when the Navy itself had done little to "ensure that
wireless would help preserve that security." According to the
amateurs the Navy should have to clean up its own act before it
called for restricting the amateurs. In short, the amateurs took
a "proprietary attitude toward the airwaves they had been working
in for the past five years." The Wireless Ship Act of 1910, which
had gone into effect in July 1911, ultimately worsened radio
interference, especially at port, because more and more ships
were equipped with radio apparatus. By 1912, numerous bills had
been introduced in Congress to diminish pollution of the ether,
as radio interference was called, though none were passed.
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The Radio Act of 1912
The sinking of the TITANIC occurred on April 15, 1912, and acted
as a catalyst for renewed federal action. As the disaster
unfolded in the press, the status of wireless and wireless
regulation "were permanently altered." One ship, within twenty
miles of the TITANIC, was equipped with wireless, but its sole
operator had retired for the night, and the captain had shut down
the ship's engines (which generated the electricity for the
apparatus) while traveling through the iceberg field. Another
ship, thirty miles away had no radio apparatus aboard. The
CARPATHIA, which was fifty-eight miles away, and which rescued
the survivors in lifeboats, only received the TITANIC'S SOS by
luck. The ship's operator had returned to the wireless room to
verify the ship's time and overheard the disaster signal when he
put on his headphones. Soon after the CARPATHIA reached New
York, the Senate Committee on Commerce began holding its
preliminary hearings into the TITANIC disaster.
Within four months of the Senate hearings, the whole American
radio scene shifted dramatically in the statist direction. Not
only would the government supervise and regulate the air waves,
but transmitting in the ether would no longer be an inherent
right, but rather a privilege assigned by the State. Safety at
sea was not the only legislative concern. Other political
influences were at work. The Senate, on April 3, 1912, finally
endorsed the treaty prepared at the second International Wireless
Conference of 1906. "A third convention was scheduled for June
1912, and the United States was informed that its delegates would
not be welcome unless it ratified the treaty." Such inaction
would place the United States outside the pale of the other
"civilized" nations, all of which embraced statist control of the
air waves. To remedy this, Congress passed appropriate
legislation.
The Radio Act of 1912, which was to regulate radio until 1927,
was approved on August 13, and took effect four months later, on
December 13, 1912. The most significant passage in the Act was
the provision that the Secretary of Commerce be empowered to
issue licenses and make other regulations to sort out the
wireless "chaos." The Act required that all operators be licensed
by the government, that stations use certain assigned
frequencies, and that distress calls were to receive the highest
priority. Amateurs were assigned a portion of the spectrum then
considered useless-short waves of 200 meters or less. Congress
finally adopted the international distress signal and mandated
that every shore station listen in on the 300 meter band (the
wavelength assigned for emergencies) every fifteen minutes.
"Intercommunications between systems was compulsory," and fines
were provided for "irresponsible transmission" and "malicious
interference" (at the time of the TITANIC disaster, amateurs had
interrupted rescue efforts and provided false reports about the
progress of the rescue mission). The new legislation allocated
wavelengths according to the 1906 International Conference, so
the military received the most useful wave bands. Naval stations
were required to transmit and receive commercial messages if
there was no commercial station within a 100 mile radius. The
1912 Act limited the issuance of licenses to citizens of the
United States, and empowered the president "to close private
wireless stations, or to authorize the government to take them
over" in the event of war or disaster. The American Marconi
Company supported the new regulations, which reinforced its own
commercial monopoly in the U.S., since it had bought out or
driven out of business its main competitors. "With the amateurs
assigned to the short waves and the Navy to the 600 to 1600 meter
range, the regulation ensured that in America, the Marconi
Company would have portions of the spectrum entirely to itself."
The Radio Act of 1912 clearly represents a watershed in the
history of wireless. The "one critical precedent this law
established in broadcast history was the assumption" that the
ether was a collective national resource of the people of the
United States, rather than private property of the first person
or persons that used it regularly. "Another precedent
established was that the State would assume an important role in
assigning property rights in the spectrum." There would be no
free market or private property rights in the ether. Instead the
federal government would implement and protect "the people's
interest" in spectrum use by some standard of "public convenience
and necessity." Particular wavelengths could not be bought and
sold. "Rather, the State would determine priority on the basis
of claimed needs, previous investment, and importance of the
messages. Those claims would be acknowledged by wavelength
allocations. What established merit in 1912 was capital
investment or military defense, coupled with language that
justified custodial claims based on an invaluable service to
humanity. This, too, was a significant precedent. For, under
the guise of social responsibility, of protecting the lives of
innocents, and of managing a resource more efficiently, the
military and a communications monopoly secured dominant positions
in America's airwaves."
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World War I Rationalization and the Formation of RCA
During the second decade of the 20th Century, the single most
important influence on American radio was "the Navy's
increasingly proprietary attitude toward America's wireless
system." Josephus Daniels who was Secretary of the Navy from 1913
to 1921, was "an outspoken advocate of complete naval control of
American wireless." "World War I provided a most favorable
political and ideological climate for the promotion of military
wireless ambition" in the United States. The war was used as an
excuse for the Navy to gain full control over American wireless.
Under the Radio Act of 1912, when the US formally declared war on
April 6, 1917, President Wilson closed down or assumed control
over all private radio stations in the United States. Amateurs
were ordered off the air, and told to dismantle their stations
(local police in New York searched for and seized over 800
amateur stations). Fifty-three stations (mostly American
Marconi's) were taken over and added to the Navy's communication
network. Another twenty-eight stations were closed down. By the
end of the war, the Navy owned 111 of the 127 commercial stations
then in existence.
During 1918, the Navy's obsession to obtain total control of
American radio was nearly achieved. Under its war powers, the
Navy bought out one of Marconi's major competitors, Federal
Telegraph, in May 1918, to prevent its being purchased by
Marconi. Thus by the end of 1918, the Navy controlled all of the
major elements of the budding broadcast industry, except-the
amateurs (who were at that time outlawed), Marconi's long
distance stations, the patent on the vacuum tube, and General
Electric's alternator. Since the military, especially the Navy,
was the only buyer of radio equipment during the war, it was able
to dictate equipment specifications, production schedules,
suppliers, and prices. The Navy even threatened the Crocker-Wheeler Company with government take-over, when it refused to
turn over the blueprints of its motor-generators to its chief
competitor, General Electric. The Navy was also responsible for
imposing a patent moratorium in the radio industry. This made it
possible for suppliers to use the best components, regardless of
who owned the patent.
By the summer of 1919, it was clear that the press, Congress, and
the public would not support Secretary of the Navy Daniels'
attempts to assert control over the post-war wireless industry.
Since the Navy was afraid that the Marconi Company would regain
its prominence and have control of, or access to, American
technology, naval officials began orchestrating the formation of
an all-American company that would buy out American Marconi.
Such a company would forever end all foreign interests in
America's wireless communication network. This new company was
to be the Radio Corporation of America, and it was incorporated
with the Navy's blessings in October 1919. E.J. Nally, president
of American Marconi, became the first president of RCA. American
Marconi was forced to turn over all of its stations and employees
to the new corporation, which was formed as a government-
sanctioned monopoly.
Even after the formation of RCA, the Navy remained a potent
influence in the post World War I environment. Stanford Hooper
of the Navy engineered industrial cross-licensing agreements of
radio patents between members of the Radio Group or Radio Trust.
This group included RCA, GE, Westinghouse, and United Fruit
(whose wireless operations combed Central America). The most
important legacy, however, left by naval control of radio during
World War I was the belief that radio was a natural monopoly and
that only as a monopoly could radio function in the U.S.
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The Post-War Amateur Boom and Commercial Broadcasting
Although amateur radio had a strong foothold before the war, the
government ban on amateur receiving stations was not lifted until
April 12, 1919. Amateurs were not permitted to transmit until
September 26, 1919. Groups like the American Radio Relay League,
which had held its first cross-country message relay in 1916, and
which had been formed two years earlier to unite radio amateurs
in a grass-roots, coast-to-coast communications network, which
"made it possible for the private citizen to communicate across
great distances without the aid of either the government or a
corporation," sprang back into action. By 1920, the Department
of Commerce counted over 10,000 licensed amateur radio operators.
Frank Conrad was one of the most famous amateurs. He was a
gifted engineer who worked for Westinghouse in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania. By May 1920, the local newspaper was reporting on
his radio concerts, which included live performances on piano,
and phonograph music. Seeing an opportunity to increase sales of
radio sets, the Joseph Horne Department Store in Sept. 1920 ran
an ad in the PITTSBURGH SUN describing the Conrad radio concerts
and informing the public that sets capable of receiving these
concerts were on sale for $10. Finally, a Westinghouse vice-president realized that the real wireless market was in commercial-broadcasting. Westinghouse had Conrad set up a commercial broadcasting station at its plant, and began building radio receivers for home use. The Westinghouse station, KDKA began operating Nov. 2, 1920, in time to report on the presidential election.
"Over the next year and a half, the 'broadcasting boom' swept the
United States, beginning in the northeast, and moving south and
west, reaching unprecedented levels of intensity by the spring of
1922." Many of the features we now take for granted, such as time
signal service, broadcasting of baseball games and other sporting
events, theatrical programs, and political interviews were all
inaugurated during 1921 and 1922. In 1922, the AT&T flagship
station WEAF introduced the first advertisements over the air.
By 1927, it was estimated that the retail value of receiving
sets, parts, and accessories amounted to about $500 million,
compared to about $2 million in 1920. Over 7.5 million radio
sets had been produced in 7 years, and in the same period the
number of organized broadcasting stations had grown from one to
over 700.
When the first commercial station made application in 1921, for a
federal radio license under the Radio Act of 1912, the Secretary
of Commerce, who was charged with the issuance and administration
of the radio licensing system, found himself in a quandary
because it represented a new class of station. Although the Act
itself provided for a system which primarily served as a station
registry, the Secretary assigned each station a wave length under
which it was to operate. Eventually, it was decided to license
the station on a wave length of 360 meters, because that would
place it far enough from frequencies used by other classes of
users, such as ships, the military and amateurs. As other
broadcasting stations applied for licenses, they, too, were
placed on the same wave length (and eventually on the 400 meter
band, too), so that by 1923, there were several hundred
commercial transmitters potentially interfering with one another.
In many cases, this interference was real because the stations
were in close enough geographical proximity to cause
interference.
At the same time, the case of Hoover vs. Intercity was decided
in the appeal courts. Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce in
1921, had refused to renew the broadcasting license of Intercity
Radio Company, Inc. on the grounds that he was unable to find a
wave length to assign whose use would not interfere with others.
Intercity sued and, in the final decision rendered in February
1923, it was held that "the Secretary of Commerce had no
discretion to refuse the license. ..." In effect, the court
declared that any one had the right to apply for and receive a
license from the Secretary of Commerce, though the Secretary had
some discretion in the assigning of wave lengths to them. Partly
as a result of the outcome of this case, Hoover called a general
conference of all radio interests in an attempt to bring some
"order" to the air waves. At the conference, the frequency
spectrum was divided up so that each type of radio service
(ships, shore stations, transoceanic stations, amateurs, and
commercial broadcasters, etc.) had its own special frequency
zone, and within the zone, each broadcaster was assigned a
particular channel.
This and subsequent annual conferences, helped clear up some of
the congestion in the air. So long as there were not too many
stations, and none of them were using high power (at the time, a
300 watt station was the standard size) there were few complaints
of interference. However, since the Intercity decision did not
permit the Secretary of Commerce to deny applications for radio
licenses, there was a proliferation of requests. Soon there were
over 500 commercial stations in the country, and there was no
longer any room in the commercial portion of the broadcasting
frequency zone in which to assign them wave lengths.
Consequently, by the end of 1925, the Department of Commerce
ceased issuing any new commercial radio licenses.
While this was occurring, the government brought criminal charges
against the Zenith Radio Corporation for violating the terms of
its license which had been granted in early 1925. The Zenith
license stipulated that the station must use the wave length of
332.4 meters, and its hours of operations were limited from 10 to
12 pm on Thursday, and then only when the use of this time was
not desired by the General Electric Station in Denver. Zenith,
by its own admission, broadcast at times and on wave lengths not
specified in its license. The decision rendered in April 1926,
held that the Secretary of Commerce "had no power to make
regulations and was to issue licenses" according to the Radio Act
of 1912, whose only requirement was that the wave lengths be less
than 600 meters and more than 1600 meters.
As one attorney at the time put it, "As a result of this ruling,
the entire regulatory system broke down." The Department could
not legally prohibit the issuance of licenses. Within 10 months
an additional 200 commercial stations were licensed. In July
1926, the stations then in existence were using 378,000 watts of
power. By March 1927, that wattage had nearly doubled. The
broadcasting industry was in a state of confusion. Stations
would change frequencies as well as the output. Many stations
could not air their programs, and the listening public was
entirely discouraged and dissatisfied by the fact that nearly
every transmission was accompanied by the whistles and squeals
from interfering stations.
In an article on the "Law of the Air" published in 1928, it was
pointed out that there were two ways in which this predicament
might have been handled. First, the broadcasting industry itself
must have eventually come to the realization that it was on a
self-destructive course, and taken measures to "regulate itself,
relying upon the courts to handle the situation in accordance
with the fundamental rules of law which had been found applicable
in other similar conditions." This in fact was happening. Even
before the Zenith decision, some stations had made agreements
among themselves as to the hours during which they might
broadcast and as to the frequencies they might use. "Many
stations made the best of the situation and, by contract, worked
out a satisfactory and amicable schedule of hours." Such
contracts and agreements had been upheld in federal court (see
Carmichael v. Anderson, 14 Fed 2nd 166, July 19, 1926) even apart
from the invalidity of any Department of Commerce licensing
restrictions.
There was another way in which the broadcast industry was
beginning to control its excesses. Many older stations refused
to share time with the newer stations and were coming to claim
"the exclusive right to use a wave length free from interference,
by reason of priority of appropriation." The foremost case
upholding the idea of homesteading rights was a state decision in
the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois on November 17, 1926.
In Tribune Co. v. Oak Leaves Broadcasting Station, the chancellor
was influenced by four types of common law cases. The two most
important were those dealing with prior appropriation of water in
the western states and trade-name cases. The western doctrine
was that the first appropriator of the water of a stream was
rightfully entitled to its use as against all other comers. This
doctrine applied to both irrigation and mining and was the
outgrowth of the customary usage of the western pioneers. By
analogous reasoning, it was held that the Chicago Daily Tribune's
station, WGN (World's Greatest Newspaper) had "created and
carried out for itself a particular right or easement in and to
the use of" its customary wave length, and that outsiders should
not be able to deprive them of that right. Furthermore, the use
of call letters and dial readings enabled listeners to identify
each particular station on their receiving apparatus. These
identifiers were similar in nature to trade-marks or trade-names,
and were used by the stations to build patronage, popularity, and
goodwill. The court concluded that "priority of time creates a
superiority in right" in the property of a commercial
broadcaster.
The Tribune decision intensified the fear of legislators and
regulators that licensees under the Radio Act of 1912 would
ultimately be able to assert proprietary rights in the courts.
This prompted the passage of a Joint Resolution of Congress on
December 8, 1926 that mandated that all existing commercial
broadcasting licenses expire in 90 days, and required all
"licensees to file their waiver of any assertion of proprietary
interest in a license or frequency as against the regulatory
power of the United States." This echoed an earlier Senate
resolution, passed in 1925, in which the airwaves and the use
thereof had been declared to be "the inalienable possession of
the people of the United States... ." Instead of allowing
property rights in the spectrum to develop, Congress passed a new
federal radio law on February 23, 1927.
The Federal Radio Act of 1927 strengthened the principle of
statism underlying the earlier law of 1912. The new law exerted
stringent controls over the broadcasting industry. First, it
stated that 60 days after the passage of the act, all licenses
would be terminated. Second, it clearly stated that broadcasting
was not a right, but rather a privilege granted by the United
States. Third, it created the Federal Radio Commission, whose
powers were eventually transferred to the Federal Communications
Commission in 1934. Finally, it embraced language of the earlier
Joint Resolution of Congress by providing elaborate provisions
against the assertion of any property rights in a frequency.
In his 1959 article, "The Federal Communications Commission,"
Ronald Coase analyzed the rationale behind the broadcasting
regulatory system and the events which preceded government
regulation. He cited Charles A. Siepmann's book, RADIO,
TELEVISION, AND SOCIETY (1950) which provides the standard
justification for the Radio Act of 1927: "Private enterprise,
over seven long years, failed to set its own house in order.
Cutthroat competition at once retarded radio's orderly
development and subjected listeners to intolerable strain and
inconvenience. " Coase puts these reasons to rest by explaining
that the views of Siepmann and others are faulty because they
"are based on a misunderstanding of the problem."
(T)he real cause of the trouble was that no property rights were
created in these scarce frequencies. We know from our ordinary
experience that land can be allocated to land users without the
need for government regulation by using the price mechanism. But
if no property rights were created in land, so that everyone
could use a tract of land, it is clear that there would be
considerable confusion and that the price mechanism could not
work because there would not be any property rights that could be
acquired. If one person could use a piece of land for growing a
crop, and then another person could come along and build a house
on the land used for the crop ... it would no doubt be accurate
to describe the resulting situation as chaos. But it would be
wrong to blame this on private enterprise and the competitive
system. A private-enterprise system cannot function properly
unless property rights are created in resources, and, when this
is done, someone wishing to use a resource has to pay the owner
to obtain it. Chaos disappears; and so does the government
except that a legal system to define property rights and to
arbitrate disputes is, of course, necessary.
While this is not the place to challenge Coase's assumption that
we need a governmental legal system, the main thrust of his
argument is true. The fact of the matter is that the
participants in the commercial broadcasting industry were acting
in such a manner as to bring about the recognition of property
rights and of the right to be free of interference in their
broadcasting activities. Of course, it is difficult to say what
would have happened had the Radio Act of 1927 not been passed.
But reviewing the history of wireless and the radio it was nearly
a foregone conclusion that the State would somehow assert its
dominance in this media. From the very first, the State
recognized the wireless' potential as a strategic military
weapon. Later it realized its propaganda value. Although it was
voluntaryism which made possible the invention of wireless and
its commercial developments, it was the aggressive nature of the
State and its military that was mostly responsible for the way
radio became a handmaiden of the State.
index
Short Bibliography-
R.H. Coase, "The Federal Communications Commission," THE
JOURNAL OF LAW AND ECONOMICS, October 1939, pp. 1-40.
-
Susan Douglas, INVENTING AMERICAN BROADCASTING 1899-1922,
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987. This is an
excellent overview of the early years of the radio industry.
Quotes in the earlier sections of this article may be found in
this book, as follows: Sec. I see pp. 120-122. Sec. 11 see pp.
112, 125, 139-140. Sec. III see pp. 207, 209, 214, 220. Sec. IV
see pp. 226, 235-237. Sec. V see p. 258. Sec. VI see p. 300.
-
THE RADIO INDUSTRY-THE STORY OF ITS DEVELOPMENT, Chicago: A.W.
Shaw Company, 1928. See "The Law of the Air," especially pp.
167-173.
-
"Scarcity In Radio Communication," Edwin Diamond, Norman Sandier,
and Milton Mueller, TELECOMMUNICATIONS IN CRISIS, Washington,
D.C.: Cato Institute, 1983, pp. 65-72.
-
Paul Segal and Harry Warner, "'Ownership' of Broadcasting
'Frequencies': A Review," THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN LAW REVIEW, February
1947, pp. 111-122.
-
James Taugher, "The Law of Radio Communication with Particular
Reference to a Property Right in a Radio Wave Length,"
MARQUETTE LAW REVIEW, April 1928, pp. 179-192, and pp. 299-317.
index
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