From
Florida Skip
Magazine - 1959
Have
you ever wondered
why radio amateurs
are called
"HAMS"?
Well, it goes like
this: The word
"HAM" as
applied to 1908 was
the station call of
the first amateur
wireless stations
operated by some
amateurs of the
Harvard Radio Club.
They were ALBERT S.
HYMAN, BOB ALMY, and
POOGIE MURRAY. At
first they called
their
station"HYMAN-ALMY-MURRAY".
Tapping out such a
long name in code
soon became tiresome
and called for a
revision.They
changed it to "HYALMU",
using the first two
letters of each of
their names. Early
in 1910 some
confusion resulted
between signals from
the amateur wireless
station "HYALMU"
and a Mexican ship
named "HYALMO".
They decided to use
only the first
letter of each name,
and the station call
became
"HAM".
In
the early pioneer
days of unregulated
radio, amateur
operators picked
their own frequency
and call letters.
Then, as now, some
amateurs had better
signals than
commercial stations.
The resulting
interference came to
the attention of
congressional
committees in
Washington and
Congress gave much
time to proposed
legislation designed
to critically limit
amateur radio
activity.
In
1911, Albert Hyman
chose the
controversial
WIRELESS REGULATION
BILL as the topic
for his thesis at
Harvard. His
instructor insisted
that a copy be sent
to Senator David I.
Walsh, a member of
the committee
hearing the bill.
The Senator was so
impressed with the
thesis that he asked
Hyman to appear
before the
committee. Albert
Hyman took the stand
and described how
the little station
was built and almost
cried when he told
the crowded
committee room that
if the bill went
through, they would
have to close down
the station because
they could not
afford the license
fees and all the
other requirements
which the bill
imposed on amateur
stations.
Congressional
debate began on the
WIRELESS REGULATION
BILL and the little
station
"HAM"
became the symbol
for all the little
amateur stations in
the country crying
to be saved from the
menace and greed of
the big commercial
stations who didn't
want them around.
The bill finally got
to the floor of
Congress and every
speaker talked about
the"...poor
little station
HAM". That's
how it all started.
You
will find the whole
story in the
Congressional
Record. Nationwide
publicity associated
station
"HAM" with
amateur radio
operators. From that
day to this, and
probably to the end
of time in radio, an
amateur is a
"HAM
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