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BAIRD, JOHN LOGIE
 John Logie Baird Photo courtesy of the British Film Institute JOHN
LOGIE BAIRD. Born in Helensburgh, Dumbartonshire, U.K., 13 August
1888. Attended Royal Technical College, Glasgow, and Glasgow University.
Served as superintendent, Clyde Valley Electric Power Company; helped
pioneer television transmission, successfully transmitting image
of a Maltese cross several feet, 1924; gave scientists a demonstration
of "Noctovision," a form of infra-red television imaging, 26 January
1926; succeeded with world's first transatlantic television transmission
from London to New York, and produced first television images in
natural color, 1928; experimented with stereoscopic television;
the BBC adopted his 30-line, mechanically-scanned system, 1929,
used for the first televising of the Derby from Epsom, 1931. Recipient:
first gold medal of the International Faculty of Science given to
an Englishman, 1937; Gold Medal of the International Faculty of
Science, 1937. Died in Bexhill, Sussex, U.K., 14 June 1946.
PUBLICATIONS
Sermons,
Soap And Television: Autobiographical Notes. London: Royal Television
Society, 1988.
Scottish Inventor
John Logie Baird
pioneered early television with the mechanical scanning system he
developed from 1923 to the late 1930s. He is remembered today as
an inventor (178 patents) with considerable insight, who was in
many ways ahead of his time. Among his pioneering ideas were early
versions of color television, the video disc, large screen television,
stereo television, televised sports, and pay television by closed
circuit. But he is also a tragic figure who often worked alone for
lack of financial backing and lived to see his technical ideas superseded.
He was forgotten by the time he died at the age of 58.
Baird did not
select television as a field of endeavor so much as he backed into
it. As a teen, he had toyed with the notion of pictures by wireless,
as had others fascinated with the new technology. Later, having
unsuccessfully tried innovation in several more mundane fields (socks,
jams, glass razors, shoe soles), Baird traveled to Hastings (on
England's south coast) in 1923 to see if the sea air would aid his
always marginal health. During a series of long walks there, his
mind returned to his earlier notions of how to send wireless images.
But he was not well trained in electronics, and this lack of basic
knowledge often limited his thinking and experiments.
Beginning in
1923 and continuing until 1939, Baird produced a series of mechanical
video systems that could scan (and thus transmit and receive) moving
images. These offered a crude picture (about 30 lines of definition
from 1929 to 1935, improving to about 240 before he broke off development)
by means of a cumbersome system of large rotating discs fitted with
lenses. Baird promoted initial public interest in television with
the first public demonstrations (one in a London department store
window) in 1925 to 1926, and long-distance transmissions by wire
(between London and Glasgow in 1926) and short-wave (trans-Atlantic
from London to New York in 1927). By 1928 he was experimenting with
"phonovision," a means of recording his crude images on a phonograph-like
disc. His efforts at promotion and sale of "televisor" devices created
considerable controversy among experts as to whether television
was sufficiently developed to promote public viewing and purchase
of receivers.
For many years,
the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) resisted his efforts
to utilize their frequencies and studio facilities in his work.
Under pressure from the British Post Office (then in charge of all
wire and wireless transmission), the BBC reluctantly began to work
with Baird in 1930. Several years of experiments culminated in a
regular daily broadcast comparison of his 240-line system with an
RCA-like all-electronic 405-line system developed by Marconi-EMI
in 1936-37. Baird's now outmoded approach was soon dropped in favor
of the latter's vastly superior electronic system.
Baird continued
developmental work on color television, now making use of cathode-ray
technology, and achieved 600-line experimental color telecasts by
1940. He continued his effort to perfect large-screen projection
color television during the war, along with some apparent work for
the British military. But his health, never strong, gave out and
he died in 1946.
Did Baird "fail?"
He ignored or denied the growing value of the cathode ray tube for
too long (until the late 1930s), and held on to hopes for his mechanical
alternative. His companies did not develop sufficient engineering
depth and research capability beyond Baird himself. He kept no regular
laboratory notes or records, making support for some of his claims
difficult to find. And--perhaps most important as an indicator of
impact--he achieved little commercial success. Still, there is growing
appreciation of his pioneering if limited role amongst scholars
of British television.
-C.
H. Sterling
FURTHER
READING
Baird, Margaret. Television Baird. Cape Town, South Africa:
Haum, 1973.
Burns,
R. W. British Television: The Formative Years. London: Peter
Peregrinus, 1986.
Exwood,
Maurice. John Logie Baird: 50 Years Of Television. London:
Institution of Electronic and Radio Engineers History of Technology
Monograph, 1976.
Hallett,
Michael. John Logie Baird And Television. Hove, England:
Priory, 1978.
McArthur,
Tom, and Peter Wedell. Vision Warrior: The Hidden Achievement
Of John Logie Baird. Glasgow, Scotland: Scottish Falcon Books,
1990.
Moseley,
Sydney. John Baird: The Romance And Tragedy Of The Pioneer Of
Television. London: Odhams, 1953.
Percy,
J.D. John L. Baird: The Founder Of British Television. London:
Royal Television Society, 1950; Revised, 1952
Rowland,
John. The Television Man: The Story Of John L. Baird. New
York: Roy Publishers, 1966.
Tiltman,
Ronald F. Baird Of Television: The Life Story Of John Logie Baird.
London: Seeley Service & Co., 1933; reprinted, New York: Arno Press,
1974.
See
also Television
Technology
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