Yesterday                    Tomorrow

1937:      US General Douglas MacArthur marries Jean Marie Faircloth, in New York City.  General MacArthur died in 1964. Jean MacArthur died early in 2000 (Marc Small)

April 30th, 1939 (SUNDAY)

U.S.A.: The National Broadcasting Corporation (NBC), a subsidiary of Radio Corporation of America (RCA) begins regular television broadcasting with a telecast of President Franklin D. Roosevelt opening the New York World's Fair. Programs are transmitted from the NBC mobile camera trucks to the main transmitter, which is connected to an antenna atop the Empire State Building.

Ten days prior to Roosevelt's speech, David Sarnoff, President of RCA, made the dedication speech for the opening of the RCA Pavilion at the World's Fair. Staging this event prior to the World's Fair opening ceremonies ensured that RCA would capture its share of the newspaper headlines. 

The ceremony was televised, and watched by several hundred viewers on TV receivers inside the RCA Pavilion at the fairgrounds, as well as on receivers installed on the 62nd floor of Radio City in Manhattan. Programs of 1939 included operas, cartoons, cooking demonstrations, travelogues, fashion shows, and skaters at Rockefeller Centre. There were also numerous live telecasts relayed from within the fair itself.

The RCA Pavilion was designed by the renowned U.S. modernist architectural firm of Skidmore and Owings. When viewed from the air, it was shaped like a radio tube, attracting much attention since aerial views and models of the fair were immensely popular as they showed visitors the scope of the exhibition. The first sight to be seen inside the entrance of the building was a TRK-12 television set with a special transparent cabinet. People were amazed by the quality of the television pictures on this unit. The great majority of visitors had never seen television before, and the set's transparent cabinet removed any doubts in viewer's minds that magic or trickery was involved in obtaining the pictures.

Exhibits within the RCA Pavilion dramatized the use of television in the home, and documented RCA's experimental breakthroughs. The "Radio Living Room of Tomorrow" was created by Turkish-American industrial designer John Vassos. It was outfitted with contemporary built-ins such as a combination radio/television/record player/record-recording set, a facsimile receiver, and a sound motion picture projector. To illustrate how television could be integrated into existing decor, Vassos designed a "Radio Living Room of Today". This featured period furniture complemented by separate cabinets containing the same electronic components. The RCA "Television Laboratory" exhibit featured a display of Vladimir Zworykin's experimental television camera tubes (such as Iconoscopes) and picture tubes (these tubes were often called Kinescopes). As visitors travelled further into the RCA Pavilion they could enter a "Hall of Television" which contained thirteen of RCA's finest TRK-12 receivers. These were kept operational as much as possible, to better provide visitors with an opportunity to sample the new medium. Also in this room was an experimental projection television receiver, which used a very bright 5-inch (12.7 cm) cathode-ray-tube and a large lens to project television pictures onto a special light-reflective screen. The pictures demonstrated with this unit are believed to have been at least 3-feet (91.4 cm) high by 4-feet (121.9 cm) wide. A large Nipper the Dog statue, that familiar dog listening to "His Master's Voice" on the RCA phonograph logo looked on from a pedestal on the other side of the room. 

Visitors crowded together to watch NBC broadcasts or internal closed circuit demonstrations. Frequently, volunteers were escorted outside to the cameras and encouraged to wave at the folks inside. Television was such a novelty at the time that "I was televised" cards were handed out as a souvenir of the experience.

RCA offered four types of television receivers for sale to in 1939, the TRK-12, the TRK-9, the TRK-5, and the TT-5. The TT-5 was an "everyman" vision-only table model introduced last. Their prices, ranging from US$199.50 to $600 (US$2,462 to US$7,407 in year 2000 dollars), were considered high. Advertising was initially aimed at the wealthy; depicting viewers dressed in evening suits and gowns to watch TV. All RCA TV sets at this time were designed by John Vassos, with handcrafted, highly polished wood cabinets taking their cue from the newly popular "streamline" style.

They received channels 1 to 5 (the frequency for channel 1 had not yet been taken over for military use). The RCA sets were offered for sale in Macy's, Bloomingdale's and Wanamaker's department stores in the New York Metropolitan area. Although shoppers were curious, television sales right up until the U.S. entry into World War II were disappointing. Most of the unsold 1939-41 televisions were put into storage and sold after the war. 

Manufacturers other than RCA exhibited their television receivers at the 1939 World's Fair. In 1938, Allen B. DuMont Laboratories, established by the inventor and entrepreneur of the same name, had already offered the first electronic TV sets for sale to the public (prior to the Fair) with their 180 model. Westinghouse Electric and General Electric offered  competing production lines of consumer televisions in their own pavilions. 

These companies also built studios with live cameras for interviews. Even Ford Motor Company got into the act, with television receivers in their executive lounge. Conspicuously missing was Farnsworth Television. Although Philo T. Farnsworth was the first to demonstrate electronic television technology in 1927, his company was not yet manufacturing commercial television receivers. RCA's pioneering television efforts continued at the World's Fair the following year (1940). Exhibition space for the new medium was nearly doubled and the display featured "Television Suites", again designed by Vassos, showcasing the new models in 10 different American home settings. Vassos also contributed to the "America at Home" exhibition. His "Musicorner" featured indirect lighting, soundproofing, 16 mm sound film projector, radio, phonograph, and television receiver all housed in bleached Mahogany modular furniture. Most of the New York World's Fair facilities were demolished in 1940-41 due to a lack of new tenants for the exhibition buildings.

Top of Page

Yesterday                Tomorrow

Home