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Express emphasised the nautical flavour added by the eight man sailor gang doing the hard lifting with a liberal spread of maritime dialect as the work progressed: "Brace up the top guy"; Ay! Ay! Sir!; "Ho! Ho! Boy!"; "Make fast"; and finally the mast was "Four square to all the winds that blow." The demands on
Sweeney's time and resources did not abate but rather increased as the Government relented to local representations and prioritised the Wyndham station for completion also. Sweeney had to juggle available staff and problems with availability of the necessary oregon timbers began to emerge. By mid-February 1913 the mast and buildings were complete. While the transmitting apparatus was not operational, the receivers were installed and reception was obtained from the Perth coastal station and two ships in Fremantle port. In March 1913, the PMG's Department called for tenders for the supply of 2,500 gallons of petroleum for station VIN. This would be a continuing requirement for many years until Geraldton had its own electricity supply and the station could be serviced. The transmitter and all equipment for the station was provided by a 15-h.p. "Gardner" Oil Engine, direct coupled to a "Westinghouse" D.C. Generator. The unit was purchased from Noyes Bros. (Melbourne) Propty. Ltd., 499-501 Bourke-street, Melbourne for an amount of £285, as announced in the Commonwealth Gazette of 14 June 1913. There was some competition between the various crews erecting the masts and stations. The record set by the Geraldton crew for mast erection did not last long, being announced on 30 March 1913 as broken by the Esperance team with a time of 5½ hours, though the latter mast was only 160 ft. high, compared to 180 ft. for the Geraldton mast. There had been little progress when two months later in mid-April 1913 it was advised that the promised transmitter still had not been despatched from the Shaw Wireless Works and was still "undergoing testing" in Sydney. With little more to do pending the arrival of the transmitting apparatus, Sweeney returned to Perth on 4 April 1913. Finally in early May 1913 the transmitter and ancillaries arrived on the Aeon and completion commenced in earnest. On 10 May 1913 it was reported that the transmitter had tested successfully on site and official commencement was imminent. On 12 May 1913, a brief report in the Geraldton Express stated simply that "Wireless.— The wireless station is now ready for public work." The following day the rate of progress in the coastal radio network was well illustrated. When announcing the commencement of the Geraldton station it was also stated that VIR Rockhampton would commence in three days' time, while VIC Cooktown and VIE Esperance would commence the following week.
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economically maintainable. It was finally lowered on 6 November 1930. Operation at the station was maintained using a temporary mast for several days until a replacement steel mast was installed the following week. The new mast was of tubular steel and a telescopic design. Despite the improvements in technology over the years, the process of raising the mast using a jury mast and winch was closely similar to the task undertaken in 1913. The work was undertaken by supervising project engineer Sydney Trim and mechanic S. Broomehall. The
Marconi School of Wireless was a significant part of the AWA wireless combine and played a major role in training interested individuals for future roles in the Navy and military, as well as wireless operators for shipping and coastal stations, also broadcasting. In more remote areas such as Geraldton, the local coastal station participated in the recruitment and tuition of its students. In February 1931, the wireless station was added to the Council's rate book, no doubt as a result of the change of ownership of the property. In March 1931 there was a change in senior staffing at the wireless station. Mr. H. E. Cox, the officer in charge for some years departed for Sydney. His duties were assumed by Mr. E. H. Smellie who had been at Geraldton for about one year, while Mr. H. B. Wolfe was to assume Smellie's former duties in short order. Sydney Trim, the AWA engineer charged with renovating and upgrading the coastal radio network, returned to Sydney in July 1931 after a two year journey circumnavigating Australia visiting most of the coastal stations. Trim had oversighted the replacement of the VIN mast in November 1930 during that tour. Other projects included VIO Broome (replacement mast, replacement 5kW main transmitter & new emergency transmitter), Cockatoo Island (new wireless telephony system), VIN Geraldton (replacement mast, replacement 2kW main transmitter and new emergency transmitter), VIE Esperance (replacement mast and replacement 2kW main transmitter), VID Darwin (replacement mast, replacement 5kW main transmitter and new emergency transmitter), VIA Adelaide (replacement masts, complete station refurbishment) and VIP Fremantle / Perth (new police communications system). Wolfe's recent arrival was confirmed in July 1931, noting he had previously been at VID Darwin for 3½ years and was much appreciating the change in climate.
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established that no opposition was raised to the use of the prime site, and materials were already being delivered on site in the first week of
December 1912. Construction of the station was proceeding apace towards the end of December 1912 with a team of eight carpenters constructing the 180 foot mast, 21 inches square consisting of Oregon planks steel bolted together. A further interview with Sweeney was published in the Geraldton Express a few days later which provided further detail of the overall construction and layout of the station. It noted that Sweeney was being assisted on site in wireless matters by Mr. Cox and that the mechanical aspects of the construction were being oversighted by Mr. R. D. Munson of the Public Works Department. Early in January 1913, the Geraldton Express noted that work by the Public Works Department was proceeding satisfactorily and estimated that the buildings would be complete in about three weeks' time. Mid January 1913, the new Peak Hill-Nullagine telegraph line was announced as being in service, which led to consideration of the unreliability of the old line & potential risks remaining with the new line. But it was noted that the coastal radio chain being established provided a key alternative route in case of emergencies. When the coastal chain of wireless stations was first announced, the necessary total number of stations was thought to be about 30, being almost every major port in the nation. But as commissioning proceeded, it became clear that the reliable range for the lower power stations was greater than expected. Carnarvon, about 450km North of Geraldton had been nominated as a likely site, but on 11 January 1913 it was announced that Carnarvon would not be established since Geraldton would be able to service Carnarvon's requirements (in conjunction with the land telegraph system). In February 1913, a few months after the fact, the Commonwealth Gazette announced the purchase of Bullivant's Patent Flexible Steel Wire and Bullivant's Galvanized Wire Rigging Rope for VIN as necessary for antenna and mast rigging. In March 1913, further rigging wire was announced as having been purchased for Station VIN. By mid-January 1913, the jury mast essential to raising the transmitting mast had arrived at Geraldton on the Minderoo and that task was set to commence in a matter of days.
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defenceless. A few days later the
Geraldton Mayor advised that the WA Premier had communicated to him that the matter of protection of the wireless station had been referred to the military authorities. On 18 August 1914 Lieut. Gibbings received instructions to mount a guard at the wireless station consisting of one officer and 20 men. Unfortunately the military reserve utilised for guard duty were mostly youthful and not fully convinced of the seriousness of their task. Within a week of commencement their shenanigans drew comment in the Geraldton Express. Within a few weeks the station guard had cause to draw bayonets and an intruder was apprehended at the station. Under questioning at the local court it became clear that the culprit was having a psychotic break and he was remanded for medical assessment. Generators supplied power to the station, but these were typically used primarily to charge a bank of batteries for actual equipment operation. Maintaining battery charge was an ongoing issue and significant supplies of sulphuric acid were required to achieve this. A single tender in September 1914 called for 2,490 lbs of sulphuric acid across 10 stations. By November 1914 it became clear that the number of persons at the station was causing a sanitary problem and the matter was brought to the attention of council. Lieut. Everett, the commanding officer of the station guard, sought to keep his men engaged and participation in local sports events were regularly reported. In February 1915, Commander of the guard (Lieut. E. S. Everett) departed for the Osborne School of Instruction and was replaced by Second Lieut. Hutton. On 27 January 1915 Arthur McDonald of the wireless station staff married local girl Rose Ethell at St. John's Church, Geraldton. In March 1915, Mark Mortimer was appointed as Officer-in-Charge at the Geraldton wireless station. Again in April 1915, the tom-foolery of the young guards was cause for comment in the Geraldton Express. The staff of the wireless station recognized their community responsibilities and in April 1915 donated £2 9s. to the Moore Benefit. The brief return to Geraldton in April 1915 of local boy Lieut. Gibbings on leave from the war was cause for joy and direct news of the war in several arenas in the town.
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wireless officer at the
Geraldton station had been successful in being appointed chief engineer at 4TO. Newman Pusey had been on staff at the wireless station for several years, but in July 1933 received notice of his transfer to VII the Thursday Island station. He was to marry in August 1933 and depart for the north shortly afterwards. It was announced in October 1933 that E. H. Smellie, after some 3½ years at the Geraldton station, had been transferred to VIO Broome and would depart the station in the following month. The coastal radio stations provided generally excellent alternative communication lines during outages of the land telegraph system. But Murphy's law could come to bear and during an outage near Coolgardie in April 1935, when Geraldton wireless was called to assist, it was found that that station itself was unavailable due to a battery recharge being underway. The Geraldton wireless station was fully integrated into the post office telegraphy network which in September 1935 included some 160 stations and 800 substations linked by over 13,000 miles of landlines. The ability to communicate directly with VIP Perth, 24 hours a day, provided invaluable redundancy with the landline network and this capacity was only matched by one other coastal radio station being VIE Esperance. The location of the wireless transmitter within the body of the town was certain to cause blanketing interference to local broadcast receivers due to high levels of radiofrequency signals. But the people of the town seemed to accept the interference as a necessary consequence of this vital service. The residents were less tolerant however of the electrical interference resulting from unsuppressed electrical motors in the town and the matter was raised at a Council meeting in March 1936. In July 1938 it was announced that VIO Broome and VIN Geraldton had been fitted with higher power main transmitters. Stated reason was to improve communication between Broome and Perth at times of land telegraph outages, however better communication in the event of war would also have been a factor.
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sale of the coastal radio network to
Amalgamated Wireless (Australasia) and listed 17 Australian and 9 Pacific stations. The following week it was formally announced that all of the Australian and Pacific Island stations of the coastal radio network including the cornerstone Applecross station had been sold to AWA for an amount of £39,574. It was confirmed that this was in accordance with the original 1922 agreement between the Commonwealth and AWA. A further statement again detailed the specific list of stations with 17 services in Australia (including the Geraldton station) and a further 9 in the Pacific Islands. The stated reason for the sale was that the stations are no longer required by the Federal Government for any public purpose, but that where necessary, army reservations set out in the Crown grants were withheld. George Franklin Cook had spent some years at the Geraldton wireless station circa 1927, but returned to Fremantle circa 1928. In February 1929 he was gathering firewood with his brother and fell from a tree, sustaining serious injuries. He died at the Fremantle hospital some weeks later. The Abrolhos Islands off the coast of Geraldton displayed both extreme natural beauty and horrific risk to coastal navigation. To explore the possibilities for tourism, Geraldton council despatched a party to visit the islands for ten days in June 1929. Harold Cox was the senior wireless officer at the Geraldton wireless station and accompanied the group, providing wireless communication facilities. AWA dominated the market in Australia for wireless fitout on ships in the late 1920s, and in June 1929 at the time of the maiden voyage of the "Westralia," provided a comprehensive summary of its work undertaken which included coastal radio equipment, lifeboat equipment and broadcast band repeaters. Daylight communication with the Geraldton station was established at distance ranging from 800 to 1000 miles.
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discipline. In June 1916 a large deputation of staff met with the
Minister for the Navy to air their grievances. In September 1916 A. E. Pell recounted his war experiences by letter to a local friend, noting that after 6 months in Melbourne as a wireless instructor he had been sent to Persia and was presently in a Bombay hospital recovering from fever. A sad and brief report in March 1917 was to effect that Corporal W. Pass, formerly of the wireless station guard had made the ultimate sacrifice in France. The Commonwealth Gazette of 6 September 1917 announced the abolition of the position of Officer-in-Charge, Geraldton wireless station, Postmaster-General's Department (together with all other positions associated with the coastal radio network), associated with the transfer of control to the Royal Australian Naval Radio Service. After much debate and prevarication, the Royal Australian Naval Radio Service was finally created in March 1917 as part of an overall restructure of the Navy, following on from the review by the Naval Board. As a result all pertinent staff of the PMG were transferred to Department of the Navy's RANRS. In August 1917 the impact of the war on the Western Australia coast was diminishing and domestic matters assumed greater attention. Odd noises emanating from the vicinity of the wireless station were variously attributed to secret activities therein. Further enquiry revealed that the offending noise from the wireless station was simply a nearby failing windmill. Another former member of the wireless station guard, Private George Compton, gave the ultimate sacrifice in July 1918.
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stations along the coastline. Still in July 1909, at the time of the arrival at
Fremantle of the first wireless-equipped merchant ship (RMS Mantua), the Geraldton Guardian was advocating for a wireless station for Geraldton. In July 1912 the Commonwealth Meteorologist visited Geraldton investigating a number of weather phenomenon unique to the Northwest coast of Western Australia and noted the benefits arising from a wireless station at Geraldton and foreshadowed the establishment of a continent-circling network of wireless stations. The following month, August 1912, John Graeme Balsille, the Commonwealth Wireless Expert formally announced that the Government was proceeding with the establishment of a network of coastal wireless stations and that Geraldton would be one of the initial locations. The Geraldton Guardian waxed lyrical in its announcement later in the month of August 1912 of the proposed establishment of the Geraldton station. In September 1912, Balsillie was comprehensively interviewed by a journalist from "The West Australian" and was advised that, following the completion of the capital city stations, priority was now being given to establishment of the WA coastal stations, indeed that the Geraldton station might be commenced as early as three weeks hence. A few days later, the Sunday Times also interviewed Balsillie who reiterated the short timetable proposed for the Geraldton station. The interview demonstrated Balsillie's straightforward and matter-of-fact manner which is precisely how he proceeded with the establishment of the stations.
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Trevassa were initially doubted in Perth. But the arrival of the SS Moreton Bay at
Fremantle, the ultimate source of the initial reports, quickly dispelled those doubts. Mr. Reginald Charles Goodland was on the staff of the station in 1924 and 1925, then returned to the Perth station. He passed in an accident near VIP and this news was received with sadness by his many friends Geraldton. By the 1920s Australia's capacity for weather forecasting and reporting had greatly improved. The northwest coast of Western Australia regularly saw intense cyclone activity during the summer months of the southern hemisphere and the coastal radio network played a vital role in distributing weather information to coastal shipping. In the April 1926 cyclone, the Geraldton station served both to broadcast weather information from the Weather Bureau to coastal shipping and to collect weather reports from shipping in the region to assist the Bureau in their forecasting and reporting. A secondary role for the coastal radio network was as an emergency alternative telegraphic route when the land telegraph system sustained damage. This occurred in July 1926 when land telegraph lines along coastal Western Australia were severely damaged by storms and the Geraldton wireless station became a vital link in the telegraphic network. The Geraldton station operated with power from its own diesel generator for more than 13 years. Finally the local electricity supply had expanded to the point where it could support the station and it was connected to the town grid in November 1926.
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foreshadowed following enactment of the
Navigation Act. It was noted that VIN appeared to be able to receive ships south of VIP somewhat better than VIP itself. The Commonwealth Gazette of 19 July 1913 advertised vacancies for Officers-in-charge for 12 coastal stations outside the major metropolitan centres. The positions were in the Professional Division following advice by Balsillie and generally reflected superior pay and conditions compared to other telegraphists in the Department. Following the exciting times of station construction and initial operation, ordinary life soon set in and in October 1913 a local resident was complaining about the fire risk of long grass in the station paddock. Towards the end of January, Mr. Lamb, officer in charge of the Geraldton Wireless Station was reported returning from his holiday. In May 1914, Mr. Lamb concluded his period as officer-in-charge of the Geraldton station and was transferred to VIP Perth. He was replaced by Mr. Mortimer.
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sinking of the Emden, the German threat to the Northwest coast was greatly diminished and early in May 1915 it was announced that the wireless guard to the Geraldton wireless station would be demobilised. Two of the wireless station staff, Pell and Hooker, volunteered for war service in June 1915 and were expected to depart the station shortly. A few weeks later it was reported that A. E. Pell would be departing on 9 July for training at the Blackboy Hill camp and thence to the Wireless Troop in Melbourne. Hooker was to follow as soon as a relieving officer was available. A. E. Pell was replaced early in July 1915 by Mr. Broomhill. In September 1915 both A. E. Pell and B. Hooker, having joined the service were still at the signallers camp at Broadmeadows, Victoria training new recruits in the art of wireless telegraphy. The Commonwealth Gazette of 31 August 1916 noted that Clement George Benger Meredith was now the Wireless station Officer-in-Charge.
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penalties for, inter alia, photographing or sketching wireless installations. In August 1940 Mr. R. C. Anderson, wireless officer at VIN Geraldton for the previous four years, received advice of promotion to officer-in-charge of VIO Broome and was to leave Geraldton the following month. December 1940 saw the arrival of C. Lemmon at VIN, having transferred from VIO Broome and he quickly became involved in community activities in Geraldton. The years 1941 through 1944 saw a dearth of information in contemporary publications due to the application of the National Security Act, but increased in mid-1945 as Japanese forces were finally pushed back. Prime Minister Chifley was particularly proud of the part Western Australia played in its defence and again developments in coastal radio were singled out for praise. It was noted that the Geraldton station maintained communications with coastal shipping as well as broader monitoring duties.
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key station in a radiocommunications network with 4 smaller stations located at different islands in the Abrolhos Islands. The network was to assist exchange of messages of both a commercial and personal nature with the mainland. The Mangrove Island station of the Abrolhos Island network proved invaluable when the Starling ran aground in Whales Bay in October 1950. Enabling communication with the mainland and rendering of emergency assistance upon his return to Geraldton.
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On 2 November 1928 the prospect of agreement by the Commonwealth government to the sale of the coastal radio network to Amalgamated Wireless (Australasia) Ltd. was cause for the firm to postpone its annual general meeting by one month. The Commonwealth Gazette of 8 November 1928 formally detailed the
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The transfer of officers and staff from the Wireless Branch of the Postmaster-General's Department to the Department of Navy was not supported by the personnel. Issues were a loss of professional status, modest loss of pay, loss of general terms and conditions of service and being subject to military
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On 3 August 1914 the Minister for Defence notified the imposition of censorship on all radiotelegraphic traffic within the Commonwealth. Following the commencement of World War One in August 1914, the local authorities were quick to point out that the wireless station was both a key target and quite
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In February 1947 the Overseas Telecommunications Commission (Australia) assumed control of all external telecommunications services previously operated by Amalgamated Wireless (Australasia) Ltd. This included the entire Australian coastal radio network. From June 1948, the Geraldton station was the
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AWA had rather recently expanded its sphere of operations beyond solely manufacture and retail of broadcast transmitters into ownership and control of individual broadcast stations. 4TO Townsville was to be the newest addition to the group, commencing in October 1931. Harold Cox, recently senior
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Application of the War Precautions Act resulted in minimal news of the wireless stations themselves, but Broome's "Nor' West Echo" took a broad interpretation and reported on how a merchant ship was able to evade the Emden thanks to news of its movements broadcast by the Broome station. With the
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In the early 1900s, Geraldton was essentially a port town and saw many vessels both docking at the port and passing nearby on their way to northern Australia and to Europe. But the coastline was not yet well charted and was littered with many small rocky islands and reefs, all of which presented
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daytime reception by the Geraldton station of the SS Katoomba at sea of over 1100 miles. In June 1923 the Geraldton station was the first to receive messages concerning the loss and subsequent search for the Trevassa. In fact, those first reports from the Geraldton station about the loss of the
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Two days after commencement of the station, it was operating commercially, with an underwhelming volume of traffic. Local A. H. du Boulay had the honour of lodging the first commercial radiogram and was rewarded two hours later with a reply from the RMS Malwa. An increase in business volume was
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The main mast was raised to the perpendicular on 18 January 1913. The activity in the heart of the town was a visual spectacle that was not equalled for many years and a number of townsfolk turned out to observe (as reported by the Geraldton Guardian). The report of the activity by the Guardian
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were well versed in the problem, its pages regularly reporting lost or damaged ships. Equally, with great forethought, they saw the solution to the problem. Following the sad loss of the SS Windsor, in February 1908 they proposed both additional lighthouses and provision of wireless telegraphy
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By late 1930 the work of the wireless station had expanded to the point where building additions were required and these were approved by council in September 1930. The original 180 ft. timber mast which had served the station faithfully for more than 17 years was by the end of 1930 no longer
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Even prior to the declaration of World War 2 in September 1939, the Geraldton militia mounted a guard at the wireless station, emphasising its strategic importance. Security at VIN Geraldton was further enhanced in January 1940 by the passing of the National Security Act which imposed severe
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As foreshadowed by Balsillie, initial work soon commenced and the project supervisor W. M. Sweeney arrived in Geraldton at the end of September 1912 and quickly identified the Residency site on Francis street as being the most suitable. Evidently local council was so keen to see the station
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Operationally the station's duties remained relatively constant for several decades, being essentially a communications link between the huge numbers of ships that worked on the Western Australian coastline as well as the mail liners that connected Australia to Europe.
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Hadlow, Martin Lindsay. "Wireless and Empire ambition: wireless telegraphy/telephony and radio broadcasting in the British Solomon Islands Protectorate, South-West Pacific (1914-1947): political, social and developmental perspectives". (Martin Hadlow, Brisbane, 2016)
21:
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Curnow, Geoffrey Ross. "The history of the development of wireless telegraphy and broadcasting in Australia to 1942, with especial reference to the Australian Broadcasting Commission: a political and administrative study".
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Mr H. Selfe, was reported as being on the Wireless Station Staff. The Royal Australian Navy Radio Service was formally disbanded on 28 October 1920. The appointments of all the officers were terminated.
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The Commonwealth Gazette of 21 April 1921 announced a partial restructure of the Radiotelegraph Branch including the abolition of the position of Radio Station Master, Geraldton.
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Amalgamated Wireless (Australasia) was never reticent in claiming records and exceptional performance, and a December 1922 report advised of a
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in 1922 bought under the control of Amalgamated Wireless (Australasia) Ltd as it increased its grasp of Australian wireless
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266:, 1913, Commonwealth Wireless Expert who designed the wireless system deployed and oversighted the network establishment
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late in WW1, a reluctant transferee to the Department of the Navy as the Royal Australian Naval Radio Service (RANRS)
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598:(PhD. thesis, focus on Beam Wireless and its origins with emphasis on wireless telegraphy era, detailed analysis)
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R. D. Munson, 1913, project foreman-rigger for the Public Works Department's portion of the construction project
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Sydney Trim, 1930, mast replacement project supervising engineer for Amalgamated Wireless (Australasia) Ltd.
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E. H. Smellie, wireless operator, 1930 to March 1931; senior wireless operator, March 1931 to November 1933
2935:. Vol. XLVIII, no. 16, 976. Western Australia. 30 September 1929. p. 6 (HOME FINAL EDITION)
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R. C. Anderson, wireless officer, circa September 1936 to September 1940; relief January 1949 to May 1949
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Private George Compton, guard troop August 1914 to January 1915, died France July 1918 "no greater love"
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2823:. Vol. XLVII, no. 16, 701. Western Australia. 9 November 1928. p. 1 (HOME FINAL EDITION)
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Given, Donald Jock. "Transit of Empires: Ernest Fisk and the World Wide Wireless". (Melbourne, 2007)
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For a more comprehensive treatment with full quotes of newspaper articles refer Wikibooks chapter on
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S. Broomehall, 1930, mast replacement project mechanic for Amalgamated Wireless (Australasia) Ltd.
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Upon commencement of WW2, again the coastal radio network control vested in the Defence Department
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The Official History of Australia in the War of 1914-1918; Volume IX, The Royal Australian Navy
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Martin, Fiona (2002). "Beyond public service broadcasting? ABC online and the user/citizen".
272:, 1913, construction project supervising engineer for the Postmaster-General's Department
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following the commencement of WW1, informally within the scope of the Defence Department
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659:"The Geraldton Guardian. For Country, Faith, and Justice. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY, 15 1908"
519:(especially Chapter XIV: Sundry services: Radio-Telegraphy, Censorship, Coaling, etc.)
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1191:"The Geraldton Guardian. For Country, Faith, and Justice. SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1913"
883:"The Geraldton Guardian. For Country, Faith, and Justice. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1912"
807:. Vol. XXVIII, no. 8, 264. Western Australia. 26 September 1912. p. 7
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after the conclusion of WW1 transferred back to the Postmaster-General's Department
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1906 to 1912 with, inter alia, lists of merchant ship and shore station callsigns)
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and stations further north) and particularly when land telegraph systems failed.
3299:. Vol. 51, no. 15, 352. Western Australia. 6 September 1935. p. 19
1415:"The Geraldton Guardian. For Country, Faith, and Justice. SATURDAY, MAY 10, 1913"
2731:"Geraldton Guardian For Country, Faith and Justice. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1926"
1787:. Vol. VIII, no. 1168. Western Australia. 17 September 1914. p. 2
1387:"The Geraldton Guardian. For Country, Faith, and Justice. SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1913"
835:. No. 767. Western Australia. 29 September 1912. p. 6 (Second Section)
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3467:. Vol. XII, no. 2, 055. Western Australia. 5 December 1940. p. 1
3411:. Vol. XII, no. 1, 914. Western Australia. 11 January 1940. p. 3
3383:. Vol. XI, no. 1, 859. Western Australia. 4 September 1939. p. 2
3131:. Vol. XLVII, no. 9, 073. Western Australia. 24 July 1931. p. 12
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3578:. Vol. XXII, no. 3758. Western Australia. 10 October 1950. p. 2
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2655:. Vol. XIX, no. 4516. Western Australia. 31 December 1925. p. 2
2571:. Vol. XVI, no. 4103. Western Australia. 12 December 1922. p. 1
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2207:. Vol. IX, no. 1306. Western Australia. 2 September 1915. p. 2
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1927:. Vol. IX, no. 1221. Western Australia. 11 February 1915. p. 1
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1871:. Vol. IX, no. 1201. Western Australia. 24 December 1914. p. 2
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1843:. Vol. IX, no. 1198. Western Australia. 26 November 1914. p. 2
1834:
1778:
1731:. Vol. VIII, no. 1157. Western Australia. 18 August 1914. p. 3
1722:
1610:
1582:
1563:. Vol. VIII, no. 1023. Western Australia. 7 October 1913. p. 3
1554:
1498:
1414:
1386:
1302:
1227:. Vol. VII, no. 928. Western Australia. 18 February 1913. p. 2
1218:
1190:
1134:
1031:. Vol. VIII, no. 385. Western Australia. 11 January 1913. p. 7
1022:
919:. Vol. VII, no. 903. Western Australia. 21 December 1912. p. 4
910:
882:
854:
826:
798:
686:
658:
574:
Radio Broadcasting Technology, 75 Years of Development in Australia 1923–1998
516:
3075:. Vol. II, no. 543. Western Australia. 17 February 1931. p. 2
3019:. Vol. II, no. 509. Western Australia. 22 November 1930. p. 3
1899:. Vol. IX, no. 1219. Western Australia. 6 February 1915. p. 2
1311:. No. 795. Western Australia. 30 March 1913. p. 7 (Second Section)
1199:. Vol. VII, no. 915. Western Australia. 18 January 1913. p. 2
1143:. Vol. VII, no. 915. Western Australia. 18 January 1913. p. 2
891:. Vol. VII, no. 897. Western Australia. 7 December 1912. p. 2
667:. Vol. II, no. 159. Western Australia. 15 February 1908. p. 2
625:
616:
550:
507:
3187:. Vol. III, no. 639. Western Australia. 1 October 1931. p. 2
3047:. Vol. IV, no. 682. Western Australia. 12 January 1931. p. 2
2991:. Vol. II, no. 502. Western Australia. 6 November 1930. p. 2
309:
B. Hooker, wireless officer, ?? to August 1915 (leave for war service)
297:
James Joseph Wiseman Lamb, senior wireless officer, March? 1913 to May 1914
3243:. Vol. V, no. 961. Western Australia. 28 October 1933. p. 2
2627:. Vol. XVI, no. 4183. Western Australia. 16 June 1923. p. 1
2459:. Vol. XII, no. 1738. Western Australia. 25 July 1918. p. 3
863:. Vol. VI, no. 868. Western Australia. 1 October 1912. p. 3
480:
412:
367:
Corporal W. Pass, guard troop, died France February 1917 "no greater love"
324:
Reginald Charles Goodland, wireless officer, January 1924 to December 1925
306:
A. E. Pell, wireless officer, ?? to July 1915 (leave for war service)
278:, 1913, assistant project engineer for the Postmaster-General's Department
117:
in 1948 transferred to the newly created Overseas Telecommunications (OTC)
3550:. Vol. XX, no. 3415. Western Australia. 15 June 1948. p. 5
3159:. Vol. III, no. 610. Western Australia. 25 July 1931. p. 2
3103:. Vol. II, no. 552. Western Australia. 10 March 1931. p. 2
2787:"SALE OF WIRELESS STATIONS TO AMALGAMATED WIRELESS (AUSTRALASIA) LIMITED"
2711:. Vol. XX, no. 4593. Western Australia. 24 July 1926. p. 2
2683:. Vol. XX, no. 4549. Western Australia. 1 April 1926. p. 1
2599:. Vol. XVI, no. 4180. Western Australia. 9 June 1923. p. 3
2487:. Vol. XIV, no. 2014. Western Australia. 18 May 1920. p. 3
2319:. Vol. XI, no. 1537. Western Australia. 3 March 1917. p. 2
2123:. Vol. IX, no. 1276. Western Australia. 24 June 1915. p. 2
2039:. Vol. IX, no. 1243. Western Australia. 8 April 1915. p. 3
1619:. Vol. VIII, no. 1114. Western Australia. 9 May 1914. p. 3
695:. Vol. III, no. 376. Western Australia. 10 July 1909. p. 4
568:
471:
454:
428:
342:
F. H. Chrismas, senior wireless officer, circa November 1935 to May 1949+
108:
in 1928 the hard assets of the coastal radio network formally sold to AWA
1507:. Vol. VII, no. 961. Western Australia. 15 May 1913. p. 3
1423:. Vol. VII, no. 959. Western Australia. 10 May 1913. p. 2
586:
577:
3215:. Vol. V, no. 920. Western Australia. 25 July 1933. p. 2
2907:. Vol. I, no. 124. Western Australia. 14 June 1929. p. 2
2879:. Vol. I, no. 79. Western Australia. 16 April 1929. p. 1
2847:
2259:
2095:. Vol. IX, no. 1255. Western Australia. 6 May 1915. p. 3
1395:. Vol. VII, no. 956. Western Australia. 3 May 1913. p. 2
477:
Australian MCS; A brief history of the Australian Coastal Radio Service
54:
had commenced previously, but that station had been constructed by the
2767:. No. 22, 081. Queensland, Australia. 2 November 1928. p. 12
2375:. No. 11812. New South Wales, Australia. 20 March 1917. p. 4
2067:. Vol. 3, no. 150. Western Australia. 1 May 1915. p. 6
387:, (Child & Associates Publishing Pty Ltd, Frenchs Forest, 1988)
361:
Second Lieut E. S. Everett, guard commander ?? to February 1915
425:
The seawatchers : the story of Australia's Coast Radio Service
2851:. No. 22962. Victoria, Australia. 9 November 1928. p. 10
592:
Constituting Australia's International Wireless Service: 1901-1922
2431:. Vol. XXXIX. Western Australia. 15 February 1918. p. 2
2403:. Vol. XXXVIII. Western Australia. 20 August 1917. p. 3
2263:. No. 19, 113. Victoria, Australia. 24 June 1916. p. 15
127:
significant danger to the shipping trade. The proprietors of the
947:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 23 December 1912. p. 1
330:
Harold E. Cox, senior wireless officer, circa 1929 to March 1931
1479:. No. 11, 706. Victoria, Australia. 13 May 1913. p. 5
1171:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 20 January 1913. p. 3
1115:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 15 January 1913. p. 2
1003:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 10 January 1913. p. 2
779:. Vol. XXXIV. Western Australia. 19 August 1912. p. 2
399:
Callsign History Australia - Australian Amateur Radio Callsigns
1759:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 24 August 1914. p. 2
1703:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 14 August 1914. p. 3
1675:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 12 August 1914. p. 3
975:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 8 January 1913. p. 3
751:. Vol. XXXIV. Western Australia. 7 August 1912. p. 3
2151:. Vol. XXXVI. Western Australia. 30 June 1915. p. 2
2011:. Vol. XXXVI. Western Australia. 7 April 1915. p. 2
1983:. Vol. XXXVI. Western Australia. 7 April 1915. p. 3
723:. Vol. XXXIV. Western Australia. 19 July 1912. p. 2
601:
United States, Navy Department, Bureau of Steam Engineering.
364:
Second Lieut Hutton, guard commander February 1915 to ??
358:
Second Lieut Gibbings, guard commander August 1914 to ??
2179:. Vol. XXXVI. Western Australia. 2 July 1915. p. 2
1367:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 4 April 1913. p. 3
1339:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 4 April 1913. p. 2
1451:. Vol. XXXV. Western Australia. 12 May 1913. p. 3
635:
Wireless Institute of Australia (editor Wolfenden, Peter).
583:
Halcyon Days, The Story of Amateur Radio in VK4, Queensland
504:
Something in the air : a history of radio in Australia
300:
Mark Mortimer, senior wireless officer, May 1914 to ??
16:
20th-century telecommunication service in Western Australia
452:
Changing Stations the story of Australian commercial radio
2347:. No. 146. Australia. 6 September 1917. p. 1874
1815:. No. 71. Australia. 12 September 1914. p. 2208
436:
Geeves, P. "The Dawn of Australia's Radio Broadcasting".
2795:. No. 121. Australia. 8 November 1928. p. 3084
2515:. No. 96. Australia. 11 November 1920. p. 2066
2235:. No. 116. Australia. 31 August 1916. p. 2082
827:"A Wireless Wizard—Five Stations for Western Australia"
622:
Early Radio Station Lists Issued by the U.S. Government
318:
Louis Alfred Fontaine, wireless officer, circa Jun 1923
603:
List of wireless telegraph stations of the world, 1912
535:
Southern Review: Communication, Politics & Culture
61:
The station provided a vital link between VIP and VIZ
1647:. No. 50. Australia. 3 August 1914. p. 1335
1639:"ESTABLISHMENT OF CENSORSHIP OF CABLE COMMUNICATIONS"
339:
H. B. Wolfe, wireless operator, March 1931 to ??
303:
Arthur McDonald, wireless officer, circa January 1915
2543:. No. 35. Australia. 21 April 1921. p. 675
1535:. No. 52. Australia. 19 July 1913. p. 1723
1283:. No. 44. Australia. 14 June 1913. p. 1532
1255:. No. 21. Australia. 29 March 1913. p. 854
1087:. No. 23. Australia. 12 April 1913. p. 937
1955:. No. 17. Australia. 6 March 1915. p. 364
1059:. No. 17. Australia. 8 March 1913. p. 553
639:(Wireless Institute of Australia, Melbourne, 2017)
327:George Franklin Cook, wireless officer, circa 1928
333:Newman Dobson Pusey, ??, 1926 to August 1933
312:Broomhill, wireless officer, July 1915 to ??
2227:"POSTMASTER-GENERAL'S DEPARTMENT. CENTRAL STAFF"
85:Organisational control was constantly changing:
613:The Magic Spark: 50 Years of Radio in Australia
556:A History of Radio in South Australia 1897–1977
547:Australian Radio, The Technical Story 1923–1983
321:E. W. Tymms, wireless officer, circa April 1925
515:(Angus & Robertson, Sydney, 9th Ed, 1941)
373:H. H. Opie, guard commander ?? to ??
39:, which commenced operation on 12 May 1913.
8:
495:Media ownership and regulation: a chronology
348:C. Lemmon, ??, December 1940 to ??
114:in 1946 briefly under the control of the PMG
524:Australian Radio Publications and Magazines
3586:– via National Library of Australia.
3558:– via National Library of Australia.
3530:– via National Library of Australia.
3502:– via National Library of Australia.
3475:– via National Library of Australia.
3447:– via National Library of Australia.
3419:– via National Library of Australia.
3391:– via National Library of Australia.
3363:– via National Library of Australia.
3335:– via National Library of Australia.
3307:– via National Library of Australia.
3279:– via National Library of Australia.
3251:– via National Library of Australia.
3223:– via National Library of Australia.
3195:– via National Library of Australia.
3167:– via National Library of Australia.
3139:– via National Library of Australia.
3111:– via National Library of Australia.
3083:– via National Library of Australia.
3055:– via National Library of Australia.
3027:– via National Library of Australia.
2999:– via National Library of Australia.
2971:– via National Library of Australia.
2943:– via National Library of Australia.
2915:– via National Library of Australia.
2887:– via National Library of Australia.
2859:– via National Library of Australia.
2831:– via National Library of Australia.
2803:– via National Library of Australia.
2775:– via National Library of Australia.
2747:– via National Library of Australia.
2719:– via National Library of Australia.
2691:– via National Library of Australia.
2663:– via National Library of Australia.
2635:– via National Library of Australia.
2607:– via National Library of Australia.
2579:– via National Library of Australia.
2551:– via National Library of Australia.
2523:– via National Library of Australia.
2495:– via National Library of Australia.
2467:– via National Library of Australia.
2439:– via National Library of Australia.
2411:– via National Library of Australia.
2383:– via National Library of Australia.
2355:– via National Library of Australia.
2327:– via National Library of Australia.
2299:– via National Library of Australia.
2271:– via National Library of Australia.
2243:– via National Library of Australia.
2215:– via National Library of Australia.
2187:– via National Library of Australia.
2159:– via National Library of Australia.
2131:– via National Library of Australia.
2103:– via National Library of Australia.
2075:– via National Library of Australia.
2047:– via National Library of Australia.
2019:– via National Library of Australia.
1991:– via National Library of Australia.
1963:– via National Library of Australia.
1935:– via National Library of Australia.
1907:– via National Library of Australia.
1879:– via National Library of Australia.
1851:– via National Library of Australia.
1823:– via National Library of Australia.
1795:– via National Library of Australia.
1767:– via National Library of Australia.
1739:– via National Library of Australia.
1711:– via National Library of Australia.
1683:– via National Library of Australia.
1655:– via National Library of Australia.
1627:– via National Library of Australia.
1599:– via National Library of Australia.
1571:– via National Library of Australia.
1543:– via National Library of Australia.
1515:– via National Library of Australia.
1487:– via National Library of Australia.
1459:– via National Library of Australia.
1431:– via National Library of Australia.
1403:– via National Library of Australia.
1375:– via National Library of Australia.
1347:– via National Library of Australia.
1319:– via National Library of Australia.
1291:– via National Library of Australia.
1263:– via National Library of Australia.
1235:– via National Library of Australia.
1207:– via National Library of Australia.
1179:– via National Library of Australia.
1151:– via National Library of Australia.
1123:– via National Library of Australia.
1095:– via National Library of Australia.
1067:– via National Library of Australia.
1039:– via National Library of Australia.
1011:– via National Library of Australia.
983:– via National Library of Australia.
955:– via National Library of Australia.
927:– via National Library of Australia.
899:– via National Library of Australia.
871:– via National Library of Australia.
843:– via National Library of Australia.
815:– via National Library of Australia.
787:– via National Library of Australia.
759:– via National Library of Australia.
731:– via National Library of Australia.
703:– via National Library of Australia.
675:– via National Library of Australia.
315:H. Selfe, wireless officer, circa May 1920
93:, but with officers professionally classed
89:initially a possibly unwanted part of the
630:Wireless Telegraph Stations of the World
650:
628:(includes HTMLs of all known copies of
565:Handbook for Radio Engineering Managers
427:(angus & Robertson, Sydney, 1986)
2507:"DISBANDMENT OF R.A.N. RADIO SERVICE"
58:under contract to the Commonwealth.
7:
171:Royal Australian Naval Radio Service
605:(Government Printing Office, 1912)
743:"Girdling Australia with Wireless"
52:VIP Perth / Fremantle / Applecross
14:
2792:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
2540:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
2512:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
2344:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
2232:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
1952:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
1947:"POSTMASTER-GENERAL'S DEPARTMENT"
1812:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
1644:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
1532:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
1280:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
1252:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
1247:"TENDERS FOR SUPPLY OF PETROLEUM"
1084:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
1056:Commonwealth of Australia Gazette
468:When Radio Was The Cat's Whiskers
258:Design, construction, maintenance
3608:1913 establishments in Australia
1723:"WIRELESS STATION TO BE GUARDED"
939:"The Geraldton Wireless Station"
65:during the daytime (then to VIO
2703:"BUSY TIME AT WIRELESS STATION"
637:Wireless Men & Women at War
585:(Boolarong Publications, 1987)
91:Postmaster-General's_Department
3519:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3464:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3436:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3408:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3380:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3324:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3240:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3212:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3184:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3156:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3100:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3072:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3044:Geraldton Guardian And Express
3016:Geraldton Guardian And Express
2988:Geraldton Guardian And Express
2960:Geraldton Guardian And Express
2904:Geraldton Guardian And Express
2876:Geraldton Guardian And Express
1499:"Geraldton's wireless Station"
911:"Geraldton's Wireless Station"
594:(Rick Umback, 1916, Canberra)
385:Ships on the Australia Station
1:
2535:"COMMONWEALTH PUBLIC SERVICE"
2339:"COMMONWEALTH PUBLIC SERVICE"
2283:"WITH THE WIRELESS OPERATORS"
470:(Rosenberg Publishing, 2002)
56:Australasian Wireless Company
1275:"Government Gazette Notices"
1219:"Geraldton Wireless Station"
1079:"Government Gazette Notices"
1051:"Government Gazette Notices"
42:It was the first station in
37:Geraldton, Western Australia
3347:"COMMUNICATION WITH BROOME"
2871:"WIRELESS OPERATOR'S DEATH"
1527:"NOTIFICATION OF VACANCIES"
3624:
3263:"TELEGRAPHIC INTERRUPTION"
31:was a wireless telegraphy
3011:"GERALDTON RADIO STATION"
1779:"At the Wireless Station"
1303:"The Countryman's Column"
48:Commonwealth of Australia
29:Coastal radio station VIN
3570:"Fisherman's Experience"
2255:"NAVAL WIRELESS SERVICE"
771:"WIRELESS FOR THE NORTH"
409:Australian Radio History
3123:"COASTAL RADIO SERVICE"
1975:"Guarding the Wireless"
1471:"New Wireless Stations"
1023:"THE ROEBOURNE STATION"
615:(Hawthorn Press, 1973)
549:(Kangaroo Press, 1984)
411:(4th ed. Sydney, 2013)
3291:"PERTH'S NERVE CENTRE"
2899:"THE ABROLHOS ISLANDS"
2759:"AMALGAMATED WIRELESS"
1163:"The Wireless Station"
486:Coastal Radio Stations
448:Griffen-Foley, Bridget
253:Participants and staff
210:Sale of Station to AWA
81:Organisational changes
3459:"SOCIAL AND PERSONAL"
3431:"SOCIAL AND PERSONAL"
2815:"VALUATION COMPLETED"
2647:"LOCAL & GENERAL"
2395:"Capricious Carpings"
1919:"A Geraldton Wedding"
1667:"GERALDTON'S DEFENCE"
804:w:The West Australian
567:(Butterworths, 1980)
264:John Graeme Balsillie
2764:The Brisbane Courier
1443:"JUNIOR ASSOCIATION"
1308:Sunday Times (Perth)
995:"Notes and Comments"
832:Sunday Times (Perth)
526:(Ian O'Toole, 2004)
3514:"LOCAL AND GENERAL"
3491:The West Australian
3375:"NEWS IN GERALDTON"
3352:The West Australian
3319:"MUNICIPAL COUNCIL"
3296:The West Australian
3268:The West Australian
3179:"LOCAL AND GENERAL"
3128:The West Australian
3067:"LOCAL AND GENERAL"
3039:"LOCAL AND GENERAL"
2983:"LOCAL AND GENERAL"
2843:"WIRELESS STATIONS"
2619:"METROPOLITAN MEMS"
2591:"THE LOST TREVASSA"
2423:"Local and General"
2372:The Daily Telegraph
2171:"Local and General"
2003:"Local and General"
1891:"LOCAL AND GENERAL"
1863:"LOCAL AND GENERAL"
1835:"MUNICIPAL COUNCIL"
1751:"Local and General"
1695:"Municipal Council"
1331:"Local and General"
1107:"Local and General"
967:"Local and General"
855:"Wireless Stations"
576:(J. F. Ross, 1998)
558:(J. F. Ross, 1978)
545:Muscio, Winston T.
423:Durrant, Lawrence.
270:Walter Moss Sweeney
189:PMG control resumes
46:constructed by the
33:coast radio station
3575:Geraldton Guardian
3547:Geraldton Guardian
3542:"Abrolhos Islands"
2736:Geraldton Guardian
2708:Geraldton Guardian
2680:Geraldton Guardian
2652:Geraldton Guardian
2624:Geraldton Guardian
2596:Geraldton Guardian
2568:Geraldton Guardian
2484:Geraldton Guardian
2456:Geraldton Guardian
2316:Geraldton Guardian
2288:Geraldton Guardian
2204:Geraldton Guardian
2120:Geraldton Guardian
2092:Geraldton Guardian
2036:Geraldton Guardian
1924:Geraldton Guardian
1896:Geraldton Guardian
1868:Geraldton Guardian
1840:Geraldton Guardian
1784:Geraldton Guardian
1728:Geraldton Guardian
1616:Geraldton Guardian
1588:Geraldton Guardian
1560:Geraldton Guardian
1504:Geraldton Guardian
1420:Geraldton Guardian
1392:Geraldton Guardian
1224:Geraldton Guardian
1196:Geraldton Guardian
1140:Geraldton Guardian
916:Geraldton Guardian
888:Geraldton Guardian
860:Geraldton Guardian
715:"NOR WEST WEATHER"
692:Geraldton Guardian
687:"Our Perth Letter"
664:Geraldton Guardian
522:MacKinnon, Colin.
506:(Kenthurst, 1995)
484:Johnstone, James.
219:Station modernised
129:Geraldton Guardian
3487:"DEFENCE OF W.A."
2955:"MUNICIPAL WORKS"
2927:"THE BROADCASTER"
2428:Geraldton Express
2400:Geraldton Express
2176:Geraldton Express
2148:Geraldton Express
2031:"Back from Egypt"
2008:Geraldton Express
1980:Geraldton Express
1756:Geraldton Express
1700:Geraldton Express
1672:Geraldton Express
1448:Geraldton Express
1364:Geraldton Express
1336:Geraldton Express
1168:Geraldton Express
1112:Geraldton Express
1000:Geraldton Express
972:Geraldton Express
944:Geraldton Express
776:Geraldton Express
748:Geraldton Express
720:Geraldton Express
646:In-line citations
620:White, Thomas H.
581:Shawsmith, Alan.
497:(Canberra, 2016)
475:Hewitson, Peter.
353:Station guard WW1
149:Initial operation
44:Western Australia
3615:
3588:
3587:
3585:
3583:
3566:
3560:
3559:
3557:
3555:
3538:
3532:
3531:
3529:
3527:
3510:
3504:
3503:
3501:
3499:
3483:
3477:
3476:
3474:
3472:
3455:
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3448:
3446:
3444:
3427:
3421:
3420:
3418:
3416:
3399:
3393:
3392:
3390:
3388:
3371:
3365:
3364:
3362:
3360:
3343:
3337:
3336:
3334:
3332:
3315:
3309:
3308:
3306:
3304:
3287:
3281:
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3278:
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3250:
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3141:
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3108:
3091:
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2716:
2699:
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2688:
2675:"WEATHER REPORT"
2671:
2665:
2664:
2662:
2660:
2643:
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2636:
2634:
2632:
2615:
2609:
2608:
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2548:
2531:
2525:
2524:
2522:
2520:
2503:
2497:
2496:
2494:
2492:
2479:"PERSONAL ITEMS"
2475:
2469:
2468:
2466:
2464:
2451:"PERSONAL ITEMS"
2447:
2441:
2440:
2438:
2436:
2419:
2413:
2412:
2410:
2408:
2391:
2385:
2384:
2382:
2380:
2363:
2357:
2356:
2354:
2352:
2335:
2329:
2328:
2326:
2324:
2311:"PERSONAL ITEMS"
2307:
2301:
2300:
2298:
2296:
2279:
2273:
2272:
2270:
2268:
2251:
2245:
2244:
2242:
2240:
2223:
2217:
2216:
2214:
2212:
2199:"Personal Items"
2195:
2189:
2188:
2186:
2184:
2167:
2161:
2160:
2158:
2156:
2139:
2133:
2132:
2130:
2128:
2115:"Personal Items"
2111:
2105:
2104:
2102:
2100:
2083:
2077:
2076:
2074:
2072:
2059:"Wireless Worth"
2055:
2049:
2048:
2046:
2044:
2027:
2021:
2020:
2018:
2016:
1999:
1993:
1992:
1990:
1988:
1971:
1965:
1964:
1962:
1960:
1943:
1937:
1936:
1934:
1932:
1915:
1909:
1908:
1906:
1904:
1887:
1881:
1880:
1878:
1876:
1859:
1853:
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1635:
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1611:"Personal Items"
1607:
1601:
1600:
1598:
1596:
1583:"Personal Items"
1579:
1573:
1572:
1570:
1568:
1555:"CORRESPONDENCE"
1551:
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683:
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655:
542:
511:Jose, Arthur W.
466:Harte, Bernard.
180:Post World War I
3623:
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3403:"DEFENCE WORKS"
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2589:
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2563:"Radio Records"
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2057:
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2029:
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2024:
2014:
2012:
2001:
2000:
1996:
1986:
1984:
1973:
1972:
1968:
1958:
1956:
1945:
1944:
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1245:
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1128:
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670:
668:
657:
656:
652:
648:
532:
493:Jolly, Rhonda.
401:, (IEEE, 2014)
397:Burger, David.
383:Bastock, John.
380:
378:Further reading
355:
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3002:
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2806:
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2666:
2638:
2610:
2582:
2554:
2526:
2498:
2470:
2442:
2414:
2386:
2367:"NAVAL FORCES"
2358:
2330:
2302:
2274:
2246:
2218:
2190:
2162:
2134:
2106:
2078:
2050:
2022:
1994:
1966:
1938:
1910:
1882:
1854:
1826:
1798:
1770:
1742:
1714:
1686:
1658:
1630:
1602:
1574:
1546:
1518:
1490:
1462:
1434:
1406:
1378:
1350:
1322:
1294:
1266:
1238:
1210:
1182:
1154:
1126:
1098:
1070:
1042:
1028:Northern Times
1014:
986:
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930:
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874:
846:
818:
790:
762:
734:
706:
678:
649:
647:
644:
643:
642:
633:
618:
611:Walker, R. R.
609:
599:
590:Umback, Rick.
588:
579:
572:Ross, John F.
570:
563:Ross, John F.
561:
554:Ross, John F.
552:
543:
530:
520:
509:
502:Jones, Colin.
500:
491:
482:
473:
464:
456:
445:
440:
434:
421:
414:
407:Carty, Bruce.
405:
395:
379:
376:
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97:
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82:
79:
50:. The station
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2110:
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2064:Nor-west Echo
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2010:
2009:
2004:
1998:
1995:
1982:
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1911:
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861:
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834:
833:
828:
822:
819:
806:
805:
800:
799:"BY WIRELESS"
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772:
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763:
750:
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393:0-86777-348-0
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292:Station staff
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