July Fourth Is Time To Hail America’s Tech Heroes

Happy Fourth of JulyIndependence Day typically revolves around fireworks, beaches and picnics, with a little patriotism thrown in for good measure.

It strikes me that nothing affirms the truth about the freedoms we enjoy more than the realization that the vast major of technological innovations we enjoy.

Things like radio and television to computers and the Internet - came to us by way of talented Americans, people who weren’t always recognized in their own time for the heroes they were. So let’s honor them this July Fourth.

The notion that technological innovation is a basic American virtue isn’t meant to be xenophobic, nor to take anything away from the many fine inventors born in other lands.

True, Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi laid the foundations of radio, with his spark-gap continuous-wave transmissions.

Did you know, though, that Marconi built a station in Massachusetts, from which he achieved the first transatlantic radio transmission, to England?

And that the Scottish physicist Robert Watson-Watt invented radar, just in time to save England from the Germans during the Battle of Britain?

Certainly English-born Alan Turing is justly honored as one of the fathers of the computer. Turing completed his doctoral dissertation at Princeton.

And now we start to tilt towards the domestic tech heroes. Another computer pioneer, John von Neumann, was born in Hungary but did his key work in the United States.

Mostly, when I think of American tech heroes, I think of the lesser-known inventors.

In much the same way that veteran ballplayers can’t understand why the youngsters don’t know the names of the people who did the heavy lifting, like Curt Flood, who broke baseball’s reserve clause, I’m amazed at people who think U.S. tech begins and ends with Bill Gates and Steve Jobs.

Here then is my list of America’s July Fourth tech best:

Edwin Howard Armstrong:

A true genius who bridges the divide between the attic tinkerer and the academically trained modern engineer, Armstrong made radio practical by inventing the superheterodyne receiver. Then he made musical by inventing FM.

Unfortunately, Armstrong is equally remembered for his sad back-story. He got screwed out of most of his royalties and in his lifetime, the credit for his inventions by RCA impresario David Sarnoff and he committed suicide by walking out of a hotel-room window.

Philo Farnsworth:

Utah farm boy who conceived the idea of electronic television as a teen-ager, became rich in the roaring twenties, but then faded into the background when his ideas were eclipsed and possibly purloined by RCA’s Vladimir Zworykin.

Farnsworth, a true visionary and genius, never did anything that mattered after the age of 30, though not for want of trying.

To read the whole, achingly sad yet totally compelling story (when have you ever heard technology history characterized thusly?) you owe it to yourself to read David E. Fisher’s Tube: The Invention of Television (Harcourt Brace, 1996).

Peter Goldmark:

Okay, so here’s another Hungarian-born inventor but he came to the United States in 1936 and became a citizen. Goldmark is important because he developed a product which seems obvious to us today: the 33-1/3 rpm long-playing record.

Couldn’t anybody come up with the LP, which was introduced in 1948?

Well, no. Not if you understand the practical limitations which had made it difficult to place large amounts of audio on anything but specially handled disks.

So, no Goldmark, no Sgt. Pepper’s, no CD, no rap music, no rock and roll. (Oh well, the progression falls down at the end.)

Okay, that’s enough of my great tech Americans for July Fourth. I’ll save my next group for next year.

I hate to ask but in the spirit of conversational blogging, I’ll give it a shot. Who do you think are the great American inventors?

Happy Independence Day!

Comments

2 Responses to “July Fourth Is Time To Hail America’s Tech Heroes”

  1. Paul S. on July 5th, 2007 5:40 am

    Nice job rounding up some of the most notable of all the forgotten heroes. Good to see Armstrong and Goldmark remembered along with some of the more familiar names, and good too to see that Philo is finally getting his due thanks to Aaron Sorkin. –PS

  2. Dylan on July 6th, 2007 11:03 am

    During Independence Day, we celebrate freedom. And who better to defend computer users’ freedom than my buddy Richard Stallman? In the 1980s, he started the GNU Project for a Free Software operating system. Combined with the kernel called Linux, we now have the GNU/Linux operating system, which tens of millions now use.

    He’s also the author of gcc, gdb, emacs, and other great tools that many of us interact with on a daily basis.

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