Charles D. "Doc" Herrold (right) and his student Ray Newby (left) are shown operating a small spark transmitter at the Herrold College of Engineering and Wireless in San Jose, 1909. The voice radio station they started here eventually became first KQW and then KCBS.
Prof. Charles Herrold operating radio equipment [ca. 1925]
Charles David 'Doc' Herrold, (November 16, 1875 – July 1, 1948) was an American radio broadcasting pioneer who in 1909 created the world's second radio station.
Born in Fulton, Illinois, Herrold grew up in San Jose, California and attended Stanford University where he studied physics and astronomy. When his electrical manufacturing company in San Francisco was destroyed by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake he moved into teaching, and opened the Herrold College of Wireless and Engineering at 50 W. San Fernando St. in San Jose in 1909 to educate wireless operators. Interested in radio to transmit voice signals, he began broadcasting music and entertainment on a regular basis between 1912 and 1917 to fellow radio enthusiasts, using the callsigns FN and SJN. He had the world's first regularly scheduled broadcasts, allowing listeners to tune in at a known time. However, in 1917, the US government ordered non-military radio transmissions to cease.
The "Arc Fone" radio station in the Garden City Bank Building of San Jose, about 1912. Doc Herrold is standing in the doorway.
After World War I, Herrold obtained the license for KQW in 1921, but he was unable to maintain the financial requirements, and the station was sold several times. In the 1940s, CBS attempted to buy its then-affiliate in San Francisco, KSFO. KSFO refused to sell, so CBS purchased KQW, moved it to San Francisco and changed the call letters to KCBS.
However, Herrold did not profit financially from his pioneering work, and later became a repair technician in the Oakland, California school district, and a janitor in a local shipyard. He died in a Hayward, California rest home, aged 72.
On the September 27, 1965 episode of the TV game show I've Got a Secret, Charles Herrold's former student, Ray Newby of Stockton, California, made an appearance as a contestant. Ray's "secret" was that he had been the first radio disk jockey in 1909. Host Steve Allen displayed a photograph of Newby and Herrold in the small broadcasting studio.
In May 2006, KCBS and KPIX-TV moved their San Jose news bureau to the Fairmont Tower at 50 W. San Fernando St., the address of Charles Herrold's original broadcasts. Although CBS management was not aware of the history of the San Fernando Street address when the move was planned, they quickly recognized and embraced its significance when informed at the bureau's opening celebration, giving long-overdue credit to the man who invented broadcasting.
In 1925, Doc Herrold sold KQW to the First Baptist Church of San Jose. The church applied the slogan "King's Quickening Word" to the station, and installed the equipment in the church building. This photo shows the towers built on the church property to hold the KQW antenna.
The original 500 plus Herrold photos were copied by Mike Adams in 1994 using a Nikon 35mm system, copy stand and Kodak TMY ISO 100 B&W film.
Photos were scanned at 300dpi in tiff format, by reduced here to 72 dpi jpeg for Web Viewing and titled. They are somewhat chronological. They are from the Perham and True collections.
Access to the photos can be had by contacting Jim Reed at History San Jose