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"Wavescan" is a weekly program for long distance radio hobbyists produced by Dr. Adrian M. Peterson, Coordinator of International Relations for Adventist World Radio. AWR carries the program over many of its stations (including shortwave). Adrian Peterson is a highly regarded DXer and radio historian, and often includes features on radio history in his program. We are reproducing those features below, with Dr. Peterson's permission and assistance.


Wavescan N636, May 2, 2021

The Radio Scene in Brazil: The Early Mediumwave Years

The interesting story of mediumwave radio broadcasting in the South American country of Brazil can be traced back to its very earliest beginnings, in the year 1922, when a temporary demonstration station was installed in what was back then their national capital city, Rio de Janeiro. The Independence Centenary International Exposition, as it was known in English, was open for a little over half a year, and it was staged as a 100th anniversary celebration of Brazilian independence.

This World Expo was held in Rio de Janeiro from September 7, 1922 to March 23, 1923, and it was planned as an opportunity to display Brazil's growing industrial development, and also to focus on the nation's increasing potential in the international market place. The fair pavilions were constructed alongside Rio Branco Avenue in a landed area of Rio that was specially built just for the occasion.

The Brazil Expo, which attracted participation from 14 countries in Europe, Asia and the Americas, was staged in a dozen specially designed and newly built tall ornate pavilions. The rolling attendance from all over the world was in excess of 3 million people.

The location for a unique though temporary radio broadcasting station during the Expo was the summit of Mt. Corcovado, upon which subsequently stood the Catholic inspired Statue of Christ the Redeemer. This statue, standing 125 feet tall, is only a little lower than the equally famous Statue of Liberty in New York. Back at the time of the radio station in 1922, the basic platform for the Christ the Redeemer Statue had already been constructed.

In preparation for the World Expo radio broadcasting station in Brazil, Mr. L. A. Osbourne, President of Westinghouse at East Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania in the United States, visited Rio de Janeiro in Brazil. He received approval for the installation of the station from both the government and from the management of the Brazilian Light and Traction Company, upon whose land the station would be installed. The Brazilian Light and Traction Company was already operating a Swiss made passenger cog railway up the side of Mt. Corcovado, and they agreed to provide electricity for the radio station.

The new mediumwave broadcasting station for Rio de Janeiro was similar in design and layout to the already famous two year old KDKA in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (The original mediumwave WJZ in Newark, New Jersey was also a similar copy of KDKA.) The equipment for this new radio station in Brazil was manufactured and assembled at the Westinghouse factory in Pennsylvania, it was tested on air, and it was then packed and shipped to Rio in June 1922.

Two self-supporting aerial masts were erected at the top of Mt. Corcovado, each standing 125 feet tall and 153 feet apart, and a six wire flat top antenna system was suspended between the two masts. Back then, a counterpoise system was usually suspended above ground level underneath the aerial system, but in this case the counterpoise (in two widely separated sections) was suspended above ground level but running down the mountainside for 100 feet. The radio frequency feed from the transmitter was fed by a single wire running up the mountainside to the antenna system.

The antenna system for this radio station was at times above cloud level, and there must have been some form of protection from lightning strikes. However, there is no record of lightning causing any damage to the electronic equipment.

The official callsign for this new radio broadcasting station was SPC, and the original operating channel was the standard North American channel 450 m., corresponding to 666 kHz, though this was subsequently changed to 483 m (620 kHz). All of the radio equipment, the studio and the 750 watt transmitter were accommodated in a single room made available by the mountainside tramway company.

Test broadcasts from SPC began on August 15 (1922), three weeks before the opening of the Independence Centenary International Exposition, and the programming came by landline directly from the downtown Grand Opera House. These live broadcasts, in Portuguese, of course, were on the air each afternoon and each evening, and one of the musical renditions in the opera was O Aventureiro (The Adventurer), as we mentioned at the beginning of our program today. Official broadcasting began ten days later, on August 25 (1922).

Back then, very few people in Rio owned a radio receiver, and the sale of radio receivers in Brazil was actually prohibited by the government. However, Westinghouse installed public radio receivers with a loud speaker at several different locations throughout the Expo, and indeed throughout Rio itself, such as outside Monroe Palace, at Praia Vermelha, and at the American Pavilion in the Expo.

The inaugural speech at the opening of the Independence Centenary International Exposition was presented by His Excellency, the President of Brazil, Senhor Epitácio Lindolfo da Silva Pessoa. The auspicious events in the opening of the Expo were also broadcast over radio station SPC.

Newspaper reports and monitoring reports from ships at sea indicated that the programming from radio station SPC was always heard loud and clear. Additionally, coverage tests with a radio receiver in a motor car were conducted throughout Rio and beyond.

This very unusual and now historic radio broadcasting station was on the air throughout the entire 7 month lifetime of the Expo in Rio. When the Expo was finally closed on March 23 of the following year (1923), the radio station was also closed. The station was entirely dismantled and then totally removed from its mountaintop location and placed in storage.

The Rest of the Story: Radio SPC, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, becomes Radio WNYC, New York, USA

Yes, it is true. When the Brazil Expo was finally closed on March 23, 1923, the radio station SPC was also closed. This KDKA-WJZ look-alike radio station was entirely dismantled and totally removed from its mountaintop location and placed in storage in Rio de Janeiro.

However, a new mediumwave station in New York City was looking for suitable radio equipment. New transmitters were expensive, and not readily available. So instead, they procured the now silent Westinghouse SPC from Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, installed it on the 25th floor of the Municipal Building at 1 Center Street, New York, and erected the antenna on the roof above. A photograph of the historic SPC-WNYC transmitter is shown in the American radio magazine, Radio News, for October 1924 on page 476.

New York's new mediumwave station, WNYC, was officially opened with a special inaugural ceremony on the evening of Tuesday, July 8, 1924. The station was owned by the City of New York, it radiated 1 kW on 570 kHz, and its daily schedule of programming began each evening at 7:30 pm.

Over the intervening years of close to a century, New York's WNYC has undergone many changes and developments. The original studios were in the Municipal Building, and subsequent locations have been on Varick Street and at Hudson Square. Ownership has changed also, though they are still a public station and not a commercial station.

Transmitter locations have been moved from the Municipal Building to Greenpoint, NY, and then to Kearny in nearby New Jersey. Four different mediumwave channels have been allotted to WNYC over the years, and they operate today as one of New York's most valuable radio stations, with 10 kW on 820 kHz.

Evidence would suggest that the historic original mediumwave transmitter was discarded, perhaps in 1928 at the time when a new antenna system was installed. That was the original transmitter that was on the air in Brazil with programming in the Portuguese language. When this same transmitter began to air programming as WNYC in New York in the English language rather than in Portuguese as in Brazil, the change of language apparently had no effect upon the actual transmitter itself (!).

WNYC on Shortwave

Radio station WNYC has also made its own foray into shortwave broadcasting. In 1937, they requested the FCC for approval to operate a shortwave relay station as a program feed to other public radio stations throughout the United States, though this request was denied.

On May 27, 1938, New York's WNYC began a program relay via shortwave W2XAF in Schenectady for programming beamed to South America in Spanish and Portuguese. These daily half hour broadcasts were intended to counter the impact of propaganda programming beamed to South America from the central powers in continental Europe.

During the following year (1939), a similar program relay from WNYC was broadcast from the Boston shortwave station W1XAL/WRUL. Interestingly, during that same era, WNYC on mediumwave in New York also relayed live off air some of the WRUL shortwave programming.

Then during the next year again (1940), WNYC installed its own 1 kW shortwave transmitter in the Municipal Building under the callsign W2XVP. This small transmitter, an Apex high fidelity unit, operated on 26.1 MHz, and it was installed initially with the same intent, countering the shortwave impact of the axis broadcasts in Spanish and Portuguese beamed to South America. However, as it is stated, that project turned out to be nothing more than somewhat of an overreach.

Then instead they began using this Apex transmitter from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. nightly to rebroadcast regular daytime music programming from WNYC, which at that time closed down at sunset. That unusual shortwave scheduling lasted until 1942, when that transmitter was also dismantled to make way for a new FM transmitter that was used to launch WNYC-FM in March 1943.