Home | Back to Wavescan Index

"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 N687, April 24, 2022

One Hundred Years of Radio in Manitoba, Canada: The Early Wireless Years

During the month of April (2022), the Canadian province of Manitoba is celebrating the 100th anniversary of the introduction of official radio broadcasting in their territory. In honor of this auspicious occasion, we begin a mini-series of interesting topics regarding the wireless and radio history of Manitoba, and in our program today, we go back to the very beginning, to the time when even experimental wireless was very young.

The Canadian province of Manitoba lies in the very center of their country, and it was originally settled by waves of tribal migrations who crossed over the Bering Straits from Asia way back in ancient times. Some 500 years ago, the first European fur traders from both France and England entered the arena; and then, in 1673, England acquired a very large tract of territory in the center of what is now Canada, and they initially named it Rupert's Land, in honor of Prince Rupert, a nephew of King Charles I of England, and the first governor of the Hudson Bay Company.

Almost 200 years later (1870), the new province of Manitoba was incorporated into the three year old Dominion of Canada, though at that time, Manitoba was just a small square of territory that was informally dubbed the "postage stamp province". The name Manitoba was derived from the local indigenous tribal languages.

These days, the subsequently expanded province of Manitoba covers a quarter million square miles, with more than a 100,000 lakes, and a large population of white Polar Bears. The total number of people stands at more than 1.3 million, and they speak the two official languages (English and French), though many of the locals speak the regional Aboriginal languages as well. It is also reported that the largest population of Icelanders who live outside the island of Iceland is found in Winnipeg, the provincial capital of Manitoba.

Actually Winnipeg was already established as a trading center for the tribal peoples before the first European traders arrived. In 1738, the French established their first trading post; and in 1809, the English established their first settlement, which included the construction of Fort Gibraltar. The population of Winnipeg has now reached 3/4 million, and like the name of the province, the name of the city was also derived from local languages, and it means muddy water.

Before we begin the information about the early wireless story in Manitoba, there is another interesting point of historic information, about a very friendly Black Bear. In August 1914, an English born veterinarian who was serving in the Canadian army, Lt. Harry Colbourn, bought an orphaned Black Bear that was for sale in White River, Ontario.

Colbourn named his new pet, Winnipeg the Bear, in honor of his adopted Canadian city, and he smuggled it into England, where it became the unofficial mascot of his Canadian army regiment. Before his army unit moved across the English Channel into France during the events of World War I, Colbourn gifted his pet, Winnipeg the Bear, to the London Zoo.

Now, for the well-known children's story. Christopher Robin (Milne) was born in 1921 in England, and for his first birthday in the following year, his parents gave him a popular stuffed toy teddy bear made by the Alpha Farnell company. Three years later (1924), four year old toddler Christopher Robin visited Winnipeg the Bear (Winnie) in the London Zoo for the very first time.

Christopher enjoyed his many encounters with Winnie in the Zoo, and he gave his toy bear the same name, Winnie. Now on a previous occasion while on vacation in the English countryside, he had seen a beautiful snow white swan, that was apparently also quite smelly as well, that he personally named Pooh. In a childlike way, he named his toy teddy bear in the same way, Winnie the Pooh.

Two years later again (1926), his 44 year old father, Alan A. Milne, began to write a series of poems and stories for children, including two major children's books about his son Christopher Robin and his toy teddy bear, Winnie the Pooh. Other well-known characters in his writings for children were Piglet, Kanga, Roo and Tigger. His writings about Winnie, named after Winnipeg in Canada, are read all around the world.

Now back to the Canadian province Manitoba and the beginning of wireless communications in that Canadian province, more than one hundred years ago, before the advent of radio broadcasting.

During the summer of the year 1909, student Alex V. Polson from the Central Collegiate in Winnipeg, Manitoba visited one of the several wireless stations that Dr. Lee De Forest had erected along the eastern coast of the United States. Enthralled with the wonders of the new wireless that he had observed, young Polson, together with several other students in the Central Collegiate on Kate Street in Winnipeg, began experimenting in the same way.

Their first successful wireless transmission was made from the Polson home at 94 Cathedral Avenue in the autumn of 1909, and the Morse Code message was received by student Melville Sayer in his home at the Alexandria Block on Graham Avenue, a distance of about 3 miles.

During the following year, 1910, Dr. Lee De Forest himself made an important visit to Winnipeg, and that will be our second story about the early wireless scene in the Canadian province of Manitoba, Canada, coming up quite soon.