WEYMOUTHS
WIRELESS MANUFACTURERS
Vintage Wireless manufacturing
in Weymouth, England by John Rose, M0BQO
(First
published in the February 2003 edition of Catswhisker)
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Clicking on the links will show a picture of each wireless and
for more pictures click here
See also 2006 Update
and more pictures here
www.sdrs.zoomshare.com
History In the 1920s three local
firms are known to have manufactured radios commercially, though on a small
scale. The recent exciting discovery by Bill Young G4KUU of a Smith III in
a local antique shop aroused lots of
interest.
Marshall & Sons of
Portland
The
Portland
Three was their offering; it was made in small batches at
£16. Harry, the elder son,
was a skilled woodworker and made the cabinets at first; later with increasing
demand they were made by Betts of Weymouth at 30/- a
time. Freddie Young of 1 St
Alban Street, Weymouth, engraved the ebonite fascia
panels. The Youngs may have
also made crystal sets.
Ernest Marshall started in business
in Grove Road as a watchmaker but moved to Easton about
1923. By 1929 he described himself
in Kellys Directory as electrical, mechanical & radio expert
& watch repairer. Younger son Frank, now a sprightly octogenarian,
recalls as a small boy helping to wind the coils.
Two of these sets are known to
have survived, plus an empty cabinet.
There was also a Portland II
but nothing is known of this except an empty cabinet
W.Smith &
Son
Established in 1900, probably in
Royal Arcade, Smiths moved to Royal Terrace and by 1930 to 23 Crescent
St. There is no record of the
company after 1936.
In 1929 they advertised themselves
as Makers of the SMITH MAJESTIC MUSICAL
EQUIPMENT.
On this evidence it is likely that
the Smith
III (or Weymouth III) set was their
doing. Moreover, this is the
only Smith in the electrical trade in the
twenties.
The set was given a Post Office
Registration number 2093 (the first digit of which suggests to me that there
had been a previous 2-valver); it was cleverly designed, though too complex,
and expensive at £40. It
had oscillation problems and poor amplification but otherwise worked
well.
The P.O. number was given to a
set with sloping panel. This would have been around
1923. Two of these are known
to exist - one locally, the other in North of England.
Smith &
Clammer
Established about 1933 they called
themselves Modern Radio Services with premises in Clinton Arcade (by
Mothercare) but are not likely to have made the Smith III - though the name
did emerge in a discussion I had with a long memory.
H.W.Smith
(Harry
Wilkinson Smith)
Now on the Granby Estate, this
electrical & radio business
originated around 1938 at 70 Wardcliffe Road, later going to Abbotsbury
Road. It is not believed to
be linked with the earlier Smith.
V.H.Bennett
A well-known Weymouth department
store occupying at least three premises, one of which was 8 & 9 Middle
Bond Street, the base for their registered electrical installation
contractors and wireless engineers business.
If there are any long memories
amongst our readership, several loose ends need tying up, such as technical
and production details of all these sets. Have any other sets survived -
or ancient components and parts?
What wireless shop was behind Alexandra
Gardens? Any help in any
direction would be appreciated.
Acknowledgements: thanks for
their help to Frank Marshall, G2XQ, Bill Young, G4KUU, Ray Henville,
G3TPH.
John Rose M0BQO - Weymouth , January 2003
WEYMOUTH WIRELESS IN THE THIRTIES
A few personal recollections from George, G2DGB, who moved to the Weymouth area in 1933.
I remember well the wireless shop in the Clinton arcade. I saw my first television there around 1934. It used a rotating disc and the image was viewed through a lens about two inches in diameter. Across St. Thomas Street on Frederick Place was Howleys, who sold wireless parts and bicycles, and later on Opal cars. Also on Frederick Place was a private house displaying used wireless parts in the window but I don't know the name. I bought a nice 100/1 slow motion drive there for my o.v.1 short wave receiver.
Going south down St. Thomas Street, on the left-hand side, just before the town bridge was Darches', who sold Listen parts and kits. I bought and built the Listen 'Skyscraper Four' there in about 1934. It was a TRF with long, medium and two short-wave bands, and I had lots of fun with it.
In 1936 I bought a 'Challenger', 8-valve superhet from the London firm Degalliers. It cost 13 guineas (£13.65). The valve line-up in the 8-valver was almost the same as the famous HRO and used types 6C6, 42 and an 80. The set was still working with some of the original valves at my parents' home until 1986. I later gave it to Ray, G3TPH at Blandford.
George Short, G2DGB - Dorchester, August 2008.