Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi’s transmitting station at Cape Cod National Seashore, powered by kerosene engines producing 25,000 volts, successfully facilitated the first public two-way wireless communication between Europe and America on January 18, 1903.
This coastal station was instrumental in several key sea rescues, including the pivotal response to the RMS Titanic’s sinking in April 1912, where station operators rapidly communicated the ship’s fate to the RMS Carpathia.
The station was shut down in 1917 for several reasons, including security (it was the beginning of World War I), erosion, and the fact that newer inventions were being made. In 1920, the equipment was removed from the site, and it was abandoned.
Marconi’s extensive research efforts in communications electronics formed the basis for subsequent developments in radio, radar, microwave, and cellular communication technologies.
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