646 Matching Results

Search Results

Advanced search parameters have been applied.

[Photograph 2012.201.B1277.0307]

Description: Photograph used for a newspaper owned by the Oklahoma Publishing Company. Caption: "These high-frequency tubes shown in this photograph are used in RCA's television transmitting station in the Empire State Building."
Date: November 5, 1936
Creator: NBC News
Partner: Oklahoma Historical Society

[Photograph 2012.201.B1277.0298]

Description: Photograph used for a newspaper owned by the Oklahoma Publishing Company. Caption: "Dr. E.F.W. Alexanderson, retired General Electric engineer, and his first home television receiver demonstrated in Schnectady, New York on January 13, 1928."
Date: September 25, 1953
Partner: Oklahoma Historical Society

[Photograph 2012.201.B1277.0295]

Description: Photograph used for a newspaper owned by the Oklahoma Publishing Company. Caption: "On April 7th, television was pulled out of the dictionary and into the worlds of fact when it was inaugurated at New York as a successful scientific achievement."
Date: April 8, 1927
Creator: Pacific and Atlantic Photos, Incorporated
Partner: Oklahoma Historical Society

[Photograph 2012.201.B1277.0287]

Description: Photograph used for a newspaper owned by the Oklahoma Publishing Company. Caption: "This gaint 200-pound electronic tube, called a Klystron, is used by General Electric engineers to generate high-power UHF singals needed for widespread TV coverage"
Date: September 25, 1953
Partner: Oklahoma Historical Society

[Photograph 2012.201.B1277.0285]

Description: Photograph used for a newspaper owned by the Oklahoma Publishing Company. Caption: "Convention telcasts from the International Amphit heatre in Chicago will involve more dishes than those used by Betty Furness in her kitchen commercials."
Date: August 17, 1956
Partner: Oklahoma Historical Society

[Photograph 2012.201.B0089.0241]

Description: Photograph used for a newspaper owned by the Oklahoma Publishing Company. Caption: "President Ford waves from the official Michigan covered wagon to a large Valley forge crowd Sunday arriving to welcome the bicentennial wagon train at end of the journey."
Date: unknown
Partner: Oklahoma Historical Society
Back to Top of Screen