The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Sound and vision and the creation of television

- Norman Watson by

Many inventions are disputed yet I suspect we would all struggle to name anyone other than John Logie Baird as the individual behind television.

The creation of the mechanical television began in 1924 when Baird (1888-1946) managed to transmit a flickering image across 10 feet to accompany sound. By the following year, he had achieved successful transmissi­on of recognisab­le human faces, in pictures with light and shade.

As a result, on January 26 1926, Baird held a public demonstrat­ion in London before members of the Royal Institute and a journalist from The Times, displaying an image 3½in by 2in.

By 1927 he had succeeded in transmitti­ng content across a 438-mile telephone line between London and Glasgow, before setting up the Baird Television Developmen­t Company the same year. Through the company, the first transatlan­tic broadcast was transmitte­d from London and New York in 1928. The next year Baird’s technology was mass produced for public sale, releasing the first television receiver, ‘The Televisor’, made by Plessey in England. Selling for approximat­ely £26, the sets were relatively expensive.

Early examples of this Baird television are understand­ably rare. On the last day of October, however, Bonham’s in London smashed through a £10,000£15,000 estimate to take £21,250 for a c1930 Baird Televisor, made by The Plessey Company, and restored in the 1970s to working order.

It was labelled ‘No 192’ and was housed in a 27in wide, chocolateb­rown tinplate case with cream lining, with an ‘Eye-of-the-World’ plaque on the front bearing the Baird signature.

It had useful provenance. The owner’s grandfathe­r ran an electrical shop in the Thames Valley which opened in the 1930s. The Televisor had been stored in the family home for at least the past 45 years.

Picture: Baird television £21,250 (Bonham’s).

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