Article 452T A Photo Tour of the National Capital Radio and Television Museum

A Photo Tour of the National Capital Radio and Television Museum

by
Thomas
from The SWLing Post on (#452T)

On Tuesday afternoon, I made a pilgrimage the to the National Capital Radio and Television Museum in Bowie, Maryland, USA. The museum is located in a modest and beautiful historic house on the corner of Mt. Oak and Mitchellville Roads in Bowie.

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Museum Curator and volunteer, Brian Belanger, kindly gave me a private tour of the museum collections (the museum is closed on Tuesdays). Brian-1024x678.jpg

Many thanks to Brian for taking time out of his day for the tour, and for allowing me to take some photos for the SWLing Post!

The museum has a number of display rooms with radios broadly grouped by style and decade. The first room offers examples of some of the earliest radios produced-including the venerable crystal radio (below).

[Click photos to enlarge.]

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Like Brian, numerous volunteers work to keep the collections in working order. This isn't a place where vintage radios come to die; they actually come to life here.

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1920sRadio-678x1024.jpgEven examples of some of their earliest radios are on the air and can be tuned to local and international stations. Radio5-1024x677.jpg

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This RCA "portable" (below), housed two batteries on either side of the center faceplate. Note the ad on the wall above-a couple enjoy the RCA as they recline on a beach.

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Speakers of the day were pretty amazing, too-check out this hand-painted 1927 Air Chrome Double Cone Speaker, below.

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The museum also has an extensive collection of studio and off-air recordings that can be played over an AM carrier throughout the building.

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By the late 1920s and early 1930s, radio manufactures built gorgeous console radios, features in the living rooms and parlors of many lucky homes.

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This E.H. Scott All-Wave 23 console (above and below) sported not only twenty-threee vacuum tubes, but a large, robust internal speaker. Radio collectors consider the All-Wave 23 to be one of the finest performing radios of the vacuum-tube era. Scott-Console-Radio-Dial-1024x678.jpg

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The museum also features the Zenith 12-S-232 tabletop radio with working shuttle dial-a futuristic band-switching mechanical wonder with a stunning dial.

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A number of tabletop and portable radios that span the decades have found their homes in this museum. No doubt many SWLing Post readers cut their teeth on these classics!

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I love the design of the Garod Model 5A2-wow! And I'm sure many kids of the fifties wished they had an official Hopalong Cassidy AM radio (below).HopAlongCassidy-Radio-1024x526.jpg

The museum, of course, also houses a large number of classic televisions.

Pilot-Model-TV-1024x572.jpgHallicrafters-TV-1024x879.jpg Philco-TV-678x1024.jpg Philco-TV-Controls-1024x678.jpgRadio stations and benefactors have also donated many items used in the industry, both in broadcast and retail.

NBC-Chimes-1024x678.jpg PhilcoSign-1024x678.jpg Midwest-Magazine-1024x678.jpg SylvaniaSigns-1024x457.jpg 980KC-Mic-678x1024.jpgBrian was also kind enough to take me to the building, next door, where they repair radios and store others for eventual rotation into the collection.

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Museum volunteers also teach radio repair and restoration classes.Repair1-1024x678.jpg Repair3-1024x678.jpg

GE-Radio-1024x749.jpgThe number of classic ham radios, home brew receivers and transmitters was simply amazing. Indeed, I felt like a kid in a candy shop!

Radio1-1024x635.jpg National-NC-46-1024x619.jpg HalliDial-1024x678.jpg Hallicrafters-SX100-948x1024.jpg Hallicrafters-SX62A-1024x678.jpg Hallicrafters-SuperSkyrider-1024x678.jpg Hallicrafters-Super-Skyrider-1024x678.jp CollinsTransmitter-678x1024.jpgBy the end of the tour, I had decided to become a member of the National Capital Radio and Television Museum. Even though I live a few states away, I like knowing that my membership funds not only help preserve vintage radios and televisions, but also provide me members-only access to many of their scanned archives. Click to view a full list of benefits for a modest $25 membership.

Again, many thanks to Brian Belanger for the amazing tour of this wonderful museum! Brian, I'll be back next year"

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