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== David Sarnoff ==
{{Biography
|Image=David Sarnoff.jpg
|Caption=David Sarnoff
|Birthdate=1891/02/27
|Birthplace=Minsk, Russian Empire
|Death date=1971/12/12
|Associated organizations=[[RCA (Radio Corporation of America)]]
}}
David Sarnoff's vision, inexhaustible energy, and aggressive personality led to the creation of 20th century [[radio]] and [[television]] broadcasting and the roots of our wireless communications today.


Born: 27 February 1891 <br>Died: 12 December 1971
Sarnoff, the eldest of five children, was born on 27 February 1891 outside Minsk in imperial Russia. He and his family immigrated to the United States in 1900 and settled on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Sarnoff’s first job was as a newsboy; the existence of so much cheap information--through newspapers, magazines, telegraphs, libraries, newsreels, etc.--helped explain American dynamism compared to Russia. At fifteen, his grade schooling finished, to support his family he found a job as a messenger boy for the Commercial Cable Company. When his boss refused him time off for Rosh Hashanah, he joined the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America as an office boy and then a telegrapher.


[[Image:David Sarnoff.jpg|thumb|left|David Sarnoff]]
After taking an electrical engineering course at Pratt Institute, Sarnoff concluded that the path to leading its continuing innovation technically was not by being an engineer. Driven to influence if not direct the wireless communications industry, by 1912 he was managing the new Marconi station atop Wanamaker’s department store in Manhattan, New York City. After the sinking of ''Titanic'', Sarnoff stayed on duty for 72 hours, gathering names of survivors for anxious relatives with two other wireless telegraphers. Sarnoff took  and learned everything he could about the business, the technology, and the customers, and more promotions followed.


Business genius David Sarnoff made great contributions to the development of [[Radio|radio]] and [[Television|television]]. His vision, inexhaustible energy, and aggressive personality led to the creation of radio and television broadcasting as we know it.  
In 1917, [[General Electric (GE)|General Electric]] bought American Marconi and combined its radio patents to form a new telecommunications company, the [[RCA (Radio Corporation of America)|Radio Corporation of America (RCA)]]. Sarnoff was promoted to general manager of RCA in 1921. Although he had advocated broadcasting entertainment and information [[Media:Magoun.pdf|since 1915]], his superiors continued to focus on point-to-point communications. That July, he helped promote a boxing match as the first broadcast sports event. Up to 300,000 people listened, helping drive sales of home radios, and RCA became a much larger company than anyone else foresaw.


Sarnoff was born on 27 February 1891, the oldest of five children, in Minsk, Russia. He and his family immigrated to the United States in 1900 and settled on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Sarnoff’s first job was as a newsboy. At the age of fifteen, his grade schooling finished, he literally stumbled into the wrong building and found a job as a messenger boy for the Commercial Cable Company. Later he found work as an office boy and then a telegrapher for the Marconi Wireless Company of America. While there, Sarnoff met [[Guglielmo Marconi|Guglielmo Marconi]], the famous radio pioneer, who served as Sarnoff’s mentor.  
Sarnoff was not satisfied with home radio's success. He advocated the application of radio electronics to the [[phonograph]] industry, [[Wrist-Wearable Electronics|portable radios]], facsimile, network broadcasting (NBC), and sound films for the movie industry. In addition, from 1929 to 1939, as RCA's president during the Great Depression, he convinced RCA's board of directors to allocate $10 million to develop an electronic television system despite the company's losses. This was based largely on the work of [[Vladimir Zworykin|Vladimir Zworykin,]] who invented a practical [[Iconoscope|electronic camera tube]]. Investing in this system meant neglecting the innovation of [[Edwin H. Armstrong|Edwin Howard Armstrong]]'s [[FM Radio|frequency modulated (FM) radio]] system because NBC's own and affiliated stations could not afford to buy and develop both simultaneously. When other industries and corporations opposed RCA’s approach, he and the corporation fought them vigorously. Independent TV inventor [[Philo T. Farnsworth]] was one of the few who stood up to Sarnoff and RCA and won, before joining with RCA to advocate commercial TV in 1940-41.


Driven by nearly unbounded ambition Sarnoff rose in the ranks. By 1912, he was managing the new Marconi station atop the Wanamaker’s Department Store in Manhattan. Legend has it that Sarnoff was at his Wanamaker’s post during the sinking of the Titanic and was the first to hear the news. Although that version of the story is myth, there is no disputing that during the tragedy, Sarnoff sent and received wireless messages for seventy-two straight hours, gathering names of survivors as relatives of passengers anxiously waited for word of their loved ones. Sarnoff impressed his superiors with his persistence and another promotion soon followed.  
During World War II, Sarnoff served as a U.S. Army officer after bigotry kept him from serving in the U.S. Navy during World War I. He served on General Dwight Eisenhower’s staff, helping coordinate allied news communications for the invasion of Europe, and was promoted to brigadier general. For the rest of his life, he would be addressed as “General Sarnoff.” After the war, Sarnoff championed [[Milestones:Monochrome-Compatible Electronic Color Television, 1946-1953|electronic color television]] in an eight-year battle with rival company CBS, which advocated an electromechanical system. His support of innovation at the RCA Laboratories--renamed the David Sarnoff Research Center--in Princeton, New Jersey, led to the establishment of the U.S. color TV standard in 1953 that served as the fundamental approach of monochrome-compatible color TV systems around the world.


In 1917, [[General Electric (GE)|General Electric]] purchased the American branch of the Marconi Company and combined its radio patents to form a new company called the [[RCA (Radio Corporation of America)|Radio Corporation of America (RCA)]]. Sarnoff was promoted to General Manager of RCA in 1921 and was given full authority to run the company. By this time, Sarnoff had come to understand the potential of radio as a means of entertainment and communication. In July of that year, he promoted the first home entertainment event, a radio broadcast of a boxing match. As many as 300,000 people listened. Sales of home radios took off and money rolled into RCA’s coffers.  
Sarnoff continued to support innovation in communications technologies, including flat-panel displays, [[Milestones:TIROS-1 Television Infrared Observation Satellite, 1960|weather]] and [[Milestones:First Transpacific Reception of a Television (TV) Signal via Satellite, 1963|communications]] satellites, and low-power solid-state electronics with a vision of enabling people around the world to communicate with each other by "voice, sight, or written message" on handheld devices. Although he knew he would not see their commercialization, Sarnoff attended the dress rehearsal for RCA's introduction of the [[Milestones:Liquid Crystal Display, 1968|liquid crystal display (LCD)]] in 1968. By then he suffered from a mastoid infection that left him deaf, dumb, and blind, communicating only by tapping Morse code into an associate's hand. On 12 December 1971, Sarnoff passed away and is buried at Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.


But Sarnoff was not satisfied with the enormous success of home radio. He foresaw the merger of radio with the [[Phonograph|phonograph]], network broadcasting (the NBC network) and the movie industry. Sarnoff also recognized the potential of another home entertainment device—the television. In the 1920s and 1930s, he allocated large sums of RCA research money to television projects and funded the work of [[Vladimir Zworykin|Vladimir Zworykin]] who developed an early electronic camera tube. When other developers and their patents got in Sarnoff’s way, he fought them hard. [[Philo T. Farnsworth|Philo T. Farnsworth]] was one of the few who stood up to Sarnoff and won.


In the 1940s, Sarnoff volunteered to serve as a communications officer during World War II and helped coordinate allied communications for the invasion of Europe. He served on General Eisenhower’s staff and was given the courtesy title of Brigadier General. For the rest of his life, he insisted on being addressed as “General.” Sarnoff was named CEO of RCA in 1947, a position he would hold until 1970. On 12 December 1971, Sarnoff passed away in New York.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sarnoff}}


[[Category:People_and_organizations]] [[Category:Engineers]] [[Category:Business,_management_&_industry|Category:Business,_management_&amp;_industry]] [[Category:Management]] [[Category:Geographical_units]] [[Category:Societies]] [[Category:Engineering_profession]] [[Category:Engineering_disciplines]] [[Category:Electrical_engineering]]
[[Category:Radio_communication]]

Latest revision as of 19:01, 9 February 2021

David Sarnoff
David Sarnoff
Birthdate
1891/02/27
Birthplace
Minsk, Russian Empire
Death date
1971/12/12
Associated organizations
RCA (Radio Corporation of America)

Biography

David Sarnoff's vision, inexhaustible energy, and aggressive personality led to the creation of 20th century radio and television broadcasting and the roots of our wireless communications today.

Sarnoff, the eldest of five children, was born on 27 February 1891 outside Minsk in imperial Russia. He and his family immigrated to the United States in 1900 and settled on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Sarnoff’s first job was as a newsboy; the existence of so much cheap information--through newspapers, magazines, telegraphs, libraries, newsreels, etc.--helped explain American dynamism compared to Russia. At fifteen, his grade schooling finished, to support his family he found a job as a messenger boy for the Commercial Cable Company. When his boss refused him time off for Rosh Hashanah, he joined the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America as an office boy and then a telegrapher.

After taking an electrical engineering course at Pratt Institute, Sarnoff concluded that the path to leading its continuing innovation technically was not by being an engineer. Driven to influence if not direct the wireless communications industry, by 1912 he was managing the new Marconi station atop Wanamaker’s department store in Manhattan, New York City. After the sinking of Titanic, Sarnoff stayed on duty for 72 hours, gathering names of survivors for anxious relatives with two other wireless telegraphers. Sarnoff took and learned everything he could about the business, the technology, and the customers, and more promotions followed.

In 1917, General Electric bought American Marconi and combined its radio patents to form a new telecommunications company, the Radio Corporation of America (RCA). Sarnoff was promoted to general manager of RCA in 1921. Although he had advocated broadcasting entertainment and information since 1915, his superiors continued to focus on point-to-point communications. That July, he helped promote a boxing match as the first broadcast sports event. Up to 300,000 people listened, helping drive sales of home radios, and RCA became a much larger company than anyone else foresaw.

Sarnoff was not satisfied with home radio's success. He advocated the application of radio electronics to the phonograph industry, portable radios, facsimile, network broadcasting (NBC), and sound films for the movie industry. In addition, from 1929 to 1939, as RCA's president during the Great Depression, he convinced RCA's board of directors to allocate $10 million to develop an electronic television system despite the company's losses. This was based largely on the work of Vladimir Zworykin, who invented a practical electronic camera tube. Investing in this system meant neglecting the innovation of Edwin Howard Armstrong's frequency modulated (FM) radio system because NBC's own and affiliated stations could not afford to buy and develop both simultaneously. When other industries and corporations opposed RCA’s approach, he and the corporation fought them vigorously. Independent TV inventor Philo T. Farnsworth was one of the few who stood up to Sarnoff and RCA and won, before joining with RCA to advocate commercial TV in 1940-41.

During World War II, Sarnoff served as a U.S. Army officer after bigotry kept him from serving in the U.S. Navy during World War I. He served on General Dwight Eisenhower’s staff, helping coordinate allied news communications for the invasion of Europe, and was promoted to brigadier general. For the rest of his life, he would be addressed as “General Sarnoff.” After the war, Sarnoff championed electronic color television in an eight-year battle with rival company CBS, which advocated an electromechanical system. His support of innovation at the RCA Laboratories--renamed the David Sarnoff Research Center--in Princeton, New Jersey, led to the establishment of the U.S. color TV standard in 1953 that served as the fundamental approach of monochrome-compatible color TV systems around the world.

Sarnoff continued to support innovation in communications technologies, including flat-panel displays, weather and communications satellites, and low-power solid-state electronics with a vision of enabling people around the world to communicate with each other by "voice, sight, or written message" on handheld devices. Although he knew he would not see their commercialization, Sarnoff attended the dress rehearsal for RCA's introduction of the liquid crystal display (LCD) in 1968. By then he suffered from a mastoid infection that left him deaf, dumb, and blind, communicating only by tapping Morse code into an associate's hand. On 12 December 1971, Sarnoff passed away and is buried at Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.