Rugby Radio Station
The tallest masts on the site were 820 feet (250 m) tall, and could be seen from up to 20 miles (32 km) away, making the site for many years a major local landmark. Since closure, part of the site has been used for a large housing development called Houlton, named after Houlton, Maine, USA the American town which received the first transatlantic phone call from the station in 1927.
History
Following the end of the First World War the British government set about implementing plans for an Imperial Wireless Chain to link the countries of the British Empire. It was decided that the new wireless service would be state-run by the Post Office. The site east of Hillmorton, was chosen in 1923. Part of the site had previously been occupied by RAF Lilbourne between 1915 and 1920.
Its large very low frequency (VLF) transmitter came into service on 1 January 1926 and was originally used to transmit telegraph messages to the Commonwealth as part of the Imperial Wireless Chain. After the 1950s this transmitter, active as callsign GBR on 16.0 kHz, using Morse code and later on 15.975 kHz with frequency-shift keying FSK and minimum-shift keying MSK, was used by the British Navy for transmitting messages to submerged submarines. Criggion radio station acted as a reserve. The GBR transmitter was shut down on 1 April 2003 and was replaced by a new one at the Skelton transmitting station.
In 1927, a second transmitter was installed to initiate the first transatlantic commercial telephone service; linking New York and London on 60 kHz using single-sideband modulation. This transmitter was decommissioned in 1956 and became the time signal transmitter MSF. This new function developed from the decision, in 1951, to use the station to transmit modulated standard frequencies for scientific reference purposes. In 1972 these transmissions were consolidated onto the present frequency of 60 kHz and a further reference, that of a time signal, was added. In 1977 this took the form of the rolling slow code in use until April 2007, when BT's contract to transmit the time signal also passed to VT Communications, using their Anthorn radio station in Cumbria. The aerial system at the VLF transmitter existed between 1926 and 2004 and consisted of twelve 250 metre (820 ft) high, guyed steel-framework masts insulated against ground and carrying an aerial wire. This wire was mainly destroyed by heavy iceloads in the winter of 1940. After the shutdown of GBR, the facility was only used for transmitting the MSF time signal. Therefore, eight of the twelve masts were obsolete and demolished on the night of 19 June 2004 to 20 June 2004.
A trial transmission of the LORAN-C navigation system was run at the station from June 2005 until March 2007. The remaining four 'tall' masts were demolished on 2 August 2007. The site is now being developed into a large new housing estate named Houlton, the first homes of which were occupied in December 2017. The power and transmission buildings, as well as a water tower have been reused as part of Houlton School.
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1922 diagram of the transatlantic radio network.
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Strain insulator supporting the cage antenna, 1938
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View of the site, 2005
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The main buildings of the station in 2009. These have been converted into Houlton School
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Control panel of the military very low frequency (VLF) transmitter used to communicate with submarines
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A radio mast after demolition in 2004
See also
- List of masts
- List of tallest buildings and structures in Great Britain
- List of radio stations in the United Kingdom
Notes
- ^ "RUGBY RADIO STATION A short history". Our Warwickshire. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
- ^ "Parishes: Hillmorton". British History Online. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
- ^ "Welcome to Houlton - Rugby's new neighbourhood named in honour of town's radio heritage". Rugby Observer. 27 October 2016. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
- ^ "RadioStation Rugby". RadioStation Rugby. 2017.
- ^ http://www.smecc.org/general_electric_computers/Houltonrepeater06123partial.jpg
- ^ "Press release about MSF relocation to Anthorn" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2007.
- ^ "Rugby Radio". Subterranea Britannica. 28 May 2003.
- ^ Royal Institute of Navigation press release dated 18 May 2005
External links
Film archives
- Rugby Radio Station on YouTube (video, 1:43 minutes)
- The Making of Information Age: Rugby Aerial Tuning Inductor on YouTube (video, 3:02 minutes)
- The World's Greatest Radio Station Aka Rugby Wireless Station (1932) on YouTube - 1932 British Pathe film about the station.
- G.P.O. Riggers Aka GPO Riggers (1967) on YouTube - short film recording the work of the riggers who worked at the station