85 years of Wirephoto
January 1st marks the 85 anniversary of AP Wirephoto service. Revolutionary for its time, Wirephoto delivered photographs side by side with AP stories to illustrate the news and enhance AP’s coverage of world events.
Kent Cooper, AP’s general manager from 1925 to 1948, had been planning this day for a decade. He made his first pitch for a telegraphic photo service to the AP board of directors in 1926, almost two years before the AP hired its first photographers. Cooper’s dream for a nation-wide system of photo transmission over leased wires, available 24-hours a day, was about to be realized. In the early hours of January 1, 1935, Cooper stood by to witness the first photo transmission over the 10,000-mile network.
As news staff and technicians gathered round the newly installed Wirephoto equipment in the AP newsroom, Harold Carlson, AP’s chief engineer, placed a photo on the cylinder and alerted twenty-five cities: “This is New York calling all points. The first picture will be a shot of the plane survivors just rescued in the Adirondacks. Are you ready?” Under the hood of the Wirephoto transmitter, a photocell scanned the picture as it turned, converting it into electronic impulses which were flashed to the receiving unit and reconverted into a negative that was then printed. The transmission took less than 15 minutes. The obstacles of time and distance that had prevented pictures from arriving alongside words had been overcome.
The Age of Pictures
From a Los Angeles Times Editorial, January 1, 1935, “One of the longest forward steps in the history of newspaper-making since the invention of the linotype will be taken today with the formal launching of the Wirephoto Service of the Associated Press, itself the world’s greatest organization for the gathering and dissemination of news and news photographs.”
The Wirephoto service had a spectacular debut with major beats on the biggest stories of 1935.
Bruno Hauptmann trial in Lindbergh baby kidnapping
Hauptmann was indicted in the Supreme Court, Bronx County, N.Y., on charges of extortion on Sept. 26, 1934 and on Oct. 8, 1934, in Hunterdon County, in Hunterdon County, N.J., he was indicted for murder of baby Charles Lindbergh Jr.
Wiley Post-Will Rogers Crash
AP published the first images of the crash that killed famed aviator Wiley Post and Will Rogers, humorist, actor and keen observer of American life. Film shot at the scene by locals was sent to Fairbanks on the same plane with the victims and flown onward to San Francisco for processing and distribution over the Wirephoto network.
1935 World Series
Some newspapers were on the street with pictures of the 1935 World Series between the Detroit Tigers and the Chicago Cubs before the game ended. On opening day, 24 minutes elapsed between the time the umpire called “play ball” and the first action picture started moving over the Wirephoto network.
The problem was no longer how to transmit photos quickly but how to get them to a Wirephoto sending bureau. By 1936 Carlson had developed a portable Wirephoto transmitter. Carlson described early efforts as more transportable than portable, but in March 1936, Carlson took the equipment to Pittsburgh with AP Engineer Jim Barnes and transmitted photos of the devastating flooding that had hit the area. He explained how it was done in the February 1947 issue of AP World:
“It required two light planes to carry it, after a little hack-sawing had reduced some of it to proportions that would fit into the planes.”
Encouraged by their success in Pittsburgh, Carlson and his team in the AP Engineering Laboratory, which included engineers Konstantin “Wally” Woloschak and Charley Hubley, worked on devising smaller and lighter equipment that could be used in the field. A 1941 AP promotion touted the latest portable Wirephoto transmitter which could be carried in a suitcase and weighed only 65 pounds.
Text written by Francesca Pitaro, AP Corporate Archives.
Curation by Julia Weeks.
Written content on this post was not created by the editorial department of AP.