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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!udel!darwin.sura.net!jvnc.net!princeton!idacrd!wahoo!n4hy
- From: n4hy@wahoo.UUCP (Bob McGwier)
- Newsgroups: rec.radio.shortwave
- Subject: Re: RE : Stupid Questions (origin HAM)
- Message-ID: <N4HY.92Dec24105854@wahoo.UUCP>
- Date: 24 Dec 92 15:58:54 GMT
- References: <1992Dec23.111239.28594@muppet.bt.co.uk>
- Sender: n4hy@idacrd.UUCP
- Organization: IDA Center for Communications Research
- Lines: 19
- In-reply-to: jeff@alien.bt.co.uk's message of 23 Dec 92 11:12:39 GMT
-
-
-
- >Regarding the derivation of the term HAM for radio amateur
- >enthusiasts, JEB had it almost correct. HAM was coined by
- >a legendary British comedian called Tony Hancock. Her had a
- >comedy series called "Hancocks Half Hour" in the early sixties
- >which consisted of a series of sketches. In one of these
- >sketches he was a radio fanatic, and in the course of the sketch
- >he called himself a "radio hamateur", and the slang has stuck
- >ever since.
-
-
- What a load of horse manure. Radio Amateurs have been calle hams since
- the early 1910's. NO one knows the real origin of the term but it was
- widely used by ship to shore telegraph operators who would complain about
- the damn hams messing up the comm links with their spark gap transmitters.
-
- BMc
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-