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Image / Wirephoto switchboard and receiving machine, Los Angeles, 1935

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Title
Wirephoto switchboard and receiving machine, Los Angeles, 1935
Date Created and/or Issued
January 1935
1935-01
Publication Information
Los Angeles Times
Contributing Institution
UCLA, Library Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library
Collection
Los Angeles Times Photographic Archives
Rights Information
US
Description
Access to this collection is generously supported by Arcadia funds.
One man stands at left in front of a large three paneled switch board, holding a telephone receiver to his ear. A second man stands at a machine that receives images through wire transmission.
One of several related photographs housed in this negative sleeve that document the process of phototelegraphy -the process of transmitting photographic images over telephone wire. Though there were advancements - namely the Telediagraph, the Belinograph, and the Telephotograver (invented by Los Angeles Times managing editor Ralph Trueblood) – the technology left much room for improvement. In the 1930s, the Associated Press began working with Kodak to perfect the technology. On January 1, 1935, the AP sent the first photograph out over its Wirephoto service to 47 affiliated newspapers across the United States.
Related to Los Angeles Times article, "Wirephoto Shows Lead: "Times" Keeps in Forefront. Recalls Pioneering in Picture Transmission Over Wire Systems," 6 Jan. 1935: 26.
Text from negative sleeve: 1150. Box 1. Associated Press Wirephoto. [Stamped:] Jul 18 1935.
Type
image
Format
b&w nitrate negative
Identifier
uclamss_1429_10232
ark:/21198/zz002hb5bc
Subject
Electronic apparatus & appliances
Phototelegraphy
Photojournalism--California--Los Angeles
Los Angeles Times (Firm)
Associated Press
Source
Los Angeles Times Photographic Collection

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