W9DZT 1907 - 1986
W9DZT - Parker S. Gates Parker S. Gates
Quincy, IL

QCWA # 1463
Chapter 2
W9DZT - Parker S. Gates
First Call: 9DZT in 1925       Other Call(s): WB4YGD

If you're over 65, and you haven't heard of Gates Radio and Supply Company, you've been living under a rock. Almost as famous is its founder Parker Gates, W9DZT [sk in Fort Myers, Florida]. He was very good friends with Lee Bergrin, WØR (sk), of Loudenboomer fame. While I lived in the Kansas City, area, I quite often checked into the morning Kansas City net. Parker was often a check in. In the spring of 1974, on a trip to the tri-cities, I took a small detour to Quincy, IL where Parker lived.

We had a very enjoyable talk about old-time radio, and the founding of Gates radio. Besides transmitters, they also produced studio equipment. I don't remember the whole story, but I do remember one model was named after his mother, Cora. The next afternoon, we went out to lunch at the local country club, with his extended family of three daughters, wife, and a whole parcel of grandchildren. This brings up a very strange scenario.

During one of the conversations with Parker, he mentioned that his life in the broadcast industry was the reason he only had daughters. He was convinced, apparently, that the low, and medium frequency radiation caused the phenomena. I have always been told that wasn't the case, but over the years I have met several other amateur operators who have also been in the broadcasting industry with the same story to tell. It would be hard to prove the case, but it is the main reason I remember Parker so well.

(Source: www.k0bg.com/yesteryear)


The announcement of the sale of Harris Corp.'s Broadcast Division has caused many people to reflect on the long history of that iconic broadcast manufacturer. The Gores Group becomes just the third owner of one of the world's major broadcast suppliers, and in the process it inherits that company's 90-year history.

This is a quick look back at that history and some of the company's important products.

Henry C. and Cora B. Gates founded the Gates Radio & Supply Company in 1922 in the kitchen pantry of their apartment in Quincy, Ill., primarily to create a job for their son, Parker S. Gates, who was only 15 years old at the time. He began by selling crystal radios to friends and neighbors in the community.

It would be the only place Parker would ever work.

Parker had always tinkered with electronics, along with his Quincy school chum Elmer Wavering. The two boys put together an early automobile radio to impress their girlfriends, and in the process solved the thorny issues of ignition and multi-vibrator interference that had prevented reception in a vehicle.

Wavering later partnered with Paul Galvin of Chicago to develop and market car radios under the name Motorola, while Parker stayed in Quincy and got into the manufacturing business.

Gates Radio & Supply Company soon became a serious enterprise, and Parker's father quit his job to head the family business, which they moved into a second floor commercial space in downtown Quincy.

The first major product that Parker developed was a sound system used in early "talkie" movie theaters around the country. The Gates family also developed and sold a broadcast remote amplifier, a transcription turntable and a compact condenser microphone.

Two more moves to increasingly larger factory space took place in the 1930s. In the middle of that decade, Gates built one of the industry's first audio consoles and introduced its first AM transmitter, the 250 Watt model 100A (a restored unit is on display today in the Harris lobby in Quincy).

The war years brought more work when the Gates Radio Company received several subcontracts from RCA for the manufacturing of military shortwave transmitters. Gates purchased a larger factory located on the Mississippi River in Quincy in 1945, and then in 1953 constructed an even larger building.

By the 1950s, Gates Radio had become one of the country's principal radio equipment suppliers -- a major provider of audio consoles, turntables, AM, FM and shortwave radio transmitters and accessories. It also made its first forays into the new field of television at that time.

In December 1957, Harris Intertype Corp., a lithography and typesetting conglomerate that was making its first venture into the field of electronics, acquired the company. Parker Gates stayed on as the president of the division, which gradually phased in the Harris name and is today known as Harris Broadcast Communications.

For many years, however, Parker Gates remained, graduating from president to adviser, staying in touch with his many employees, customers and friends via his ham radio station, W9DZT.

In succeeding decades, Harris became a leader in broadcast technology with innovative FM and TV transmitters -- including multi-megawatt AM systems, new AM techniques such as pulse width and digital modulation and some of the industry's first solid-state AM, FM and TV transmitters.

A full line of television products also was created through both in-house development and corporate acquisitions. More recently, Harris worked closely with the Advanced Television Systems Committee and Zenith/LG to perfect and introduce an over-the-air mobile digital television technology that is just now being introduced to consumers

The company consolidated operations into its present 40-acre factory complex in Quincy in 1977. The senior management, product line management and R&D team moved to Mason, Ohio, in 1998, and later moved its management offices to Englewood, Colorado, in 2010. But the primary manufacturing facility has always remained in Quincy.

Harris Broadcast made many acquisitions over the years, including radio companies Allied Broadcast, Intraplex and Pacific Research & Engineering (PR&E), as well as a number of notable television acquisitions. In the process, the company's engineers made important contributions into the development of high-definition television and HD Radio technology

In 1992, the Harris Broadcast Division celebrated its 70th anniversary by naming a Quincy street "Parker Gates Avenue." Parker S. Gates died on Sept. 16, 1986, at the age of 79. His wife Millie and their three daughters still live in Quincy, where Millie recently celebrated her 101st birthday.

(Source: http://www.radioworld.com/article/remembering-the-gates-radio-company, posted March 4, 2013)

CREDITS
Photo #1: www.www.k0bg.com/yesteryear

W9DZT - Parker S. Gates
by www.radioworld.com (Gates Radio founders)

W9DZT - Parker S. Gates
by www.radioworld.com (Gates Radio management team, 1957)

W9DZT - Parker S. Gates
Credit:www.oldradio.com (Street sign, Quincy, Illinois)