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The Wireless Voice of a New Century (1920)
On February 16, 1920, the first regularly scheduled radio broadcasts began in the United Kingdom from station 2MT in Writtle, Essex. Though primitive by modern standards, these early transmissions marked the beginning of a new era, one where voices and music could travel invisibly across great distances.
Radio transformed how people experienced news, entertainment, and even politics. A speech no longer required a town square; a concert no longer required a ticket. By the 1930s, radios sat in living rooms across Europe and America, binding communities together through shared moments.
The technology would evolve, television, satellites, the internet, but February 16 reminds us of the first time sound itself seemed to defy geography. The airwaves became a public space, and the modern media age quietly began.
Thanks for reading,
The TTC Team
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