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William (Bill) J. Halligan, founder of
Hallicrafters, was born in Boston, Massachusetts
in 1899. He got his first ham license as a
teenager. Even at that age he considered
himself a radio experimenter and bulit an early
spark-gap transmitter. Bill's first job,
at age 16, was as a wireless operator on
excursion ships between Boston and other coastal
cities. When World War I began, he
put his skills to good use by serving his
country as a wireless radio operator on the
battleship Illinois. After the war was
over he attended engineering school at Tufts
College and West Point, but left when he married
in 1922. He took a job as a newspaper
reporter, and then left journalism in 1924 to
sell radio parts. In 1928 he decided to
start his own company, and moved to Chicago,
Illinois. He had ideas for improving
the short-wave radios he had been selling. It
was a brave venture, with almost no capital,
manufacturing license problems and then the
depression, but in 1933 Bill founded the
Hallicrafters company.
Hallicrafters built handcrafted receivers with
state-of-the-art features at an affordable
price. By 1938, Hallicrafters was considered
one of the "Big Three" manufacturers of amateur
receivers (Hallicrafters, National and
Hammarlund). He had 23 different
models of transceivers and was ready to start
producing transmitters, beginning with the
HT-1. Instead of putting a lot into expensive
cabinets, Halligan believed in providing every
nickel's worth into the performance of the
chassis and the latest in circuit design.
When World War II began, there was a tremendous
shortage of military radio equipment.
Hallicrafters geared up for wartime production,
and perhaps the best known new design is the
HT-4 (BC-610) which was used extensively during
the war. After the war, focus was again on
consumer electronics, including radio
phonographs, AM/FM receivers, clock radios and
televisions.
The company
employed 2,500 people. Many of the radio
products became classics, e.g. the HT-32 and the SX 101. Much of this equipment is still used
today and collected by nostalgia buffs.
In 1966 Northrop Corporation bought
Hallicrafters and moved the company to a new
plant in Rolling Madows, Illinois. The company's
main function was to produce para-military
equipment and electronic countermeasures
systems. Hallicrafters produced a few ham radios
through 1972 and a few accessories through 1974.
From 1933 until the company was sold to
Northrop, Bill Halligan, W9AC, always supported
the ham radio hobby. He died on July 14th, 1992
at the age of 93.
The history information came from the following
sources:
1) History of Hallicrafters
from Chuck Dachis
http://ww1.photomicrographics.com/webpages2/pmi/dd1/history.htm
3) Hallicrafters http://www.aa9tt.com/Hallicrafters.html
4) Hallicrafters Founder Dead at Age 93 (W5YI
Report)
http://www.amfone.net/AMPX/101.htm
5) Charlie Hugg K5MBX
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| The first Hallicrafters
radio, the S-1 Skyrider, was hand-crafted and built in 1932.
The name "Hallicrafters" was a composite of Bill Halligan's
last name, and the word "Hand Crafted." The S-Prefix
continued for over three decades, and was used mostly in
products that are geared for the budget-conscious consumer.
The most famous "S" prefixed radio, the S-38, appeared in
1946 and continued for another for 15 years.
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| The last Hallicrafters sets to use Skyrider as part of
the name were the S-41 Skyrider Jr. receiver and the SP-44
Skyrider Panoramic adapter. |
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