A bit of radio history
In the 1990s I bought an old table radio at an auction in Saskatchewan. Inside the cabinet was a licence from 1950, shown below.
For the sake of privacy I have blotted out the name of the licencee, just in case some members or friends of his family are still living.
Even home radio receivers had to be licenced back then. I wonder if receiving licences were ever required in the U.S. There's no such requirement in Canada today, but I'm not sure when the law was repealed.
The conditions on the reverse of the licence included non-disclosure of communications that have been intercepted accidentally or without authorization.
The radio was still in working condition, and so was a Westinghouse console radio from 1929 that I had acquired at another auction, but I had to give away my vintage radios when I moved to BC.
In the 1990s I bought an old table radio at an auction in Saskatchewan. Inside the cabinet was a licence from 1950, shown below.
For the sake of privacy I have blotted out the name of the licencee, just in case some members or friends of his family are still living.
Even home radio receivers had to be licenced back then. I wonder if receiving licences were ever required in the U.S. There's no such requirement in Canada today, but I'm not sure when the law was repealed.
The conditions on the reverse of the licence included non-disclosure of communications that have been intercepted accidentally or without authorization.
The radio was still in working condition, and so was a Westinghouse console radio from 1929 that I had acquired at another auction, but I had to give away my vintage radios when I moved to BC.