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Radio Man Mark Frankland

Radio Man By Mark Frankland

Radio Man by Mark Frankland


$54.99
Condition - Very Good
Only 2 left

Summary

Radio Man tells the story of C.O. Stanley, the unconventional Irishman who acquired Pye Radio at the beginning of the broadcasting age.

Radio Man Summary

Radio Man: The remarkable rise and fall of C.O. Stanley by Mark Frankland

Radio Man tells the story of C.O. Stanley, the unconventional Irishman who acquired Pye Radio at the beginning of the broadcasting age. Although he started with little experience and even less money, he was to make Pye a major player in the British electronics industry - only to crash it spectacularly forty years later. From the romance of early radio to the birth of the mobile, Stanley and Pye were players in some of the key moments of twentieth century Britain. His obsession with the infant medium of television allowed Pye to provide the equipment that put radar into planes in time for the Battle of Britain. His energy also drove Pye's pioneering work on the proximity fuse - work that would revolutionise antiaircraft warfare - and the company's manufacture of the war's most successful army radios.

In the 1950s Stanley led the offensive against the BBC's monopoly of television in a battle that split the British establishment. When his son, John, took Pye into mobile radio Stanley fought and defeated the bureaucrats who then controlled Britain's airwaves.

Stanley's loss of Pye in 1966 illustrated British industry's inability to withstand foreign competition. It also brought tragedy. Stanley himself escaped with honour more or less intact, but left his son to face public humiliation on his own.

This revealing and meticulously researched text is written within the broad context of the political, technological and business changes of the time, and shows how a very ambitious businessman was brought down by the qualities that made him so successful.

Radio Man Reviews

'hard to put down. The author has done an excellent job of research on the subject. The history of Stanley and Pye may not be familiar to many of us, so I urge you to read this book - you won't be disappointed.'

-- Alan Smith-Gode * HRSA Radio Waves *

'Any Practical Wireless reader, even with the slightest interest in the history of radio and broadcast technology, Second World War communications, radar and television should read Radio Man. I could not put the book down, it's a superb radio-based real life drama!'

* Practical Wireless *

'the reader gains a detailed insight into one of the most significant industrial empires of the 20th Century and of C.O. Stanley who made it all happen - a fascinating glimpse of a truly wonderful man.'

-- Dr. David Ellis * Measurement + Control *

'a fascinating story about the transience of commercial and personal success, the complexity of the factors that produce it, and the difficulty of sustaining it in changing circumstances.'

-- Jock Given * Prometheus *

About Mark Frankland

Mark Frankland read history at Cambridge and at Brown University, USA. He was a foreign correspondent for The Observer, working in the Soviet Union, the Far East, Europe and the United States. He twice won the British Press Awards prize for foreign reporting. His most recent book, Child of My Time (Chatto & Windus, 1999), won the J.R. Ackerley Prize for autobiography. His account of the collapse of communism in east Europe, The Patriots' Revolution (Sinclair-Stevenson, 1990), was shortlisted for the NCR award. He is the author of five other books, including Khrushchev (Penguin Books, 1966) and The Sixth Continent (Hamish Hamilton, 1986), a study of Russia under Mikhail Gorbachev. Gordon Bussey is the Historical Adviser to Philips Electronics UK Ltd. and a Trustee of the Marconi Collection. He was a contributor and former referee to the London School of Economics Dictionary of Business Biography. He is the author of numerous publications on wirelessrelated subjects including Marconi's Atlantic Leap, published in 2001. He has also given extensive historical and technical advice to the producers of the BAFTA award-winning website, www.marconicalling.com. In 2000 he was the historical consultant to the Royal Mint during the preparation of their legal tender GBP2 coin issued in 2001 commemorating Marconi's transatlantic centenary and he also provided the edge inscription for the coin. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1: An Irish family
  • Chapter 2: Birth of a salesman
  • Chapter 3: Radio man
  • Chapter 4: C.O. goes to war
  • Chapter 5: The fighting factory
  • Chapter 6: Boom and bureaucrats
  • Chapter 7: Liberating television
  • Chapter 8: West Briton
  • Chapter 9: Danger years
  • Chapter 10: The palace revolution
  • Chapter 11: Son and father

Additional information

GOR005850005
9780852962039
0852962037
Radio Man: The remarkable rise and fall of C.O. Stanley by Mark Frankland
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Institution of Engineering and Technology
2002-07-02
368
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Radio Man