Philo T. and Elma G. Farnsworth photograph collection, 1900-1980

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Farnsworth, Philo Taylor
Title
Philo T. and Elma G. Farnsworth photograph collection
Dates
1900-1980 (inclusive)
Quantity
1.75 linear feet, (4 archives boxes)
Collection Number
P0437
Summary
The photograph collection contains prints and slides including Philo's childhood to his death. A large number of the photographs document his various technological and equipment inventions, as well as early television shows, the first TV broadcast. Also personal photographs of his family and colleagues. This collection is entirely digitalized and available online in our Digital Library.
Repository
University of Utah Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library
University of Utah
295 South 1500 East
Salt Lake City, UT
84112-0860

Telephone: 8015818863
special@library.utah.edu
Access Restrictions

Twenty-four hour advanced notice encouraged. Materials must be used on-site. Access to parts of this collection may be restricted under provisions of state or federal law.

Languages
English

Biographical NoteReturn to Top

Philo Taylor Farnsworth (1906-1971) was born on 19 August 1906, to Lewis Edwin and Serena Bastian Farnsworth in a log cabin at Indian Creek, near the town of Beaver in Southwestern Utah. He was the namesake of his paternal grandfather who built the log home in 1856 while settling the area at the request of Mormon Church leader Brigham Young.

Philo was six years old when the hand-cranked Bell telephone and Edison gramophone became well known, just old enough to become inquisitive about motors, magnets, coils, armatures, and other components of the newly popular electric power. By the time his family moved to his Uncle Albert's 240 acre ranch near Rigby, Idaho the thirteen-year-old was reading everything about electricity that he could get his hands on, including instructions to the farm's Delco power system. However, Philo's avid reading of Popular Science and other technical magazines found in the attic, soon had him using the power system to operate the family's washing machine, sewing machine, and barn lights.

Philo's appetite for knowledge gave him a mental grasp of such developing concepts as Einstein's theory of relativity, sub-atomic particles, radio waves, and mechanic disc-operated television. He was also well ahead of his classmates in most math and science subjects by the time he entered Rigby High School. In fact, it was in his first chemistry class that he disclosed his idea of an "image dissector tube." Such a vacuum tube, he suggested, was capable of operating a television unit electronically by shooting a stream of electrons toward a fluorescent screen, thereby accurately reflecting pre-designated images.

With the loss of his uncle's farm in 1922, Philo's family moved to Provo, Utah. For the next two years, Philo attended Brigham Young University. It was there that he was introduced to Elma "Pem" Gardner in 1924. However, just three months later, he was forced to leave school to assume the role of family provider when his father died.

Farnsworth's attempts to provide support for himself and his family were many and varied during this period. He labored on logging crews, repaired and delivered radios, sold electrical products door to door, and worked on the railroad as an electrician. His acumen in math and science helped him pass the Navy's Officer Candidate School Examination, but after being assigned to Annapolis as a first-year midshipman he decided a military career was not his goal. He returned home to work on a Salt Lake City street cleaning crew. It was his knowledge of Salt Lake City's street plan that eventually earned him a supervisor position for an out-of-state charitable organization managed by George Everson and Leslie Gorrell.

Everson and Gorrell were professional fundraisers from California who were impressed with Farnsworth's ability to organize a job, dedicate himself to completing the tasks involved, and motivate other team members, They listened to him recount his ideas of electronic television as they performed the mundane work of folding, stuffing, sorting, and stamping bulk mailings of fundraising letters, and became convinced of the investment possibilities such a venture could bring. So impressed were these two men with Farnsworth's knowledge of current television literature and his own innovative concepts, they offered to financially support the venture under a formal partnership know as Everson, Farnsworth and Gorrell. Three days later, on 27 May 1926, Philo and Pem were married.

On 7 September 1927, George Everson watched with staff members as Farnsworth slowly turned on the controls. An unmistakable line appeared across the small bluish square of light on the end of the Oscillite tube. Although fuzzy at first, it became distinct with adjustment, and through the visual static each could see the side of a black triangle previously inserted by Pem's brother, Cliff Gardner.

For the next three years support was provided by a group of bankers and investors calling themselves Crocker Research Laboratories. In March 1929, Jesse McCarger took the reins of the fledgling group, provided substantially more support and renamed the company Television, Inc. It was during this period (1929-1933), that publicity catapulted the promise of this little organization. However, with public awareness came the problems of competition, races to the patent office and legal disputes. The most significant and long-lasting conflict began in April 1930, when Dr. Vladimir Zworykin of Westinghouse visited Farnsworth's Laboratory. For three days he was a guest of the investors, who hoped to persuade Zworykin's employer to purchase their small company. But, unbeknownst to the Farnsworth staff, Zworykin had recently been hired by RCA, who sent him to the laboratory to obtain information for replicating the necessary television equipment. For the next decade Farnsworth and his attorneys were involved in court battles endeavoring to convince the United States Patent Office that it was he and not Vladimir Zworykin who had invented the basic components of electronic television. It was later to be one of Farnsworth's great professional satisfactions to have rival competitor RCA concede and pay one million dollars for rights to the Farnsworth patents.

During 1933, Farnsworth acquired enough investment capital to restructure the organization and change its name to Farnsworth Television, Inc. This name remained until 1938, when management purchased the Capehart Company of Fort Wayne along with a general household utilities plant in Marion, Indiana. With these acquisitions they were prepared to compete in the blossoming radio and phonograph manufacturing market. But while endeavoring to develop and refine his electronic television invention, Farnsworth was also responsible for providing investors with saleable products during the post-depression economy and directing and supervising laboratory personnel.

With the slowdown in radio and television production during the war years, Farnsworth closed down his Fort Wayne, Indiana home and moved permanently to Fernworth Farm in Brownfield, Maine. The Farnsworth Company had been converted to the production of war materials and was supplying electronic components to the federal government. With a subsidy from the Farnsworth Company, Farnsworth was able to spend more time developing ideas that had previously been dwarfed by the race for television patents. From 1939-1948 he utilized the farms lumber resources for the production of ammunition boxes for the War Production Board. The family venture was organized under the name of Farnsworth Wood Products Company and flourished for the duration of the war.

Anticipating the end of the war, RCA, Philco, and several other large companies received their commercial licenses from the FCC. They immediately began retooling their equipment for the commercial manufacturing of televisions. The Farnsworth Company quickly found itself at the rear of this aggressive pack of electronics firms in the scramble for parts and materials. In addition, the one-year grace period allowed by the federal government for repayment of its wartime bank loans was up. The company found itself financially strapped and frantically tried to sell its assets in order to remain afloat in the post-war market. When all but the original plant had been sold, substantial bank loans still remained outstanding. The board of directors voted to sell the company to International Telephone and Telegraph (ITT) in 1949. Under the new management, Farnsworth retained his position as vice president of research and advance engineering. His primary function within the ITT system was to engineer his staff toward timely completion of space-age contracts awarded by the Air Force and other government agencies. During the next eighteen years he was to make ITT his home. It was within this environment that he invented components of the Defense Early Warning Signal, the PPI Projector (which allowed safe control of air traffic from the ground), an infrared telescope, submarine detection devices, radar calibration equipment, and other inventions.

Although his health continued to deteriorate, he actively worked on many military research projects. Nevertheless, due to illness and the time necessary for recuperation, ITT transferred him from his responsibilities as vice president of research to that of systems consultant. As such, he was able to follow his own pursuits and still remain on the ITT payroll. Fortunately, ITT management agreed to nominally fund his new controlled fusion ideas. He and staff members invented and refined a series of fusion reaction tubes called "fusors." Publicity about his activities persuaded ITT management to raise Farnsworth's salary and promote him to the position of director of research. For Scientific reasons unknown to Farnsworth and his staff, the necessary reaction lasted no longer than thirty seconds. In December 1965, ITT came under pressure from its board of directors to terminate the expensive fusion research and sell the Farnsworth subsidiary. It was only from the urging of President Harold Geneen that the 1966 budget was accepted, permitting ITT's fusion research one additional year. However, the stress associated with this managerial ultimatum threw Farnsworth into relapse. One year later he was terminated and eventually allowed medical retirement.

In the spring off 1967, Farnsworth and his family moved back to Utah to continue his fusion research at Brigham Young University, which presented him with an honorary doctorate. The university also offered him office space and an underground concrete bunker location for the project realizing the fusion lab was to be dismantled at ITT, Farnsworth invited staff members to accompany him to Salt Lake City as team members in his planned Philo T. Farnsworth Associates (PTFA) organization. By late 1968 the associates began holding regular business meetings and PTFA was underway. However, although a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration was promptly secured and more possibilities were within reach, the financing needed to pay the $24,000 in monthly expenses for equipment rental and salaries was stalled.

By Christmas 1970, PTFA had failed to secure the necessary financing, the Farnsworth's had sold all their own ITT stock and cashed out Philo's life insurance policy to maintain organization stability. The underwriter had failed to provide the financial backing that was to have supported the organization during its critical first year. The banks called-in all outstanding loans. Repossession notices were placed on anything not previously sold and the Internal Revenue Service put a lock on the laboratory door until delinquent taxes were paid. During January 1970, Philo T. Farnsworth Associates disbanded. Farnsworth became seriously ill with pneumonia and died on 11 March 1971.

Although best known for his development of television, Farnsworth was involved in research in many other areas. He invented the first infant incubator. He was involved in the development of radar, peacetime uses of atomic energy, and the nuclear fusion process. At his death, Farnsworth held 300 U.S. and foreign patents, and Scientific American magazine called him one of the ten greatest mathematicians of his time.

Elma "Pem" Gardner Farnsworth (1908- 2006) was born on 25 February 1908 in Jensen, Utah. "Pem", as she was affectionately known, married Philo Taylor Farnsworth in 1926. She became part of her husband's lab team, handling the technical drawings for his early experiments on his vision for television and was present in San Francisco on 7 September 1927, when electronic television was first demonstrated successfully. Pem Farnsworth was the first person ever to appear on a cathode-ray-tube receiver via transmission from her husband's lab and has been referred to as "The Mother of Television."

During the last three decades following Philo's death, Elma Farnsworth had been a tireless advocate of her husband's work. During this period he received many posthumous honors. In 1977 he was awarded an Emmy by the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences; in 1983 his image was placed on a U.S. postage stamp; the Inventors Hall of Fame inducted him as a member in 1984. In 1990 a life-sized statue of him was placed in the Statuary Hall in Washington D.C. Elma wrote a biography on Philo It was published in 1989 with the title Distant Vision: Romance and Discovery on an Invisible Frontier .

Well into her 90's Mrs. Farnsworth continued her cause and was successful in lobbying the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences to consider creating an award in honor of her husband's accomplishments. She took center stage to present the first "Philo T. Farnsworth" award for technical excellence in television at the 56th Annual Emmy Awards in Los Angeles in 2003. A devout Mormon, she derived her greatest satisfaction from meeting school children and encouraging them to follow in her late husband's footsteps. Elma died on 27 April 2006 at the age of 98

Content DescriptionReturn to Top

The photograph collection contains prints and slides including Philo's childhood to his death. A large number of the photographs document his various technological and equipment inventions, as well as early television shows, the first TV broadcast. Also personal photographs of his family and colleagues. Many of the items listed are photocopies, duplicates, or copy-pritns. The finding aid was revised in 2023 to reflect those materials.

Use of the CollectionReturn to Top

Restrictions on Use

The library does not claim to control copyright for all materials in the collection. An individual depicted in a reproduction has privacy rights as outlined in Title 45 CFR, part 46 (Protection of Human Subjects). For further information, please review the J. Willard Marriott Library's Use Agreement and Reproduction Request forms.

Preferred Citation

Collection Name, Collection Number, Box Number, Folder Number. Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, The University of Utah.

Administrative InformationReturn to Top

Arrangement

By folder.

Acquisition Information

Purchased from Purchased from Elma G. Farnsworth in 1991, Additional materials purchased from Sam Wellers Bookstore in 2014.

Processing Note

Processed by Photo Archive staff.

Separated Materials

Audio-visual and manuscript materials available in the AV and Manuscipt departments of Special Collections.

Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
1 1 Philo T. Farnsworth
  • 1. Philo T. Farnsworth at his desk in lab at 127 E. Mermaid Lane, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 1934.
  • 2. Philo T. Farnsworth, 1936. duplicate see (P0437n01_01_001)
  • 3. Philo T. Farnsworth at 17 (1923), a student.
  • 4. Duplicate see (P0437n01_01_003)
  • 5. Philo playing violin.
  • 6. Grave of Philo T. Farnsworth.
  • 7. On Snow Bird River in North Carolina replacing a fly to lure a trout, 1937.
  • 8. Philo T. Farnsworth in Maine.
  • 9. Philo T. Farnsworth at Sanibel Island, Florida. 1968.
  • 10a-b. Philo T. Farnsworth, 1923.
  • 11: Duplicate see (P0437n02_06_006)
  • 12. Philo being interviewed on TV in San Francisco in 1950's.
  • 13. Philo T. Farnsworth at his desk in his Philadelphia TV research lab, 1936.
  • 14. Philo in New York in 1931 on roof of Penney Hotel.
  • 15. Philo T. Farnsworth circa 1950.
  • 16. Philo T. Farnsworth in Fort Wayne at age 44. 1950
  • 17. Philo T. Farnsworth, Fort Wayne, return from Acapulco, 1954.
  • 18. Philo in his study at his home in Holladay. 1970.
  • 19. Philo T. Farnsworth looking out to sea on the beach at Sanibel Island of Ft. Myers, Florida.
  • 20. Wooden forms – for a dam over the stream in Brownfield Maine. 140 ft. dam designed and built by Philo T. Farnsworth in 1939 for trout pond. Photo is stamped "April 30, 1968, Electronics Museum Library"
  • 21. Philo T. Farnsworth at news conference. S.F. Press Club, 1950.
  • 22. Philo T. Farnsworth with his dog "Thunder" looking over his burned forest acreage in Maine (forest fire of 1947).
  • 23. Philo T. Farnsworth. duplicate see (P0437n02_01_001), photocopy
  • 24. Ormond Rigby, signed to Philo and Elma Farnsworth, 1953.
  • 25. Philo, a candid photo by Jake Garn.
  • 26-27: Philo T. Farnsworth
  • 28. Philo T. Farnsworth at 202 Green Street Lab-1928.Duplicate (see P0437n02_01_011).
  • 29. Philo T. Farnsworth with his new electron Multiplier tube about 1935. duplicate see (P0437n01_11_006), photocopy
  • 30. Duplicate see (P0437n02_01_009), photocopy
  • 31. Duplicate see (P0437n02_01_009), photocopy
  • 32. Philo T. Farnsworth, photocopy
  • 33. Duplicate see (P0437n02_01_009), photocopy
  • 34. Philo T. Farnsworth age 47. duplicate see (P0437n01_01_016)
1 2 Philo and Pem Farnsworth
  • 1 Philo and Pem Farnsworth.
  • 2 Philo and Pem Farnsworth with Seymore Turner in background-arriving at Washington Airport.
  • 3 Philo and Pem going over papers in their breakfast room in their Holladay, Utah home-1969. Duplicate see also P0437n02_02_006.
  • 4 Philo and Pem boarding plane in Fort Wayne, Ind. to fly to San Francisco as guests of the San Francisco Press Club at the opening of the TV link between San Francisco and Los Angeles.
  • 5 Philo and Pem at the Hotel de Orient Montone, French Riviera. 1936, photocopy
  • 6 Philo and Pem, Kent caught us by surprise on the return from Temple wedding May 27, 1968.
1 3 Pem Farnsworth
  • 1 Tom Cosgrove and Pem Farnsworth with plaque Pem made for Farnsworth Dam-1939. Dam designed and built by Phil as master mind of project.
1 4 Philo and Family
  • 1. 1938 Pack trip to Maine. First thing to Mane. L to R: Cliff Gardner, Philo Farnsworth.
  • 2. Philo's mother, Serena Bastian Farnsworth receiving corsage from Dionne Tall, wife of Dr Alden Tall. Rigby tube presentation. In background (L to R): Colonel Vernal Sorenson, Philo and wife Elma 'Pem'.
  • 3. Phil presenting tubes to the Rigby High School Library (Pem in near). Holding an early dissector.. Duplicate material see (P0437n02_06_004).
  • 4. Lincoln Farnsworth in the box shop of Farnsworth wood products.
  • 5. Lincoln, Lindy, Claude, Carl, and Philo Farnsworth. 1935.
  • 6. Philo with his brothers. Left: Lincoln, Right: Carl.
  • 7. Pem with a child? .
  • 8. Philo Taylor Farnsworth holding son Russell S. October 1935, Philadelphia.
  • 9. Duplicate see (P0437n01_04_008), photocopy
  • 10. Bishop Gerke, Linda, and Kent after Wedding Ceremony at home in Ft. Wayne-734 E. State Blvd.
  • 11. Philo and Pem with a child ?
  • 12. Philo with son ?
  • 13. Philo with son and grandson ?
  • 14. Philo T. Farnsworth at Clay's Pond on his Maine Property. At left his brother Carl, Philo and son Philo.
  • 15. Philo T. Farnsworth with his mother-1937 in his home in Wyndmoor, Pa., near Philadelphia.
  • 16. Philo and Cliff stopping to rest on the 2 mile pack trip on their way to camp on little Snow Bird Creek, North Carolina.
  • 17. Philo T. Farnsworth.
  • 18. Philo and Philo Jr. and Lola and Jean Gardner.
  • 19. Philo and Carl Wendy Farnsworth with equipment in the basement of 734 E State Street. January 1962. Duplicate see (P0437n02_10_006)
  • 20. Skee at 2 1/2 years of age.
  • 21-23. Farnsworth Children.
  • 24. Duplicate see (P0437n01_04_013)
  • 25. Philo and Russell "Skee" Farnsworth at 18 months and 7 1/2 years, Cresheim Valley Road, Wyndmoor, PA.
  • 26. Unidentified child.
  • 27. Philo T Farnsworth III in 1974, photocopy.
  • 28a-33. Slides of family trip in1953.
1 5 Philo and Family
  • 1. Cast of "Charm School", B.Y.U. Standing: D. Alton Partridge, Philo Farnsworth, Warren Beardall and Elton BIllings (leading man).
  • 2. Aboard the HMS Majestic-L to R- Tobe Rutherford, "Skee" Turner, and Philo T. Farnsworth-late 1934.
  • 3. Classmates at Rigby High. Also members of the dance orchestra. At left, Rulon Doman, trumpet; center, Philo Farnsworth, violin; right, Vern Sorenson, drums. Frances usually played piano. Dianne(nee unknown) now Tall, sometimes played piano.
  • 4. Philo, Morey, and Tom.
  • 5. Classmates at Rigby High. Also members of the dance orchestra. At left, Rulon Doman, trumpet; center, Philo Farnsworth, violin; right, Vern Sorenson, drums. Frances usually played piano. Duplicate see (P0437n01_05_003).
  • 6. Philo Farnsworth and LaVieda Coacher, School Year 1919-20. Duplicate see also P0437n02_01_002.
  • 7. Left to Right-Arch Madsen, his mother, Philo, Pem, and Zeline-1958-Cedar City.
  • 8. Rigby High School Class 30th Reunion-1954 or 55.
1 6 Homes
  • 1. Unidentified place
  • 2. Farnsworth cabin
  • 3. Philo in front of the cabin
  • 4. Swimming pool addition to the home of Philo T. Farnsworth-5166 Cottonwood Lane, Salt Lake City (Holladay), Utah.
  • 5. Home of Philo T. Farnsworth-5166 Cottonwood Lane, Salt Lake City (Holladay), Utah. photocopy
  • 6. The old George Haley boyhood home in Brownfield, Maine-purchased by Philo and Pem in 1937.
  • 7. Home at 734 E. State-Fort Wayne. photocopy
  • 8. Farnsworths' house in Brownfield, Maine. Duplicate material, see P0437n02_05_002.
1 7 Friends and close associates
  • 1. Cyril Day, back from the dead due to Phil getting him to u of chi medical team – Cancer of the inner ear.
  • 2. Seymour Turner-1936 actively involved with Farnsworth Television, 1934-38.
  • 3: "Seasons greetings with love from George Swenson."
  • 4: Unidentified.
  • 5 : Frances Critchlow, Phil's teacher, organized dance, orchestra, second mother, even after all these years, (1919-1965).
  • 6. "Recent picture of Frances Critchlow– her relationship with Philo has grown warmer thru the years. As friend, advisor and critic (but never critical) she is in a class all by herself far as he is concerned. This feeling is shared by hundreds, possibly thousands, of her other 'young people' with whom she has had contact during her career as teacher and student advisor. She taught Philo in the 7th grade. The year he won a national contest for gadgets for cars. His winning idea was a thiefproof lock. The key had to be magnetized before it would turn on the ignition. He won a $25.00 prize."
  • 7. Donald K. Lippincott Farnsworth patent attorney.
1 8 Equipment
  • 1-2 Farnsworth Television Model-1936.
  • 3 Farnsworth Iatron Tube.
  • 4 Multipactor oscillator.
  • 5 Diode Cold Cathode Multipactor tubes....unique in that it has no filament.
  • 6 Farnsworth's Capehart model TV, ca. 1948-49
  • 7 Demonstration of 1 tube radio using Multiplier shown at IRE Convention, New York City-1935.
  • 8 High Powered one tube radio-sent message around the world 1932. Duplicate see (P0437n01_08_007), photocopy
  • 9 Farnsworth TV Camera.
  • 10 Unidentified.
  • 11 Duplicate see (P0437n03_03_013)
  • 12 Farnsworth Fusor-approx. 1966. Duplicate (see P0437n01_18_002)
  • 13 Continuous film TV projector-1930's.
  • 14 Farnsworth Television Camera-The first mobile TV Camera-1930.
  • 15 Multipactor Crystal Control-used in New York-3/4/36.
  • 16 1934-5 Multipactor used in demo before the IRE convention, New York
  • 17 1927-1st Electronic Transmitter-produced by Farnsworth at 202 Green Street, San Francisco.
  • 18 Unidentified.
  • 19 Farnsworth receiver from 1930 journal.
  • 20 Duplicate see (P0437n01_08_017)
  • 21. Duplicate see (P0437n02_16_007)
  • 22-23. Unidentified Equipment.
  • 24. Duplicate see (P0437n01_08_023)
  • 25. Unidentified Equipment.
  • 26. Duplicate see (P0437n01_08_025)
  • 27. Unidentified Equipment.
  • 28. Duplicate see (P0437n01_08_027)
  • 29-33: Unidentified Equipment.
  • 34. Late model fusor (MK IV) out of its' pit. (P0437n03_04_017)
  • 35. Fusor (P0437n03_04_015)
  • 36-38. Unidentified Equipment.
  • 39. Unknown Ion gun.
  • 40 Multipactor.
1 9 Philo and Colleagues
  • 1 Top: Carl J, Christensen with camera, Center: Philo T. Farnsworth and wife, Pem, Robert Humphries, (from the Farnsworth journal for 1927). This crew produced the first all electronic television picture on September 7, 1927. Duplicate see (P0437n02_11_009), photocopy
  • 2 Unidentified people
  • 3 Seymour Turner and Philo Farnsworth.
  • 4 Arch Madsen and Phil Farnsworth in Cedar City, Utah, 1958.
  • 5 Unidentified group.
  • 6 Philo T. Farnsworth and Bruce Coke in Philo's study at Salt Lake City, 1970. Showing documents sent as press release to expedite. Photo by Kent.
  • 7. Front row L to R: B. Ray Cummings, Philo T. Farnsworth, E. A. Nicholas (new president), Donald K. Lippincott (patent attorney) Cliff Gardner, center back, wearing hat. Second Row: Fred Millspaugh, --- Nina, ---, Al Buttino, Phil Snell, Hans Salinger, Sara O'Connell, ---, Don McKay, Phil Herbst. Third Row: Don Pike, Joseph Spallone, Ray Bart, Cliff Gardner. Back Row: Harold Bernhardt, Joe Fernsler, ---, Alex Bielski, ---, Rudolf Wild, George Huffnagle, Joe Schantz, Mable Bernstein, Chris Larson, Sully Rosa. In background is the Farnsworth TV studio, Mermaid Lane, Wyndmoor, PA. 1938.
  • 8. Duplicate see (P0437n01_09_007)
  • 9. Duplicate see (P0437n02_09_003), photocopy
  • 10. Left to Right: E.J. McGrath (International Telephone and Telegraph), Dr. Duke (Vice President of International Telephone and Telegraph Head Quarters), Dr. Marion Chadorow (Stanford Nuclear expert), J.J. Graham ((Vice President of International Telephone and Telegraph), Philo Farnsworth, Rear Admiral F.R. Furth, and Dr. Watson (Director of Fort Wayne Industrial)
  • 11. Philo T. Farnsworth, Rear Admiral Frederick R. Furth and Dr. Maraen Chowderoux. Atomic energy expert from Stanford At Palo Alto California. about 1965 in Philo's office at Farnsworth research in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Duplicate of P0437n01_09_015.
  • 12 Les Gorrell, Philo Farnsworth, and George Emerson in Philo's Green Street Lab-1928, negative made from photocopy.
  • 13 PTF with probably George Everson. Duplicate see (P0437n02_08_001), photocopy
  • 14. Philo T. Farnsworth, R Adm Frederick R. Furth, and Dr. Maraen Chowderoux.
  • 15. Philo T. Farnsworth, Rear Admiral Frederick R. Furth and Dr. Maraen Chowderoux. Atomic energy expert from Stanford At Palo Alto California. about 1965 in Philo's office at Farnsworth research in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Duplicate see also P0437n01_09_011.
1 10 Colleagues
  • 1 Engineers and office personnel at Farnsworth TV and Radio Corporation-Fort Wayne, Ind.-1940.
  • 2 Some of Philo's old Colleagues.
  • 3 Farnsworth Television and Radio Golf Tournament-1949.
  • 4 Mr. John Logie Baird-Baird Television limited.
  • 5. Dr. E.O. Lawrence, Nobel laureate, mientre of cyclotron in 1948 at the ion source of the 184-inch cyclotron at the University of California Lawrence Rad lab, Berkeley. Program is supported by atomic energy comm. Photocopy only.
1 11 Philo demonstrating equipment
  • 1 Bart Molinari with Farnsworth Camera.Bart Molinari with Farnsworth Camera. photocopy
  • 2 Philo Farnsworth with equipment.
  • 3 caption 1: Camera crew at Philadelphia TV studio 1937. caption 2: Don McKay on Farnsworth Camera with Cameraman from scientific films for Paramount News-1936.
  • 4 caption 1: Philo T. Farnsworth, Right, Inventor of Television. caption 2: On the left: Archie Keene President of Indiana Technical College on the right: Philo T. Farnsworth making presentation of pictured equipment to the college
  • 5 Duplicate see (P0437n02_10_008)
  • 6 PTF holding a new version of his high power multipactor tubes. Philadelphia, 1933-35.
  • 7 Dr. Rolf Mueller of Fernseh A.G. Berlin with Philo T. Farnsworth showing an early experimental projection tube-1933.
  • 8 Philo T. Farnsworth Philadelphia Lab-1938.
  • 9 Scene on roof of the Franklin Institute, Philadelphia-August, 1934. Seymour (Skee) Turner and Carl smith sitting. Philo, son of Philo Farnsworth, climbing on railing. This equipment was used to photograph the moon-see news article (not included).
  • 10 Lawrence Lynden Player (brother-in-law of PTF) with control panel in the Farnsworth Broadcast Studio W3XPF, Philadelphia, 1936 or 1937. Duplicate. See (P0437n02_11_002)
  • 11 Philo Farnsworth holding improved Image Dissector Tube in his Philadelphia Lab-127 E. Mermaid Lane-1933 or 34. photocopy only.
  • 12 Philo Farnsworth by trout pond, Brownfields, Maine.
  • 13 Philo T. Farnsworth with his "Fusor"-1960.
  • 14 WATERSTAR PRODUCTIONS, PHOTO CAPTION, IMAGE DISECTOR, Philo T. Farnsworth holds up the image dissector, the tuber that allowed him to transmit images through the air electronically. The photograph was used in his case against RCA to prove that he invented television. Subject: Philo T. Farnsworth – Image Dissector. Activity: 50th Anniversary of the invention of Television. Date: Wednesday, September 7, 1977.
  • 15 : P.T. Farnsworth with his television receiver-1929 or 1930. Company name "Television Inc.".
  • 16 Lawrence Lynden Player (brother-in-law of PTF) with control panel in the Farnsworth Broadcast Studio W3XPF, Philadelphia, 1936 or 1937. Duplicate. See (P0437n02_11_002)
  • 17 First MK2 Fusor, 1965 or 1966. Duplicate see (P0437n02_10_009)
  • 18 Mobile unit crew, photocopy only.
  • 19 Duplicate see (P0437n02_10_005)
  • 20 Philo with first mobile unit. photocopy only.
  • 21 One of the first outdoor experimental telecasts. Mr. Farnsworth is adjusting controls of the portable transmitter-monitor unit at right, 1934 Philadelphia.
  • 22 P.T. Farnsworth with 1929 version of continuous film TV transmitter first attempts-San Francisco, Green Street Lab-Late 1928.
  • 23 No longer a "laboratory experiment", television is today an accomplished fact, and now on the eve of its general presentation to the public. Necessarily perfected along with Television itself are accessory arts. Such as make-up. Hollywood's world-famous make-up specialist, Max Factor, Jr.., who has been conducting television make-up laboratory tests for the past seven years, is here shown with film actress Elaine Shepard and George Everson, Secretary of the Farnsworth Television Corporation. Everson explains the workings of the intricate Farnsworth television broadcasting apparatus prior to the special make-up test which Max Factor, Jr. will make, with Elaine Sheppard as his subject.
  • 24 George Sleeper, George Emerson-San Francisco Lab early film projector (telecine) early 1930s.
  • 25 Don Pyke at the Farnsworth camera he later took charge of RCA's mobile unit for covering sports, rocket launches, etc. Duplicate see (P0437n02_13_006)
  • 26 Carl J. Christensen with early camera.
  • 27 John Stagnaro in Oklahoma with his TV demo.-1948.
  • 28 The Farnsworth television show was taken on a country- wide tour in 1938. Very well received.
  • 29 First Farnsworth television receiver for assembly lines-1947.
  • 30 Philo with equipment. photocopy
  • 31 E.A. Nicholas shows George Everson a 1948 Farnsworth TV set (caption from "The Boy who Invented Television" by Paul Schatzkin, p. 203)
  • 32 Duplicate see (P0437n01_17_027, bottom right )
1 12 Fusion
  • 1-13 Fusion
1 13 International Telephone and Telegraph- MARK III
  • 1. Duplicate see (P0437n03_04_005)
  • 2. Mark III-ready to operate.
  • 3. Mark III-ready to operate.
  • 4. Mark III-Anode hemispheres with all welding completed.
  • 5. Duplicate see (P0437n01_13_004)
  • 6. First design Mark III Cathode.
  • 7-8. Biased Gem parts.
  • 9. Biased Gem parts inside view, July 1, 1965.
  • 10-11. Biased Gem parts, July 1, 1965.
1 14 International Telephone and Telegraph-Ion Transport Pump
  • 1-2 Ion Transport Pump.
  • 3 Model I Transport Ion Pump.
1 15 International Telephone and Telegraph-Pendulator
  • 1-2 Early version of Pendulator.
1 16 International Telephone and Telegraph-MARK II Prime
  • 1.Mark II, March 15, 1965.
  • 2. Duplicate see (P0437n01_16_001)
1 17 International Telephone and Telegraph-MARK I
  • 1. Mark I interior.
  • 2. Tube operating 1 discharge-January 24, 1961
  • 3. Tube operating room lights on flash light on January 24,1961.
  • 4. Tubes operating 1 large flash, January 24, 1961.
  • 5. Tube operating 15 discharges, January 24, 1961.
  • 6. Tube operating, January 24, 1961.
  • 7. Tube not operating, January 24, 1961 10:00am.
  • 8. Tube operating 15 flashes, January 24, 1961.
  • 9. Tube operating 1 small discharge, January 24, 1961.
  • 10. Mark I.
  • 11. Room light only-tube not operating, January 24, 1961 10:00am.
  • 12. Tube operating, January 24, 1961
  • 13. Duplicate see (P0437n03_03_017)
  • 14. Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_035)
  • 15. Duplicate see (P0437n01_17_010)
  • 16. Mark I.
  • 17. Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_038)
  • 18. Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_046)
  • 19. Constructional Data.
  • 20. Mark I interior through part. Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_030)
  • 21. Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_029)
  • 22. "Tiny inner element for fusor later taken in space on space shuttle by E.T. Garn."
  • 23-25. Group with Mark I government lab. With Philo Farnsworth and his "Fusor" are: Left to Right: Gene Meeks (Junior engineer), George Bain (chief engineer), Rear Admiral Frederick R. Furth (Vice President of International Telephone and Telegraph)
  • 26a-d: Mark I with Personnel, approximately June, 1961. contact sheet
  • 27a-d: Mark I and Personnel. With Philo Farnsworth and his "Fusor" are: Left to Right: Gene Meeks (Junior engineer), George Bain (chief engineer), Rear Admiral Frederick R. Furth (Vice President of International Telephone and Telegraph) approximately June, 1961. contact sheet
1 18 International Telephone and Telegraph-MARK II
  • 1 Composite picture of Mark II.
  • 2 Mark II Phantom assembly showing inside details. Early fusor shown without bell jar (required for operation).
  • 3 Phantom assembly of Mark II showing anode and cathode position.
  • 4 Duplicate see (P0437n01_18_003)
  • 5 Complete assembly Mark II.
  • 6 Partly assembled Mark II.
1 19 Studio interiors
  • 1 Nat Ragone and Orchestra in Farnsworth studio in Wyndmoor – about 1936.
  • 2 Unidentified studio.
  • 3 The Farnsworth television broadcast studio in action. In lower left corner: Bonnie Crousier, Rom Rutherford and George Huffnagle. On stage: Little Miss Television, Smiles Blum, and baby Doloras. Camera men: Center, Carl Smith; near piano, Fred Millspan; William Crawford Eddy; and Nat Ragone Orchestra with vocalist, Kay.
  • 4 "Dear John, I have enjoyed your visit in Dallas so much. There were many pleasant moments, so pleasant that time will never cease them. I will think of you always as a very dear friend. Your ambitions will always be my wishes. Good luck. Bettye". Dallas, Texas. October 15, 1940, photo by William Langley
  • 5 Mrs. Laura Player, Miss Bonnie Krauser, and Mr. R.E. Rutherford, photocopy
1 20 Outside studios and laboratories
  • 1 Electronic tube lab, Wyndmoor. First "Isolettes" were made here.
  • 2 The Farnsworth television broadcasting studio-1936- Philadelphia.
  • 3 Farnsworth television and radio plant in Fort Wayne, Ind, 1948, photo copy only.
  • 4 Farnsworth television broadcast studio-Wyndmoor, Pa.-1936.
  • 5 Wyndmoor (near Philadelphia) 1936, Farnsworth televison broadcast tower + shack. Later a much taller tower was built.
  • 6 Duplicate see (P0437n03_08_001)
1 21 Laboratory work
  • 1 Cliff Gardner and Phillip Snell in tube lab- Farnsworth Television Inc. about 1934.
  • 2-4 Farnsworth Television Lab.
  • 5 Farnsworth adjusting rack equipment. Duplicate (see P0437n02_10_004)
  • 6 Early TV receiver tube, used in lab by inventor Philo Farnsworth, 1933.
  • 7 Unidentified person working on a machine.
  • 8 Farnsworth engineer testing 1 tube radio set with Philo's cold cathode tube-1936.
  • 9 Farnsworth TV Console/Monitor-1949.
  • 10 With Philo Farnsworth and his "Fusor" are: Left to Right: Gene Meeks (Junior engineer), George Bain (chief engineer), Rear Admiral Frederick R. Furth( Vice President of International Telephone and Telegraph). Duplicate (see P0427n01_17_027, bottom right)
1 22 Television demonstrations
  • 1 John Stagnaro in Oklahoma with his TV demo. -1948, photocopy
  • 2 Farnsworth Television Radio show-Flint Michigan-1939.
1 23 Projected images
  • 1. Televised poster on 14" tube in 1939.
  • 2. Photograph of the televised picture 1931. A Duplicate of the one Phil wrote on to mark and initialed giving this date it was broadcast.
  • 3. Pictures of received picture on Farnsworth TV receiver-1930.
  • 4. Projected Image, November 23, 1943
  • 5. Projected Image
  • 6-9. Projected Images, December 13, 1943
  • 10. Projected Image, November 21, 1943
  • 11. Projected Image, November 21, 1943. Duplicate see (P0437n01_23_004).
  • 12. Projected Images, December 13, 1943. Duplicate see (P0437n01_23_008).
  • 13. Projected Images, December 13, 1943. Duplicate see (P0437n01_23_009).
  • 14. Projected Image
  • 15. Projected Image, November 21, 1943
  • 16. 1936 TV reception, photocopy
  • 17. Duplicate see (P0437n01_23_003), photocopy
  • 18. Duplicate (mirrored) see (P0437n02_14_010)
  • 19. Farnsworth television reception-1930 in San Francisco California. Duplicate see (P0437n02_14_001)
  • 20. Smiles Blum, "Little Miss Television" 1936. Picture from monitor at Farnsworth television studio on Mermaid Lane, Wyndmoor, Pennsylvania.
  • 21. Joan Crawford photographed on Farnsworth Television-1934. Duplicate see (P0437n02_14_006)
  • 22. Television photograph. Photograph of reproduction of projected "still" picture, using Farnsworth Image Dissector pickup. Reproduced on 12" tube, January 20, 1939.
  • 23. Philo T. Farnsworth, see negative P0437n01_32_001
  • 24. Philo T Farnsworth between June 1927 and October 1928 at Crocker lab 202 Green Street.
  • 25. Unidentified child.
  • 26. Equipment, negative only
1 24 Philo T. Farnsworth, speaking engagements
  • 1 Philo T. Farnsworth lecturing to the Society of Electrical Engineers-San Francisco Chapter – at time of the dedication of the opening of the coaxial television cable lecture in San Francisco and Los Angeles, 1950.
  • 2 Philo T. Farnsworth speaking to former High School Classmates at Rigby Reunion.
  • 3-4 Philo T. Farnsworth addressing San Francisco IEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) at time of opening TV line lecture in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Facing him in the center is George Everson, original backer and biographer.
1 25 Philo T. Farnsworth, awards
  • 1 Philo T. Farnsworth "Emmy".
  • 2 Philo T. Farnsworth receiving Morris Liebman Memorial Prize from Frederick E. Terman, President of institute of Radio Engineers. Duplicate see (P0437n02_06_010), photocopy
1 26 Hugo Gernsback
  • 1. Hugo GernsbackTrophy.
  • 2. Hugo Gernsback, (left), accepting the Hugo Gernsback Testimonial Trophy from S. L. Beraf, (right), President of Radio Parts and Electronic Equipment Shows, Inc., at the Radio Industry Banquet in Chicago, on May 18.
  • 3. Hugo Gernsback Trophy.
1 27 Green Street
  • 1 Green Street, Philo T. Farnsworth Epitaph.
1 28 Philo T. Farnsworth statue
  • 1 Statue of Philo T. Farnsworth.
  • 2 Unidentified group.
1 29 50th anniversary of the invention of the television
"In September of 1977, the author of "The Farnsworth Chronicles" joined forces with the Farnsworth family and former "lab gang" members to observe the 50th anniversary of the first electronic video transmission, which took place in Farnsworth's Green Street laboratory in San Francisco on Sept 7, 1977. 50 years later, many of the people present at the original event assembled at the Foothill Museum near Palo Alto, CA to recreate the achievement. To make the recreation authentic, Cliff Gardner built - from scratch and by hand - an authentic replica of the first successful Image Dissector tube." Description above taken from CBS Evening News, September 7, 1977
  • 1-2. 50th Anniversary
  • 3. 50th Anniversary Duplicate (P0437n01_29_009).
  • 4. 50th Anniversary Duplicate (P0437n01_29_008).
  • 5-11. 50th Anniversary.
September 1977
1 30 Philo T. Farnsworth Dam
  • 1-6. Philo T. Farnsworth Dam, 1939.
1 31 Philo T. Farnsworth, general images
  • 1-2. Farnsworth Television Float.
  • 3. Unidentified person working on machine.
  • 4. Fort Wayne Television Show
  • 5-6. Unidentified person working on machine.
  • 7. Unidentified equipment.
  • 8. Unidentified person watching TV.
  • 9. Philo T. Farnsworth achievements.
  • 10. Unidentified farm
  • 11. Unidentified person working on machine.
1 32 Philo T. Farnsworth
  • 1: Philo T. Farnsworth, see P0437n01_23_023.
  • 2: Philo T. Farnsworth at his desk in lab at 127 E. Mermaid Lane, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 1934. Copy negative, similar to item P0437n01_01_001.
  • 3: 50th Reunion, poor exposure.
  • 4: 50th Reunion, see print P0437n01_29_006.
  • 5-:50th Reunion, Pem and unknown man at podium.
  • 6-7: 50th Reunion, People being interviewed by a television crew.
  • 8: 50th Reunion, see print P0437n01_29_007.
  • 9: 50th Reunion, poor exposure (door).
  • 10: 50th Reunion, similar to P0437n01_29_004.
  • 11: 50th Reunion, see print P0437n01_29_004.
  • 12: 50th Reunion, see print P0437n01_29_003.
  • 13: 50th Reunion, Pem and two men outside the ceremony.
  • 14: 50th Reunion, car in the parking lot.
  • 15: 50th Reunion, young boy at ceremony.
  • 16: 50th Reunion, similar to P0437n01_29_010.
  • 17: 50th Reunion, see print P0437n01_29_010.
  • 18: 50th Reunion, similar to P0437n01_29_010.
  • 19: 50th Reunion, see print P0437n01_29_011.
  • 20: 50th Reunion, two young boys at the ceremony.
  • 21--23: 50th Reunion, similar to P0437n01_29_003.
  • 24: 50th Reunion, similar to P0437n01_32_005.
  • 25: 50th Reunion, audience members.
  • 26: 50th Reunion, man at podium.
  • 27-29: young boys at the dock.
1 33 Philo T. Farnsworth
  • 1: Negative only, graph showing raster levels.
  • 2: Copy work, negative only of a piece of equipment.
  • 3: Negative for P0437n01_23_016 (top).
  • 4: Negative for P0437n01_08_027.
  • 5: Negative only, equipment table with a stamp from the US patent office, January 26, 1939
  • 6. Negative only, graph showing raster levels.
  • 7. Negative only, extended electron image in dissector, image projected is P0437n01_23_014.
  • 8. Negative only, diagram with bulbs and other equipment.
  • 9. Negative only, projected image on an unknown woman.
  • 10. Negative only, graph showing step function through low pass filter
1 34 Philo T. Farnsworth
  • 1-2: Negative for P0437n01_08_022.
  • 3: Negative only, graph comparing Bell Telephone transmitter (1927) and Capehart Farnsworth Preamplifier (1951) cycles per second.
  • 4: Negative only, side view of the path of electrons in a magnetic field.
  • 5: Copy work, negative only of a television show recording .
  • 6: Negative only, diagram of "the 'photo island' structure used in the Farnsworth tube." Duplicate P0437n01_36_010.
  • 7: Negative only, diagram of Television transmitter systems.
  • 8: Negative only, diagram of Block diagram-master timing generator.
  • 9: Negative only, possibly fusor related
  • 10: Negative only, diagram of equipment by Ted Goodwin, February 1951.
1 35 Philo T. Farnsworth
  • 1: Negative only, projected image of an unknown woman.
  • 2: Negative of image P0437n01_08_025
  • 3: Negative only, diagram
  • 4: Negative only, diagram
  • 5: Copy work, negative only, two people on bicycles.
  • 6: Negative only, diagram
  • 7: Negative only, diagram
  • 8: Negative only, diagram
  • 9: Negative only, diagram
  • 10: Negative only, Figure showing scanning of an image
1 36 Philo T. Farnsworth
  • 1: Negative of image P0437n01_08_023
  • 2. Negative only, graph showing raster level, similar to P0437n01_33_001.
  • 3: Negative only, diagram of the Farnsworth storage-type image dissector tube, which displays no shading signal and has ten times the sensitivity of the ordinary iconscope. Duplicate (P0437n01_36_008).
  • 4: Negative only, diagram of the end view of electrons in a magnetic field.
  • 5: Negative for P0437n01_08_022.
  • 6: Negative only, projected image, perhaps of an animal.
  • 7: Negative only, diagram that is also included in P0437n01_33_002
  • 8: Negative only, diagram of the Farnsworth storage-type image dissector tube, which displays no shading signal and has ten times the sensitivity of the ordinary iconscope. Duplicate (P0437n01_36_003).
  • 9: Negative only, graph of sawtooth synthesis
  • 10: Negative only, diagram of "the 'photo island' structure used in the Farnsworth tube." Duplicate P0437n01_34_006.
2 1 Philo T. Farnsworth
  • 1 PTF at age 13.
  • 2 PTF and LaVieda Coacher (early girlfriend), school year 1919-1920. Duplicate (see P0437n01_05_006).
  • 3 "PTF, winter 1925. The world looked pretty dark. Had lost his father and could get no one to listen to his T.V. ideas. Couldn't even find a job. Finally took a street cleaning job until he could find something better."
  • 4 PTF working at his desk.
  • 5 PTF holding a new version of his high power multipactor tubes. Philadelphia, 1933-35. Duplicate see (P0437n01_11_006)
  • 6 PTF at his desk, 1935. Duplicate see (P0437n01_01_013)
  • 7 PTF at his desk, 1935. Duplicate see (P0437n01_01_013)
  • 8 PTF at his desk, 1935. Duplicate see (P0437n01_01_027)
  • 9 Illustration of PTF, 1950.
  • 10 PTF with a camera. Duplicate see (P0437n01_01_026)
  • 11 PTF in a clerk's hat.
  • 12 PTF. Duplicate see (P0437n01_01_015)
  • 13 Phil in mid gesture, 1970.
  • 14 Philo T. Farnsworth 1970 In his study in Holladay, UT, taken by Son Kent. Behind him his state of the art computer.
2 2 Philo and Pem Farnsworth
  • 1 "Pem." Photo taken by Tom Carskadon in New Hope, New Jersey. 1936-37.
  • 2 Pem and Phil, New Year's party 1935.
  • 3 Pem and Phil at Laura's house in San Mateo, CA in early 1948.
  • 4 Pem arranging flowers.
  • 5 Pem and Phil on a chartered fishing boat off Sanbill Island, Florida. 1968.
  • 6 Pem and Phil going over papers in the breakfast room of their Holladay home. 1969. Duplicate see P0437n01_02_003.
  • 7 Pem and Philo with some bad news, 1970.
2 3 Farnsworth family
  • 1 Philo and Phil with Philo's puppy. Cresheim Valley Road, PA.
  • 2 Philo at age 9 at the dam site in Fort Wayne. 1939.
  • 3 Image of Kenny taken from 1932 movie film – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
  • 4 Phil making a wooden whistle for his six year old son Philo.
  • 5 Philo Taylor Farnsworth holding son Russell S. October 1935, Philadelphia. Duplicate see (P0437n01_04_008)
  • 6 At Farnsworth farm, Brownfield, Maine, Left to Right: Philo T. Farnsworth III (Son of Elma Gardner 7. And Philo T. Farnsworth II.), Bernard Edward Gardner ( father of Elma), Philo T. Farnsworth II (Husband of Elma), Russell S. Farnsworth (son of Elma and Philo II).
  • 7 B.E. Gardner and his second wife's grandson.
  • 8 B. E. Gardner. Baxter Park, Maine on Farnsworth – Gardner camping trip. Cliff J. Carl, Lincoln and Phil T. and family.
  • 9 Cliff, about 1927-28.
  • 10 Kent M. Farnsworth (10 months) on terrace steps of 734 East State Street home.
  • 11 Kent and Linda Farnsworth. Kent is the grandson of Alice Mecham through Elma Gardner Farnsworth. February 1978.
2 4 Fishing
  • 1 "Philo T. Farnsworth – on vacation trip in Northern Maine washing the windshield, 1938. George Everson arranged to visit the property in Maine – Needed to get vacations spot."
  • 2 1953 Green River fishing trip, PTF and "Tex" Pervis.
  • 3 1953 Green River raft Trip, Pem with her catch.
  • 4 PTF fishing in Maine.
  • 5 PTF rowing boat and fishing on Lake Wallenpaupack, PA.
  • 6 Cliff Gardner fishing in PA, 1935-1940.
2 5 Farnsworth homes
  • 1. Farnsworth home in Brownfield, Maine. Rebuilt 200 year old farm house on the left and new wing on the right showing Phil's study above and the heated swimming pool beneath – the center in the living room built around the hand hewn hardwood beams that was once the shed. In foreground is Phil on left with a neighbor, on the right is Phil's brother Carl preparing to launch a clay bird for Phil to shoot down. The child in the back is Phil's son Russell (Skee)
  • 2. The Farnsworth home in Brownfield, Maine. Duplicate of P0437n01_06_008.
  • 3. The Farnsworth home in Brownfield, Maine ,1945.
  • 4. "This was our Maine home after the 1947 forest fire. Phil reconstructed the original 1700 fireplace with an oven for baking "new England brown beans and storage below for rocks heated in the fireplace. Original fireplace was 1/3 larger."
2 6 Speeches, Interviews, and Awards
  • 1 PTF speaking to electrical engineers in San Francisco while there for the official opening of the television cable link with Los Angeles.
  • 2 PTF being welcomed back to Fort Wayne, 1948. At his right is the President of the Lincoln Bank and Milton Cross, producer of the "Metropolitan Auditions of the Air." Program sponsored by F.T.R.
  • 3 Phil getting acclaim for presenting tubes to Rigby High School.
  • 4 Phil presenting tubes to the Rigby High School Library (Pem in near). Holding an early dissector. Duplicate (see P0437n01_04_003).
  • 5 PTF on the Gary Moore Show.
  • 6-7 PTF being interviewed in San Francisco, 1950.
  • 8-9 PTF being interviewed in San Francisco at the Electrical Engineers banquet in his honor, 1950.
  • 10 President of IRE, Fred Terman, presenting the Morris Leibman Memorial Prize to Phil, age 25-26.
  • 11 Phil being congratulated by Archie Keene, President of Indiana Technical College, after receiving D.Sc. Degree.
  • 12 Archie Keene presenting PTF with an honorary Doctor of Science degree (1950s).
2 7 Rigby High School
  • 1. Rigby Idaho Jr. High School where PTF attended school between 1919 and 1922. During these years PTF was conceiving ideas for electronic television and also studying relativity.
  • 2. Rigby reunion. Front Row: Clyde Ormond, Col. Vernal Sorenson, Pem, Phil, Dr. Aldon Tall and his wife Deoine (?), Idaho 1953.Photo by Clyde Ormond, Rigby, Idaho.
2 8 Philo T. Farnsworth with Colleagues
  • 1 PTF explaining his latest invention to George Everson after talking to the Electric and Electronic Engineers. 1950
  • 2 PTF cornered by Engineers and reporter after talking to San Francisco Electrical Engineers.
  • 3 I. C. Hunter on left, Philo T. Farnsworth on right at presentation of broadcast equipment to Indiana technical college. Names of "tech" men not known, circa 1954.
  • 4 Men gathered around table.
  • 5 Fritz, Phil and others, circa 1964.
  • 6 PTF and ITT V.P. Mr. Grayham with fusor MK I.
  • 7 PTF, inventor of television, explains intricacies of KUTA radio station control panel to Miss Frances E. Critchlow, who taught him in public schools of Rigby, Idaho, and encouraged him in scientific activity. Native of Beaver, Mr. Farnsworth began experiments when 19. Salt Lake City Tribune April 26, 1948
2 9 Laboratory Personnel
  • 1 Mabel Bernstein, PTF's secretary, and Al Butino, Cliff's assistant, at lunch time. 127 East Mermaid Lane, 1936.
  • 2 Farnsworth lab "gang" and wives Christmas party, circa 1938.
  • 3 Caption 1: Farnsworth lab group just before leaving for the new and larger facility in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Front Row: B. Ray Cummings, Chief Engineer; PTF, V.P. in charge of Research; Edwin A. Nicholas, new President of Farnsworth Television and Radio Corporation. 1938. Caption 2: The lab "Gang" at the side of the broadcast studio building in the Wyndmoor, Pennsylvania. 1938 built in 1936.
  • 4 Farnsworth lab personnel, 1948, Duplicate of P0437n02_09_005
  • 5 Farnsworth lab personnel, 1948. Duplicate see P0437n02_09_004.
  • 6 Farnsworth company party.
  • 7 Farnsworth company party, 1948.
  • 8 Farnsworth lab personnel, 1948. PTF at far right.
  • 9 "Hail, sleet or snow means very little to these rugged outdoor individualists. It is reported that this court has been used every day since the court has been placed in use, and none of the ten men have had a cold this winter. The eye catching pose at the extreme left is John Stagnaro who claims "his legs must breathe fresh air too". Left to right: John Stagnaro, Al Butino, (stooping) John Buckbee and Bobo Reill. In the Background are Bob Sanders, Henry Lipke, and Don McKay."
  • 10 Farnsworth personnel playing volleyball.
  • 11 Farnsworth personnel in front of Pontiac Street lab in Ft. Wayne.
2 10 Philo T. Farnsworth demonstrating and working with equipment
  • 1 Farnsworth with early television camera. Duplicate see (P0437n01_11_022)
  • 2 PTF and his Secretary Mabel Bernstein with T.V. camera in front of 127 East Mermaid Lane lab in Philadelphia, 1934. This camera was used in the Franklin Institute demo and later taken to Baird Television in London.
  • 3 PTF and Mabel with T.V. monitor used in Franklin Institute demo 1st showing to general public 1934 later that year taken to Baird Television Company in London.
  • 4 PTF adjusting rack equipment.
  • 5 PTF waiting to tune in a picture from the Farnsworth broadcast tower.
  • 6 PTF and Carl Wendy Farnsworth in the basement of 734 East State Street. Duplicate see also P0437n01_04_019.
  • 7 Inventor PTF at the Franklin demonstration. Steaphen and Shiddo (tennis champions) standing in front of the first mobile T.V. camera, September 1934.
  • 8 PTF with an early fusor, 1962
  • 9 PTF with an MK2 Fusor, 1965 or 1966. Duplicate see (P0437n01_11_017)
2 11 Others demonstrating and working with equipment
  • 1 Carl J. Christensen with early camera. Duplicate see (P0437n01_11_026)
  • 2 Lawrence Lynden Player (brother-in-law of PTF) with control panel in the Farnsworth Broadcast Studio W3XPF, Philadelphia, 1936 or 1937. see duplicates in P0437n01_11_010, 16)
  • 3 BYU Lab worker making elements for a Farnsworth Image Dissector (camera tube) using a spot welder, made for Arch Madsen, President of Bonneville International, 1987.
  • 4 Man Posing with MK I fusor.
  • 5 George Bain next to MK I fusor.
  • 6 Rear Admiral Frederick R. Furth ITT V.P. with MK I fusor. Duplicate (see P0437n01_17_026 bottom right image).
  • 7_1 RLH. George Bain with mark III fusion tube above pit to operate, September 1964
  • 7_2 Joseph Spallone making a measurement in Farnsworth lab, Fort Wayne, 1947.
  • 8 Employees of Farnsworth working on a government project, 1950's.
  • 9 Caption 1: Top: Carl J. Christensen with camera. Center: PTF. Below: Cliff Gardner with receiver and Robert Humphrey. (from the Farnsworth journal for 1927). This crew produced the first all electronic television picture on 09/07/27. Caption 2: collage put together by Philo III and Pem
  • 10 Unidentified man working on rear of TV.
  • 11 Soundproof studio. Probably not electric T.V.
  • 12 Ray Bart working at the Litton Glass Lathe producing a T.V. tube, 1938.
  • 13 Unidentified man examining TV apparatus.
  • 14 Woman displaying T.V.
  • 15 George Everson showing the Farnsworth camera to visitors, photocopy only
  • 16 Cliff Gardner (brother of Pem) showing an image amplifier tube (later called an iatron tube).
  • 17 Cliff Gardner – Mrs. Farnsworth brother - holding image amplifier camera tube (Major patent issue of Farnsworth / RCA 1940 Interference).
  • 18 Technician with scanning apparatus.
  • 19 Farnsworth Dealers Convention, 1948. First showing of the Farnsworth T.V. Receiver.
  • 20 Don McKay, Program Announcer. Chestnut Hill, Wyndmoor, PA, 1938.
2 12 Unidentified people
  • 1 Two men standing near water.
  • 2 "Bill Eddy" Head of Mobile Unit.
  • 3 Bill Eddy in military uniform standing in front of Farnsworth Studio.
  • 4 Phil, Hans Salinger, Frederick R. Furth and others
2 13 Filming
  • 1 Man face down checking equipment.
  • 2 Filming of Smiles Blum and Baby Doloras in Wyndmoor, PA. August, 1936. People on set: Smiles Blume, Baby Dolores, Nat Ragone, Neck Ross, Don Harry, kay Allen, (?) Eddy, Mr. Millspaugh, Mr. Smith, Mr. Hoffnagle, Mr. R.E. Rutherford, Bonnie Krauser, Duplicate see also P0437n01_19_003.
  • 3 George Everson and Winifred, daughter of Jesse B. McCargar, with Farnsworth T.V. camera, ca 1935.
  • 4 Don Pike as cameraman with Farnsworth camera. Duplicate see (P0437n02_13_006)
  • 5 R.B. Gamble, Manager of the Farnsworth Mobile Unit, explaining to a young lady the operation of the Farnsworth Dissector Camera. The Dissector Camera is the least of the television (?) systems and converts an optical image into an electrical image. This camera is valued at $12,500 and will be in operation as Edwards (?). November, 12-13. Photo by Neuman studio, Fort Wayne, Indiana
  • 6 Don Pike posing with a camera.
  • 7 John Stagnaro with a camera.
  • 8 Wayne stage paraphernalia.
  • 9-10 Some clowning at television shows. Edwards department store Springfield Massachusetts, John Stagnaro.
  • 11 Filming of a baseball game, Franklin institute 1934.
2 14 Transmitted images
  • 1. Received TV image of a young baby, 1934
  • 2. Images of Pem received on Farnsworth television used in the California Engineers article, 1930. Caption cut off.
  • 3. Television picture Farnsworth System October 1929.
  • 4. Farnsworth Television picture.
  • 5. Image of Pem used in the California Engineer Journal article, 1930.
  • 6. Received image of Joan Crawford, 1934.
  • 7. TV image of an unidentified woman.
  • 8. W.C. Fields, 1934. On Farnsworth Television, Philadelphia.
  • 9. TV image of Pem Farnsworth, 1935.
  • 10. TV image of Young Philo III.
  • 11. TV image of City skyline.
  • 12. Projected image. Duplicate ( see P0437n01_23_008). Cataloger Note: this image is dated November 21, 1943 while P0437n01_23_008 is dated December 13, 1943.
  • 13. Battle ships (navy destroyers), 12/13/43
2 15 Early television and cameras
  • 1 Rear view of 1934 Farnsworth television.
  • 2 TV console.
  • 3 Two early televisions.
  • 4 Two early television parts.
  • 5 The Farnsworth T.V. set used in the studio in Wyndmoor in the visitor's room, 1936.
  • 6 Farnsworth T.V. projector type.
  • 7 Farnsworth T.V. set.
  • 8 Table model Farnsworth T.V.
  • 9 Continuous film camera.
  • 10 Old TV camera on a geared tripod.
  • 11 Camera interior.
2 16 Fusor lab and vacuum set up
  • 1 MK II fusor.
  • 2 View of fusion lab.
  • 3 Barrels in fusion lab.
  • 4 December 1960 fusor. Vacuum system detail under test platform.
  • 5 Fusor. Farnsworth Fusor set-up. Shows detail of vacuum set-up and certain traps used in vacuum system. August 16 1960, Duplicate see (P0437n01_17_010)
  • 6 Fusor laboratory. View showing support equipment such as counters and small power supplies.
  • 7 Fusor laboratory, circa early 1960's. MKII fusor.
  • 8 Fusor Laboratory shot. Early model fusor in bell jar and the barrel in front of the table is a capacitor, December 1960.
  • 9-10 Facsimile receiver used in RCA's New York-Philadelphia ultra-short wave circuit.
3 1 Rack and Transmitter Panels
  • 1 High voltage cage behind racks, FTI.
  • 2 Drilled, blank rack with no mounted components.
  • 3 Drilled, but empty rack assemblies. Duplicate of P0437n03_01_002)
  • 4 RCA ultra-short wave receiver.
  • 5-6 Transmitter rack from rear, showing components.
  • 7 Fully assembled transmitter rack rear view.
  • 8 Transmitter and control equipment in four racks.
  • 9 Transmitter panel.
  • 10 Long row of rack equipment.
3 2 Fusor and other equipment
  • 1: Negative of P0437n01_08_003.
  • 2-3: Negative only, Farnsworth's tv camera tube, the "image dissector"
  • 4-5: Negatives only, unknown equipment
  • 6-8: Negatives only, Farnsworth's tv camera tube, the "image dissector"
  • 9: Multipactor oscillator, negative of P0437n01_08_004.
  • 10-11: Negatives only, Element of Fusor
  • 12-15: Negatives only, unknown equipment
  • 16-17: Negatives only, unknown equipment
  • 18: Negative of P0437n01_08_005.
  • 19: Negative only, unknown equipment
  • 20: Negative only, unknown equipment
  • 21: Negative only, unknown equipment
  • 22: Negative only, unknown equipment
  • 23: Negative only, unknown equipment
  • 24 The glow of the interior of the MK I fusor, Circa 1961.
  • 25 Ionized gas being "pulled" from fusor by force of the permanent magnet, Circa 1961.
  • 26 The glow of the interior of the MK I fusor, Circa 1961, slide. Duplicate (P0437n03_02_024).
  • 27 Ionized gas being "pulled" from fusor by force of the permanent magnet, Circa 1961. slide. Duplicate (P0437n03_02_025).
  • 28 Tube operating large flash, January 24, 1961, Duplicate see (P0437n01_17_004)
  • 29 Tube operating polaroid filter room lights on flash light on 1 small discharge, January 24, 1961.
  • 30 Tube operating 1 high mode discharge 15 low mode discharge, January 24, 1961.
  • 31 Tube operating, January 24, 1961 10:00 am.
  • 32 Fusor, Duplicate see (P0437n01_17_004)
  • 33 Fusor, Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_030)
  • 34 Fusor, Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_029)
  • 35 Fusor in protective cage.
  • 36 Unidentified equipment.
  • 37 Unidentified tube.
  • 38 Section of later model fusor.
  • 39 MK I MOD 1 fusor.
  • 40 Early fusor. Tube attacthed to "sniff" fusable particles. MK I.
  • 41 MK I in bell jar.
  • 42 Mk I fusor in operational setup showing viewing devices. Early fusor. Holes and mirrors are to view reaction, August 16 1960. Duplicate see (P0437n03_03_025)
  • 43 The so-called MARK-III-Ex1 was a MARK-III type device utilized for engineering studies.
  • 44 Looking through window into fusor interior. Later model.
  • 45 Inner cathode of fusor.
  • 46 "Early MK I fusor device clamped to pipe, on right is miniature, but powered counter."
  • 47 Deflecting coil mount for 1928 image director tube.
  • 48 Ion guns after a lot of use.
  • 49 Inner anode of fusor.
  • 50 Vacuum coupling fusion setup.
  • 51 Fusor, early anode design.
  • 52 Duplicate see (P0437n03_03_017)
  • 53 Duplicate see (P0437n01_18_006)
  • 54 Top view of MK I fusor.
  • 55 Fusor cathode.
3 3 Fusor and other equipment
  • 1-3a Distributed ion source tubes, 3/29/66, 2/2/67, 7/10/67
  • 3-2: Unidentified pieces of equipment
  • 4 Hollow electron (?)-m in fusor
  • 5-7 Unidentified pieces of equipment
  • 8: Chalkboard diagram of equipment design
  • 9 Elements (glass) from tube 26E
  • 10-12 Unidentified pieces of equipment
  • 13 Lab flask inside of Farnsworth television receiver, 1937.
  • 14 Dissector image tube.
  • 15 Multipactor.
  • 16 Fusor, Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_038)
  • 17 Anode "ring." Another rest geometry for fusor.
  • 18 Electronic multiplier.
  • 19 Later model fusor. This period saw dramatic reactions.
  • 20 Fusor in bell jar, August 16 1960. Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_041)
  • 21-24 Fusor [missing]
  • 25 Mk I fusor in operational setup showing viewing devices. Early fusor. Holes and mirrors are to view reaction, August 16 1960.
  • 26 The Farnsworth Fusor in the "well". Fusor "pit" used to shield higher density reaction by-products (fast neutrons).
  • 27 Small fusor in lab. August 16 1960. Cage is to protect potential implosion. Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_035)
  • 28 Early fusor shown without bell jar (required for operation). Duplicate (see P0437n01_18_002)
  • 29 "Wavy" geometry. Tested shape for anode that was not adopted in any later models.
  • 30 First model of Farnsworth fusor, August 16 1960. Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_041)
3 4 Fusor and other equipment
  • 1 Photo of fusor through bell jar to show anode, Duplicate see (P0437n01_17_016)
  • 2 Special effects shot of fusor (MK II) depicts interior and exterior of fusor. Duplicate see (P0437n01_18_001)
  • 3 Duplicate see (P0437n01_17_016)
  • 4 Mk I fusor in operational setup showing viewing devices. Early fusor. Holes and mirrors are to view reaction, August 16 1960. Duplicate see (P0437n03_03_025).
  • 5 caption 1: The MARK-III system was similar to the MARK-II with two important exceptions: the anode shell was utilized as the vacuum chamber and the arrangement was far more flexible. This apparatus was utilized principally for engineering studies. 1964-1967. caption 2: Mark III assembly installed on vacuum system. caption 3: Late model fusor all built up with guns. Post PTF?
  • 6 Photomultiplier, 6PQA.
  • 7 Deflection coil assembly.
  • 8 IP25.
  • 9 Antenna assembly with mast.
  • 10 Photomultiplier, IOPSC.
  • 11 Two multipactors
  • 12 Deflection coil and subassy.
  • 13 Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_037)
  • 14 "Ghosted" view of fusor. Duplicate (P0437n01_18_003).
  • 15 Fusor Duplicate (P0437n01_08_035).
  • 16 Clockwise: iotron, Occillite, Oscillight, and image dissector. Circa 1928-34.
  • 17 Late model fusor (MK IV) out of its' pit.
  • 18 Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_030)
  • 19 Duplicate see (P0437n03_02_029)
  • 20 Duplicate see (P0437n01_17_004)
3 5 Dynode and Anode Assembly
  • 1 Anode assembly, Later model.
  • 2 Inner anode assembly on aluminum foil.
  • 3 Inner anode assembly fusor. Duplicate ( see P0437n01_13_006).
  • 4 Axially lit photo of early configuration of dynodes and inner anode of fusor chamber. Duplicate see (P0437n03_05_005)
  • 5 Axially lit photo of early configuration of dynodes and inner anode of fusor chamber.
  • 6 Early inner anode assembly.
  • 7 Inside of early fusor: post MK I.
  • 8 "Tiny inner element for fusor later taken in space on space shuttle by E.T. Garn." (Duplicate. see P0437n01_17_022)
  • 9 Fusor interior, 1960.
  • 10 Fusor interior, December 1960.
  • 11 Fusor interior, December 1960. Duplicate see (P0437n03_05_009)
  • 12 Equipment Dynode assembly.
3 6 Television Chassis and equipment
  • 1 Artist's conception of T.V. chassis.
  • 2 Wiring on the underside of a T.V. chassis.
  • 3 Illustration of T.V. chassis without a cover.
  • 4 One tube radio transmitter used in the 'round-the-world' broadcast using the electronic multipactor. 1932-33
  • 5-6 Multipactor, Ralph Heintz and Kaufman Ltd.
  • 6 Transmitter assembly, Heintz and Kaufman setup.
3 7 Graphs
  • 1. The Mark-IV device was constructed but never fully developed due to a physics re-orientation of the project. Its purpose was to achieve higher fusion rates. 1967.
  • 2-19. Graphs
  • 20. Ion gun drawing.
  • 21. Graphs
  • 22. Computer model of formation of virtual anode in fusor graph.
  • 23-24: Graphs
  • 25. Ion gun drawing.
  • 26. The Negative Well experiment was an electron injection device operating in high vacuum. Its purpose was to study the physics of spherical virtual cathode formation. 1967.
3 8 Laboratories and Transmission Towers
  • 1 Farnsworth television transmitter and broadcast tower, Wyndmoor, Pennsylvania, 1936.
  • 2 Farnsworth transmitter shack and towers, Duplicate see (P0437n03_08_001)
  • 3 Site of Farnsworth T.V. studio and transmission towers still standing in Philadelphia.
  • 4 202 Green Street.
  • 5 Aerial view of San Francisco showing the Green Street lab. CATALOGER NOTE: Someone has written on the face of the photograph "TV lab," on top of the wrong building. Actual location of the lab, 202 Green Street, was a different building, up and left of the Native Ice and Cold Storage Company building.
3 9 Philo T. Farnsworth Dam
  • 1 Construction of the PTF dam, 1939. Duplicate (see P0437n01_30_004).
  • 2 Construction of the PTF dam, 1939.
  • 3 "Tense moment - when the cement mixer went hay wire in the middle of everything. Find Cliff by Ian Smith and note sore finger (got in supervising the pheasant coupe)"
  • 4 PTF at Farnsworth pond he created, 1941.
  • 5 Carl Farnsworth blowing a homemade whistle at the PTF dam in Brownfield, Maine, 1941.
3 10 Philo T. Farnsworth, General images
  • 1 Flag ship on man were off Porto Rico – Philo equipment demo on and from this ship were all very successful. U.S.S. Arizona.
  • 2 Advertisement for Farnsworth Television and Radio Corp., then owned WGL.
  • 3 The Crystal Palace. Built in 1850 and used to host the World's Fair in London in 1851. It was moved to another location shortly after the fair but burned down in 1936. Photograph dates to circa 1900.