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Jozef Murgaš (English Joseph Murgas) (17 February 1864 – 11 May 1929) was a Slovak inventor, architect, botanist, painter, patriot, and Roman Catholic priest. He contributed to wireless telegraphy and help develop mobile communications and wireless transmission of information and human voice.
Murgaš was nicknamed the Radio Priest and deemed a Renaissance man.
Life
Murgaš was born in Tajó, Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire (now Slovakia). He studied theology in Pozsony (Bratislava) (1880–82), Esztergom (1882–84), and in Besztercebánya (Banská Bystrica), where he graduated in 1888. From his youth he was bright, skillful and good at painting and electrotechnology: The vice-head of the school in Esztergom allowed him to use the physics room for experiments, and the Slovak painters B. Klemens and Dominik Skutecký noticed his talent for painting.
After priestly ordination in 1888, Murgaš worked as a curate. On Skutecký's initiative, Murgaš was accepted at a painting school in Budapest, where he studied from 1889-90. He also studied painting in Munich from 1890-93. He attended both schools while working. He painted sacral pieces and Slovak landscapes and Slovak personalities. It was due to his strong patriotism he exhibited during holidays in the 1890s that he was not allowed to finish his painting studies and had to work as a curate in changing places in the Kingdom of Hungary: in Nyitratormás (Chrenovec), Zólyomlipcse (Slovenská Ľupča), Cseres (Dubová) and in Lopér (Lopej). In Lopér, he painted a large sacral picture of St. George, which is still on the church altar of the village.
Due to permanent conflicts with the bishop's secretary, Murgaš had to emigrate to the United States in 1896, where he was assigned a Slovak parish in the city of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Having no possibility for painting, he started to deal with natural sciences again, especially electrotechnology. He established a laboratory in Wilkes-Barre, in which he primarily investigated radiotelegraphy. His article in the Tovaryšstvo magazine of 1900 shows that his radiotelegraphy studies had achieved a high level. In 1904, he received his first two US patents: the Apparatus for wireless telegraphy and The way of transmitted messages by wireless telegraphy. Further 11 patents followed between 1907 and 1911 (see below). Based on the first two patents, he created the Universal ether Telegraph Co., which organized a public test of Murgaš's transmitting and receiving facilities in September 1905 (see below). The test was successful, but a storm destroyed the antenna masts three month later, which led to a dissolution of the company.
Murgaš's primary concern in Wilkes-Barre, however, were the local Slovaks. He took care of Slovak immigrants, had a new church, library, cemetery, several schools, gymnasium and playgrounds built, all of which are still used by American Slovaks. He was also one of the founders of the St. Cyril and Methodius community and took care of children and youth. He was very popular among religious people because of his emotional relation to them. He also published a newspaper, in which he published some popular-science articles and verses.
Murgaš was active in the Slovak expatriates movement, wrote articles for their press, was one of the founders of the Slovak League in America, actively supported the creation of the state of Czechoslovakia, organized a money collection (a fund) of American Slovaks for the creation of Czechoslovakia (1,000,000 USD), and was also a writer and a signatory of the Pittsburgh Agreement (1918) between Czechs and Slovaks on establishing Czechoslovakia. As a respected personality, he gained trust and support of the highest authorities in the USA for the establishment of Czechoslovakia.
Murgaš continued to study physics and to do many experiments. He financed his activities by selling his paintings. He also collected mushrooms, plants, minerals and insects. His butterfly collection comprised 9000 pieces from all over the world.
When the United States entered World War I, private radiotelegraphy stations were prohibited, which put an end to Murgaš's pioneer work in this field. After the creation of Czechoslovakia, he returned to Slovakia in 1920, where he taught electrotechnology at a high school, but since he did not find appropriate understanding by the Ministry of Education in Prague, he returned to Wilkes-Barre four months later. He was nominated to be a member of the Federal Radio Commission of the United States in 1925. Murgaš died in Wilkes-Barre four years later.
Importance and primacy conflicts
The most dynamic segments in the area of communications services today are internet services, mobile telephony and convergence of voice and data process. If we go back one hundred years to history we can see that development in this area began with wireless information transmission encoded in telegraphy marks and wireless voice transmission which was made by frequency modulation.
On 7 January 1916, a US county court gave the primacy of wireless information transmission via electromagnetic waves to Murgaš. In 1905, Murgaš achieved radio transmission between Wilkes-Barre and Scranton, Pennsylvania, or a distance of 20 miles (30 km).
Other important specialists also attempted to carry out such transmissions at that time. Guglielmo Marconi and other researchers (for example Reginald Fessenden), however, were not able to perform satisfactory wireless information transmission above Earth's surface. The reason why Murgaš was more successful then the others was that he invented the so-called tone system which diminished the time needed to deliver a signal and thus considerably improved the system of wireless telegraphy used until then. The tone system is the use of two signals of different frequencies, i.e. Murgaš substituted the "dot" of the Morse code with a higher tone and the "dash" with a lower tone (this is the 1904 patent "The way of transmitted messages by wireless telegraphy").
Thomas Edison paid remarkable attention to Murgaš's experiments and he is said to have informed G. Marconi of Murgaš's success. Murgaš's lab in Wilkes-Barre was visited by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1905.
Patents 1904 - 1911
- U.S. patent 759,825 "Wireless-telegraph apparatus" (1904) – content: adaptation of a Wahnelt type interruptor and construction of an electromagnetic waves detector, in which a rotating carbon lug replaces a coherer with metallic swarf
- U.S. patent 759,826 "The way of transmitted messages by wireless telegraphy" (1904) – content: tone system for the transmission of Morse code signs (as described above)
- U.S. patent 860,051 "Constructing Antennas for Wireless Telegraphy" (July 16, 1907).
- U.S. patent 876,383 "Apparatus for making electromagnetic waves" (1908)
- U.S. patent 848,675 "Wave meter" (1907)
- U.S. patent 848,676 "Electrical transformer" [1907)
- U.S. patent 860,051 "Underground wireless telegraphy"
- U.S. patent 915,993 "Wireless telegraphy"(1909)
- U.S. patent 917,103 "Making of sparkles frequency from power supply without interrupter"(1909)
- U.S. patent 917,104 "Magnetic waves detector"(1909)
- U.S. patent 930,780 "Magnetic detector" (1909)
- U.S. patent 1,196,696 Improved invention in the United States; given in England GB9726 in 1907
- U.S. patent 1,196,969 "The way and apparatus for making electrical alternating current oscillations" (1916)
- U.S. patent 1,001,975 "Apparatus for making electrical oscillations" (1911)
- ????????? "Spinning reel for fishing rod" (1912)
- Co-author of 2 inventions concerned electrical arc lamps (1910)
Memorials and honors
In Tajov, there is Murgaš's house where he was born, a memorial room, and a symbolic grave with a sepulchral monument of Murgaš at the local cemetery. Jozef Šebo, the founder of the room and monument (now a retired teacher) looks after them very carefully. The memorial room also features originals of pictures, paintings, some unique pieces from his butterfly collection, models of inventions in wireless telegraphy and documents. One can also see there a minimodel of Murgaš's original antenna masts built by company Universal Aether Telegraph Co. in Wilkes-Barre in 1905.
Further objects include:
- Jozef Murgaš Monument in Bratislava, Slovakia – the Slovak Telecom building in the Jarošova Street
- Jozef Murgaš street in Podbrezová-Lopej, Slovakia
- Joseph Murgas Monument in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
- Paintings in a church in Wilkes-Barre in Pennsylvania
- Paintings in the Memorial room in Tajov, in some churches in Lopej and Banská Bystrica
- Murgas Amateur Radio Club of Wilkes-Barre, PA named after Fr. Murgas in 1975.
- Model of Murgas' transmitting station in Wilkes-Barre
- Collection of butterflies (9,000 pieces) from all over the world
- Liberty ship SS Joseph Murgas in the U.S. state Georgia in 1944
- Jozef Murgaš Secondary School of Electrical Engineering in Banská Bystrica, Slovakia
- Jozef Murgaš stamp issued by the Ministry of Transport, Communications and Public Works of the Slovak Republic in 1994 (400,000 pieces) on the occasion of 130th birth anniversary (1864) of Jozef Murgaš.
To the memory of Murgaš and to support the development of telecommunications in Slovakia , the Jozef Murgaš Award is awarded annually by the Slovak Electrotechnical Society and Ministry of Transport, Posts and Telecommunications of the Slovak Republic for:
- publication of original theoretical contribution supporting development of telecommunication in Slovakia,
- utilization of original or foreign theoretical contribution to development of telecommunications and telecommunication industry in Slovakia.
See Also
External links
- Jozef Murgas - The Forgotten Radio Genius
- Slovak Academy of Sciences - Mathematical Institute - Jozef Murgas - The source for this article. (Slovak)
- Early radio history - The Murgas System of Wireless Telegraphy. Orig. from Electrical World and Engineer
- Early radio history - The Murgas System of Wireless Telegraphy. Orig. from Electrical Review
- Communication Technology Forum's article on Murgaš
- Murgas Amateur Radio Club, Wilkes-Barre, PA