Pan American had provided radio equipment designed and built by H.C. Leuteritz, chief of the company’s radio division: a 15-watt telegraph transmitter, a dynamotor, and a receiver. The emergency radio, a Model TR-A transceiver (above), was stored in the airplane’s baggage compartment—to be brought out only in case of damage to the installed set or a need to abandon the downed aircraft.
The Model TR-A—a combination transmitter and receiver—is a metal box covered by a black wrinkle finish, its solid craftsmanship validating its worth as the museum piece that it is.
Before the survey flights, Anne had earned her pilot’s license and a commercial third-class radio license, which required her to master Morse code. In a 1974 book based on her diaries, she wrote: “I was amused but also inordinately proud to hear about the comment of a Pan American radio operator who, after sending me a 150-word message in code through heavy static, made the astonished remark: ‘My God, she got it!’ ”