[RVRC] How did we get the terminology HAM??

Alan Wolke alan.wolke at gmail.com
Sun Apr 14 13:21:18 EDT 2013


This is one of many stories relating the origin of the term Ham. The ARRL
book "160 meters and down" dismisses this origin, and suggests it grew out
of the 'derogatory' description that the fledgling commercial operators
gave to the amateurs that here hamming it up and interfering with their
broadcasts.

On Sunday, April 14, 2013, Pete Fierro wrote:

> Have you ever wondered why radio amateurs are called
> "HAMS"?
> Well, it goes like this: The word "HAM" as
> applied to 1908 was the station CALL of the first amateur
> wireless stations operated by some amateurs of the
> Harvard Radio Club. They were ALBERT S. HYMAN, BOB
> ALMY and POOGIE MURRAY.
> At first they called their station "HYMAN-ALMY-MURRAY".
> Tapping out such a long name in code soon became
> tiresome and called for a revision. They changed it to "HYAL-
> MU", using the first two letters of each of their names.
> Early in 1901 some confusion resulted between signals
> from amateur wireless station "HYALMU" and a Mexican
> ship named "HYALMO". They then decided to use only
> the first letter of each name, and the station CALL
> became "HAM".
> In the early pioneer days of unregulated radio amateur
> operators picked their own frequency and call-letters.
> Then, as now, some amateurs had better signals than
> commercial stations. The resulting interference came to
> the attention of congressional committees in Washington
> and Congress gave much time to proposed legislation
> designed to critically limit amateur radio activity. In 1911,
> ALBERT HYMAN chose the controversial WIRELESS
> REGULATION BILL as the topic for his Thesis at Harvard.
> His instructor insisted that a copy be sent to Senator
> DAVID I. WALSH, a member of one of the committees
> hearing the Bill. The Senator was so impressed with the
> thesis is that he asked HYMAN to appear before the
> committee. ALBERT HYMAN took the stand and described
> how the little station was built and almost cried when he
> told the crowded committee room that if the BILL went
> through that they would have to close down the station
> because they could not afford the license fees and all the
> other requirements which the BILL imposed on amateur
> stations.
> Congressional debate began on the WIRELESS
> REGULATION BILL and little station "HAM" became the
> symbol for all the little amateur stations in the country
> crying to be saved from the menace and greed of the big
> commercial stations who didn't want them around. The
> BILL finally got to the floor of Congress and every
> speaker talked about the "...poor little station HAM".
> That's how it all started. You will find the whole story in
> the Congressional Record.
> Nation-wide publicity associated station "HAM" with
> amateur radio operators. From that day to this, and
> probably until the end of time in radio an amateur is a
> "HAM"
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