Guglielmo Marconi was born at Bologna, Italy,
on April 25, 1874, the second son of Giuseppe Marconi, an Italian
country gentleman, and Annie Jameson, daughter of Andrew Jameson
of Daphne Castle in the County Wexford, Ireland. He was educated
privately at Bologna, Florence and Leghorn. Even as a boy he took
a keen interest in physical and electrical science and studied the
works of Maxwell, Hertz, Righi, Lodge and others. In 1895 he began
laboratory experiments at his father's country estate at Pontecchio
where he succeeded in sending wireless signals over a distance of
one and a half miles.
In 1896 Marconi took his apparatus to England where he was
introduced to Mr. (later Sir) William Preece, Engineer-in-Chief
of the Post Office, and later that year was granted the world's
first patent for a system of wireless telegraphy. He demonstrated
his system successfully in London, on Salisbury Plain and across
the Bristol Channel, and in July 1897 formed The Wireless
Telegraph & Signal Company Limited (in 1900 re-named
Marconi's Wireless Telegraph Company Limited). In the same year
he gave a demonstration to the Italian Government at Spezia where
wireless signals were sent over a distance of twelve miles. In
1899 he established wireless communication between France and
England across the English Channel. He erected permanent wireless
stations at The Needles, Isle of Wight, at Bournemouth and later
at the Haven Hotel, Poole, Dorset.
In 1900 he took out his famous patent No. 7777 for "tuned or
syntonic telegraphy" and, on an historic day in December 1901,
determined to prove that wireless waves were not affected by the
curvature of the Earth, he used his system for transmitting the
first wireless signals across the Atlantic between Poldhu,
Cornwall, and St. John's, Newfoundland, a distance of 2100
miles.
Between 1902 and 1912 he patented several new inventions. In
1902, during a voyage in the American liner "Philadelphia", he
first demonstrated "daylight effect" relative to wireless
communication and in the same year patented his magnetic detector
which then became the standard wireless receiver for many years.
In December 1902 he transmitted the first complete messages to
Poldhu from stations at Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, and later Cape
Cod, Massachusetts, these early tests culminating in 1907 in the
opening of the first transatlantic commercial service between
Glace Bay and Clifden, Ireland, after the first shorter-distance
public service of wireless telegraphy had been established
between Bari in Italy and Avidari in Montenegro. In 1905 he
patented his horizontal directional aerial and in 1912 a "timed
spark" system for generating continuous waves.
In 1914 he was commissioned in the Italian Army as a Lieutenant
being later promoted to Captain, and in 1916 transferred to the
Navy in the rank of Commander. He was a member of the Italian
Government mission to the United States in 1917 and in 1919 was
appointed Italian plenipotentiary delegate to the Paris Peace
Conference. He was awarded the Italian Military Medal in 1919 in
recognition of his war service.
During his war service in Italy he returned to his investigation
of short waves, which he had used in his first experiments. After
further tests by his collaborators in England, an intensive
series of trials was conducted in 1923 between experimental
installations at the Poldhu Station and in Marconi's yacht
"Elettra" cruising in the Atlantic and Mediterranean, and this
led to the establishment of the beam system for long distance
communication. Proposals to use this system as a means of
Imperial communications were accepted by the British Government
and the first beam station, linking England and Canada, was
opened in 1926, other stations being added the following
year.
In 1931 Marconi began research into the propagation
characteristics of still shorter waves, resulting in the opening
in 1932 of the world's first microwave radiotelephone link
between the Vatican City and the Pope's summer residence at
Castel Gandolfo. Two years later at Sestri Levante he
demonstrated his microwave radio beacon for ship navigation and
in 1935, again in Italy, gave a practical demonstration of the
principles of radar, the coming of which he had first foretold in
a lecture to the American Institute of Radio Engineers in New
York in 1922.
He has been the recipient of honorary doctorates of several
universities and many other international honours and awards,
among them the Nobel Prize for Physics, which in 1909 he shared
with Professor Karl Braun, the Albert Medal of the Royal Society
of Arts, the John Fritz Medal and the Kelvin Medal. He was
decorated by the Tsar of Russia with the Order of St. Anne, the
King of Italy created him Commander of the Order of St. Maurice
and St. Lazarus, and awarded him the Grand Cross of the Order of
the Crown of Italy in 1902. Marconi also received the freedom of
the City of Rome (1903), and was created Chevalier of the Civil
Order of Savoy in 1905. Many other distinctions of this kind
followed. In 1914 he was both created a Senatore in the Italian
Senate and app ointed Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Royal
Victorian Order in England. He received the hereditary title of
Marchese in 1929.
In 1905 he married the Hon. Beatrice O'Brien, daughter of the
14th Baron Inchiquin, the marriage being annulled in 1927, in
which year he married the Countess Bezzi-Scali of Rome. He had
one son and two daughters by his first and one daughter by his
second wife. His recreations were hunting, cycling and
motoring.
Marconi died in Rome on July 20, 1937.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1967
This autobiography/biography was first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1909