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Willapa Amateur Radio Club

License effective 8-3-2000 KD7KAJ on the Web 8-7-2000
Trustee: Anne Louise Grimm, KA7TON


Morse Code sending

Columbia Light Ship, Sunset Empire Radio Club Field Day exercise in which WARC took part.


WHY AN AMATEUR RADIO OPERATOR IS CALLED A HAM

Have you ever wondered why we radio amateurs are called HAMS?

Well, it goes like this: the word Ham was applied in 1908 and was the call letters of one of the first amateur wireless stations operated by some members of the Harvard Radio Club.

They were Albert S. Hyman, Bob Almy and Peggie Murray. At first, they called their station Hyman-Almy-Murray. Tapping out such a long name in code soon called for revision and they changed it to HY-AL-MU, using the first two letters of each name.

Early in 1909, some confusion resulted between signals from amateur wireless HYALMU and a Mexican ship named HYALMO, so they decided to use only the first letter of each name and the call became HAM.

In the early pioneer unregulated days of radio, amateur operators picked their own frequency and call letters. Then, as now, some amateurs had better signals than some commercial stations. The resulting interference finally came to the attention of congressional committees in Washington and they gave much time to propose legislation designed to critically limit amateur 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, he sent for Hyman to appear before the committee

He was put on the stand and described how the little amateur station was built and he almost cried when he told the crowded committee room that if the bill went through, they would have to close down the station because they could not afford the license fees and all the other requirements which were set up in the bill.

The debate started and the little station HAM became a symbol of all the little amateur stations in the country crying out to be saved from menace and greed of the big commercial stations who didn't want them around.

Finally, the bill got to the floor of the 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.

Nationwide publicity associated station HAM with amateurs. From that day to this and probably to the end of time, in radio, an amateur is a HAM.

* * *

HAM

Ham: a poor operator. A plug.

That's the definition of the word given in G. M. Dodge's The Telegraph Instructor even before radio. The definition has never changed in wire telegraphy. The first wireless operators were landline telegraphers who left their offices to go to sea or to man the coastal stations. They brought with them their language and much of the tradition of their older profession.

In those early days, spark was king and every station occupied the same wavelength . . . or, more accurately perhaps, every station occupied the whole spectrum with its broad spark signal. Government stations, ships, coastal stations and the increasingly numerous amateur operators all competed for time and signal supremacy in each other's receivers. Many of the amateur stations were very powerful. Two amateurs, working across town, could effectively jam all the other operators in the area. When this happened, frustrated commercial operators would call the ship whose weaker signals had been blotted out by the amateurs and say SRI OM THOSE %#$*!@ HAMS ARE JAMMING YOU.

Amateurs, possibly unfamiliar with the real meaning of the term, picked it up and applied it to themselves in true Yankee Doodle fashion and wore it with pride. As the years advanced, the original meaning has completely disappeared.


Amateur Radio Study

No radio is necessary to study, nor was Morse Code any longer required in 2007.
Licensed amateurs may register for ARES, the Amateur Radio Emergency Service, at their local county courthouse.



COMPLIANCE

The FCC requires each club to have a bylaws or constitution, though not that it be filed with them. In finished form, with concurrence of the membership, it follows, for anyone to save, print out and distribute at will, either in paper or electronic form.

An original word processor copy has been placed on file at the Pacific County Emergency Management Agency, with necessary signatures and dated March 2002.



BYLAWS OF WILLAPA AMATEUR RADIO CLUB

Pacific County, State of Washington


ARTICLE I
Name and Duration

SECTION 1. The Name of this organization shall be Willapa Amateur Radio Club.
SECTION 2. Call Sign Assigned by FCC, KD7KAJ

ARTICLE II
Purpose and Mission

SECTION 1. The purpose of this club shall be to promote amateur radio.

ARTICLE III
Membership and Dues

SECTION 1. Membership shall be open to all individuals who are interested in radio, licensed or not.
SECTION 2. There shall be no dues, any expenses to be borne by individual members, at their discretion.

ARTICLE IV
Officers and Directors

SECTION 1. All officers shall be licensed radio amateurs.
SECTION 2. Directors may be chosen if a larger and more formal dues paying organization results.

ARTICLE V
Equipment

SECTION 1. Shall remain the property of individual members.
SECTION 2. Used for Field Day, the County Fair or other purposes, arrangements shall be made privately for delivery, set up and removal.

ARTICLE VI
Meetings

SECTION 1. Shall be held as announced by: email, telephone, postcard, or in the newsletter.
SECTION 2. May be called by any member or group of members.
SECTION 3. A quorum shall consist of those attending a meeting.

ARTICLE VII
Newsletter

SECTION 1. Name of the newsletter shall be SPARKS.
SECTION 2. Distribution shall be by email text file, to be forwarded or printed at will by any who receive it.

ARTICLE VIII
Amendments

SECTION 1. Shall be made only with the concurrence of the current at the time trustee, responsible to the FCC.
SECTION 2. Until formally amended, the original word processor printout copy held at the office of the Pacific County Emergency Management Agency, PCEMA, shall be the recognized legal form of this document.

ARTICLE IX
Dissolution

SECTION 1. When, if current trustee can no longer serve, no replacement an be found.


DEDICATION

DEDICATED TO: George Claussen Jr, N7GC, SK, first President of WARC.



Willapa Country: [WILL-uh-paw] the river, valley, unincorporated town and bay (located in Pacific County at the shore of the Pacific Ocean in the Southwest Corner of the State of Washington) was named after a tribe of Native Americans. A rural area, the entire county has a population of just over 21,000, which includes four very small incorporated cities ... and as many school districts. In the county are located the Chinook and Shoalwater reservations.

Geographical Location

Coordinates: 46 degrees, 40 minutes, 54 seconds North
123 degrees, 44 minutes, 11 seconds West
Grid: CN86dq

E-mail KA7TON

Quick callsign lookup:
URL: http://www.willapabay.org/~anne/warc.htm

Page sponsored by:

Anne, KA7TON


E-mail Anne

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Anne Louise Grimm
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Raymond WA 98577-1804, USA

State Business License 600 560 787
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