Jason Clarke Antiques
1949 London to Birmingham Television Cable Presentation Display by STC Ltd
For sale, a fascinating and rare presentation cable section for the 1949 London to Birmingham television cable by Standard Telephones & Cables Limited.
The cable length is set within a black painted circular wooden base on three ball feet, into which a section of the cable is inserted. The cable is held in place at the bottom by means of a glass plate and metal flange which allows the flat end of the cable to be examined. The flange is engraved with, “London – Birmingham Television Cable”.
At the top side of the base, the cable protrudes up a further sixteen and a half centimetres which enabled it to be cut away and graduated into sections thus revealing all of the numerous component parts for more detailed examination. All of the cables are paper wrapped and numbered with the sections then paper wrapped together and finished in a steel tube and tape.
The cable has been well protected by a glass dome which like the base is fixed in place by a metal flange screwed into the top. It is completed with the logo badge to the front for the cable manufacturers, Standard Telephones & Cables Limited, London.
The laying of this cable was a famously major undertaking and came some short years after the original television service was set up in London at Alexandra Palace in 1936. With the requirement to extend broadcasting across the UK, Birmigham was chosen as the second broadcasting hub and both a cable connection and a radio connection were established and finally opened on the 17th of December 1949. An interesting period BBC documentary made in the 1950’s called, “How television came to The Midlands” shows in detail just how large a task this was at the time.
Contracted out by the BBC to the GPO (General Post Office), the cable ran from Alexandra Palace to The London Museum Exchange and then in stages to Watford, Berkhamstead, Tring, Aylesbury, Towcester, Coventry and finally to the Birmingham Exchange.
In much the same way as their Victorian predecessors presented sections of telegraph cable to worthy individuals, Standard Telephones & Cables were understandably proud of their involvement and smaller paperweight versions were known to have been gifted at the time. This example though is altogether a different piece standing at 26cms in height and 12cms in diameter, it is most likely to have been a presentation to an executive within the company or someone of similar standing involved in the project.
Standard Telephones & Cables Limited began life in 1883 as International Western Electric, a subsidiary of the US firm Western electric. It initially sold US designed telephones and exchanges but began manufacturing in its own right in the early part of the Twentieth Century. The First World War did nothing to hamper the company’s success given their specialism in communications and following the War became one of a consortium of companys that set up the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) in 1922.
Shortly after in 1925 Western Electric sold its subsidiary to ITT Corporation (International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation) and was soon after renamed to Standard Telephones & Cables. It continued to be a major actor in the telephony industry and with the onset of World War Two, provided support to the military throughout this period. Television had of course began public broadcasting just before the War and the company was evidently involved in its continual development from its association with the BBC. STC was also heavily involved in the subsequent spread of television broadcasting across the UK which began with the London to Birmigham connection mentioned above in 1949. Their cables were used in most other subsequent geographical developments throughout the 1950’s.
During the latter part of the century, STC continued to lead developments in light transmission for voice and data but the science was generally too far ahead of the materials available to realise these experimental processes. Their eventual decline came due to poor investment in the mainframe market of the 1980’s and from loss of business due to the privatisation of British Telecom. They were eventually bought out in 1991 by Nortel after which the name disappeared.
This fantastic presenation piece is not only a delight to look at, moreover it captures a historic moment in the development of early British Television broadcasting.
Circa 1949