W6VIB/C7 1946 China
Operator: Byron David Lott, W6VIB, Silent Key September 23, 2016.
Byron was born on January 2, 1927
in San Francisco to William Francis Lott and Clara Adelaide
(Timmerman) Lott. He spent his early years in Los Angeles. He
attended St. Johns Military Academy and Loyola High School,
and worked part time in radio shops as a troubleshooter and
repairman. As a high school senior he worked daily 4-hour shifts
at the Douglas Aircraft Company in Santa Monica, CA installing
and checking out radio equipment on production military aircraft.
After completing two years of engineering study at UCLA while
also serving in the ROTC he was called to active duty,
temporarily putting his college education on hold. From July 1945
to January 1947 he was a Radio Officer in the Army Signal Corps,
graduating from Officer Candidate School in Ft. Monmouth, NJ and
subsequently completing a year of duty in China. After release
from active duty under the GI Bill of Rights, Byron obtained a
Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering from UC
Berkeley in 1949. He then went to work for the Pacific Mercury
Television Manufacturing Corporation in Van Nuys, CA on the
design and manufacture of commercial televisions (TVs), a new
industry at the time. Some of his fondest memories in later years
included his time at Pacific Mercury working on the engineering
challenges of TVs, which he knew brought great practical value
and opened the sights and sounds of the world to everyone, much
as the personal computer would do about 25 years later.
In 1950 Byron once again answered the call of our nations
defense by joining the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation in the
Transonic Department, which later grew into the Lockheed Missiles
and Space Division, on telecommunications for the latest military
flight test vehicles. The Korean War (Conflict) led
to his recall back into active duty again as a 2nd Lt, and in
1951 he was back in the US Army Signal Corps as the Radio
Operations Officer for the 24th Infantry Division where he was
deployed north of Seoul near the front lines in Korea. In later
years he told fascinating stories to his family about setting up
and operating fixed and mobile communications amidst live combat.
He also helped develop the communications infrastructure for the
Underground Pentagon in Maryland at Camp Ritchie
(later Fort Ritchie) near Hagerstown, MD where Byron met his
first wife Vivian (Betsy) from Williamsport, MD.
After completing duty in Korea and subsequently at Camp Ritchie,
as a 1st Lt Byron again entered the inactive Army Reserves and
rejoined Pacific Mercury to design and test electronic circuits
and systems for the newly emerging color television industry. He
then rejoined the Lockheed Missiles and Space Division of the
Lockheed Aircraft Company, which by 1960 had been relocated to
its new and permanent location in Sunnyvale, CA adjacent to the
former Moffett Field Naval Air Station. He remained employed at
Lockheed in various engineering and leadership roles for the
remainder of his career as a key communications expert for the
burgeoning satellite communications industry, including
designing, installing, and operating satellite tracking,
reconnaissance, and communications facilities in Hawaii, on
Christmas Island (now Kiritimati), Alaska, Florida, California,
Greenland, and at various other strategic and exotic locations
throughout the world. He retired from Lockheed after 40 years of
service in 1990.
Byron loved all types of railroads, took trips to see and
experience famous rail lines worldwide, and was a model train
hobbyist. He was a licensed ham radio enthusiast (W6VIB - testing
in 1941 but having to wait until 1946 to receive his license due
to a full cessation of all amateur radio activity in the USA
during WWII), made regular radio contact with other
hams around the world, and had a proud collection of
operator contact (QSL) postcards. He was an avid supporter of
several Bay Area drum and bugle corps, and was a longtime fixture
of bingo fundraising at the Santa Clara Vanguard facility and at
summer corps competitions over the US and Canada. He enjoyed
traveling and took many cruises in his later years with wife
Karen, including a 4-month around-the-world cruise, a cruise
around South America (in the oceans where years earlier his
father William Frank Lott served as a printer in the
US Navy aboard super dreadnaught battleships after WWI), a cruise
around Africa, a cruise into the ice cap north of Norway,
European river cruises, and many more, logging over 235 cruise
days. In the early years Byron loved taking his young family
camping and skiing at Mt. Lassen, Graeagle, Ft. Bragg, Yosemite,
Sunset State Beach, Dodge Ridge, Pinnacles National Park, and
many other places. He was fascinated by genealogy, made family
tree charts, and kept precise records of all of his endeavors. He
volunteered thousands of hours at Kaiser hospitals over many
years. He was a faithful husband and loving father, and he will
be greatly missed and forever remembered.
QSL from the estate of KL7IY /
W5JWN / W7GHD / W7GEU / W6SQY
Info courtesy of W5KNE