Z-4AA 1927 New Zealand
The operator was Margaret Brenda
Bell (Silent Key 1891-1979).
She was the sister of Frank Bell, Z4AA.
Under conditions existing in the early days of radio, Brenda was
permitted to operate the station (no written examination was
required at that time) and she worked all round the world -
Finland, France, Japan, Mexico, Philippines, Uruguay, ships in
the Antarctic, a Texas Military Post and a priest in China who
vanished when he learned he was working a female - good DX for
those early days of radio.
--"A PIONEER YL," extracted from a very early Break-In
YL CORNER by Rene, ZL4DG, http://www.qsl.net/zl6yl/hist/pioneer.html , accessed August 5, 2014.
Biography of Frank and Brenda Bell
Bell, Francis Wirgman Dillon and Bell, Margaret Brenda
Shag Valley station in eastern Otago is an unlikely setting for a
sister and brother to become world radio pioneers. Margaret
Brenda Bell was born there on 18 October 1891; Francis Wirgman
Dillon Bell was born in Dunedin on 12 June 1896. They were the
only children of runholder Alfred Dillon Bell and his wife,
Gertrude Eliza Robinson.
Alfred Bell was more interested in science than sheep. He set up
what was probably the first telephone connection in New Zealand,
between two farmhouses, and experimented with the new-fangled
wireless communication. The two children took up their father's
interest. Frank in particular spent long periods listening to
radio signals on a home-made crystal set.
The First World War saw the sister and brother heading for
Europe. Brenda served as a military hospital cook in England and
acted as a hostess at the New Zealand High Commission in London.
Frank served as a gunner in France and Belgium until he was
invalided home in 1917. The returned soldier's boyhood interest
in wireless was revived while he recovered at home from his war
wounds. Along with a handful of fellow New Zealand amateurs, he
helped pioneer the use of short radio waves to communicate over
long distances, initially through morse code telegraphy.
He achieved spectacular success. In April 1923 he made New
Zealand's first overseas two-way radio contact, with a fellow
amateur in Australia. In September 1924 he made New Zealand's
first contact with North America. The following month, on 18
October, he and a student in London held the first-ever two-way
radio conversation from one side of the world to the other. It
was a feat that every radio operator had been striving to
achieve, and made world headlines. Frank Bell's international
status was such that, in his absence, he was elected to the
five-member executive committee of the International Amateur
Radio Union at its formation in Paris in 1925.
A self-effacing and publicity-shy Frank Bell soon lost interest
in radio and took over the running of the family sheep station.
His gregarious sister took over the wireless station. She was New
Zealand's first female amateur radio operator, and one of the
first in the world. In 1927 she also became the first New
Zealander to contact South Africa.
Brenda Bell was involved with many voluntary clubs and societies.
In 1931 she joined the Country Women's Institute (CWI); she
became a member of the Dominion executive. In 1939 she led a
70-member CWI group to London to attend a world conference of
country women's organisations. She stayed on to again serve as a
military hospital cook and nurse in England, during the Second
World War. Back home, she returned to radio, this time as a
writer and broadcaster of popular talks on Dunedin station 4YA.
During the 1950s Brenda Bell attended two further world
conferences of country women's organisations, in Toronto and
Edinburgh, and lectured and broadcast on New Zealand throughout
Europe and Australia. She also turned to the traditional family
pursuit of politics, in which her grandfather, Francis Dillon
Bell, and uncle, Francis Henry Dillon Bell, had been prominent.
In 1960 Brenda Bell stood unsuccessfully for the New Zealand
National Party against sitting member Ethel McMillan in the safe
Labour seat of Dunedin North. Undeterred, she later failed to
gain the National Party nomination for Waitaki.
Brenda Bell never married. Her brother married twice. On 3
February 1926 Frank wed Leslie Frances Crawford Laidlaw at St
Matthew's Anglican Church in Dunedin. Leslie Bell died in 1946,
leaving Frank with two sons and a daughter. On 22 February 1955,
the 58-year-old widower married Patricia Stronach at St Columba's
Anglican Church in Wanaka. She died at Shag Valley station in
1962.
Brenda and Frank Bell spent most of their lives on the family
farm. Brenda died in The Chalet private hospital in Dunedin on 10
August 1979, shortly after being presented with the Queen's
Service Medal. She was 87. Her brother spent the last four years
of his life in a retirement home in Auckland and died in the
Argyle Hospital in Herne Bay on 18 August 1987. He was 91. Both
had made a significant contribution towards the development of
radio as a means of international communication.
--Ian Dougherty. 'Bell, Francis Wirgman Dillon and Bell, Margaret
Brenda', from the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Te Ara -
the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 29-Aug-2013, URL: http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/biographies/4b20/bell-francis-wirgman-dillon , accessed August 5, 2014.
QSL card sent to Barbara Dunn
G6YL.
Started as a SWL in 1925.
Licensed in 1927 at EG6YL, Britian's first licensed YL.
QSL K8CX Collection
Info courtesy of W5KNE