Jesse Rosenquist: Difference between revisions

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{{Orphan|date=October 2006}}
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'''Jesse Rosenquist''' (1899 - 1966) was one of the world's first police radio dispatchers. A sergeant with the [[Los Angeles]] Police Department, he achieved an unexpected fame due to the early police radio frequencies being tuned in on home radios, hundreds or even thousands of miles away. Also, procedures at the time included an announcement of the dispatcher's name at the end of each broadcast. His offhanded "ROSE-n-quist!" told listeners who he was.
'''Jesse Rosenquist''' (1899 - 1966) was one of the world's first police radio dispatchers. A sergeant with the [[Los Angeles]] Police Department, he achieved an unexpected fame due to the early police radio frequencies being tuned in on home radios, hundreds or even thousands of miles away. Also, procedures at the time included an announcement of the dispatcher's name at the end of each broadcast. His offhanded "ROSE-n-quist!" told listeners who he was.


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[[Category:1966 deaths]]
[[Category:1966 deaths]]
[[Category:American police officers]]
[[Category:American police officers]]
{{unreferenced|date=May 2007}}
{{Unreferenced|date=May 2007}}

Revision as of 16:47, 10 December 2007

Jesse Rosenquist (1899 - 1966) was one of the world's first police radio dispatchers. A sergeant with the Los Angeles Police Department, he achieved an unexpected fame due to the early police radio frequencies being tuned in on home radios, hundreds or even thousands of miles away. Also, procedures at the time included an announcement of the dispatcher's name at the end of each broadcast. His offhanded "ROSE-n-quist!" told listeners who he was.

When the CBS Radio Network started their "Calling All Cars" series (heard in the western United States from 1933 to 1939), Jesse Rosenquist was the voice that producers sought, to add authenticity to their programs. The only surviving audio examples of his dispatching style are the recordings of those shows, but it is obvious that generations of radio, movie and television "dispatchers" were trying to copy Rosenquist's voice and pronunciation. Few succeed.

Due to his having become a household name in the 1930s and 1940s -- before LAPD radio moved to newer equipment and frequencies -- a public safety bulletin in the 1940s or 1950s was often referred to as a Rosenquist.