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Hillsboro wireless tower

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Hillsboro wireless tower
Map
General information
Architectural stylesteel tower
Town or cityHillsboro, Oregon
CountryUnited States
Construction started1920
Completed1921
Demolished1952
Cost$300,000
ClientFederal Telegraph Company
Technical details
Size626 feet tall
Design and construction
EngineerJ.L. Miller
The tower near Hillsboro with airplane showing scale.

The Hillsboro wireless tower was a wireless telegraph station constructed in 1921 just south of Hillsboro, Oregon, United States. Located adjacent to what is now Meriwether National Golf Club, at the time it was the second tallest steel tower in the world after France’s Eiffel Tower. It was torn down in 1952.

History

Federal Telegraph Company built a wireless station south of Hillsboro with completion of the project coming in 1921.[1] Site selection was in 1920 and dedication came on May 11 1921 with a crowd of 500 and the Hillsboro mayor in attendance.[2] Built on 330 acres the station had one large tower at a height of 626 feet surrounded by eight shorter towers arranged in a circle around the main tower in the center.[1] Workers dug out 14 feet deep concrete bases to secure the towers under the guidance of the engineer J. L. Miller.[2] Constructed of steel, the station cost $300,000 to build.[1]

By 1938 the station was owned by Mackay Radio & Telegraph Company, a subsidiary of International Telephone & Telegraph Corporation.[2] Then during World War II the United States government took over the operations. It was then operated by the United States Coast Guard.[2] In 1951 the station was abandoned and subsequently torn down in 1952.[2]

Details

The tower was operated remotely from Portland, Oregon and was capable of sending telegraph message as far away as Asia and Europe.[1] The eight smaller towers were 1,500 feet from the central tower.[1] Utilizing short-wave radio signals, the station would transmit point-to-point to regional transmitters such as in San Francisco, California or directly to ships at sea.[2] On site was also a large concrete building 60 feet by 80 feet and 20 feet tall.[2] In addition to this building there was a transmitting station on Council Crest in Portland and the main office was in the Postal Building in downtown Portland.[2] This downtown building is where all messages were received and relayed.[1] The cables supporting the towers were one and one-quarter inch in diameter.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Horner, John B. (1921). Oregon: Her History, Her Great Men, Her Literature. The J.K. Gill Co.: Portland.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i World’s second-largest tower relayed wireless messages. Hillsboro Argus, October 19, 1976.