QST
Le magazine âQSTâ fut lancĂ© en dĂ©cembre 1915 par Hiram Percy MAXIM, fondateur de lâ « American Radio Relay League » (Hartford, Connecticut) et Clarence D. TUSKA, secrĂ©taire du âHartford Radio Clubâ


Radioamateur titulaire successivement des indicatifs SNY, 1WA, 1ZM et 1AW-W1AW, Hiram Percy Maxim fonda lâARRL en 1914 face Ă lâabsence dâun groupe organisĂ© de stations de relais capables de transfĂ©rer des messages par la voie des ondes.
« One night in April he attempted to send a message to another ham in Springfield, Massachusetts. He had a one-kilowatt station and Springfield was only 30 miles (48 km) away, well within his normal range. He was unable to make contact, and remembering that he knew another ham in Windsor Locks, about halfway, he contacted the Windsor Locks ham, and asked him to relay the message, which was successfully done. This was not the first time a message had been relayed, but it set Maxim to thinking. At that time, a great deal, perhaps most of amateur radio activity consisted of sending and receiving messages, not only between amateurs, but involving the general public as well. But at that time the maximum reliable range of a station was a few hundred miles or less, and so Maxim realized that a formally organized relay system would be of tremendous use to amateurs. » (De Soto, Clinton B., Two Hundred Meters and Down, the Story of Amateur Radio, Hartford: ARRL, 1936)
Voici ce que nous pouvons lire Ă ce sujet sur le site internet de lâARRL :
« By 1914, there were thousands of Amateur Radio operators - hams - in the United States. Hiram Percy Maxim, a leading Hartford, Connecticut, inventor and industrialist saw the need for an organization to band together this fledgling group of radio-experimenters. In May 1914 he founded the ARRL to meet that need. »
LâARRL connut un succĂšs fulgurant ! 600 affiliĂ©s dĂšs mars 1915. La nĂ©cessitĂ© dâun organe de liaison, permettant dâĂ©tablir et de garder le contact entre les opĂ©rateurs sans-filistes du pays, se fit immĂ©diatement sentir.
« It was apparent that the ARRL now needed some kind of bulletin to stay in touch with its members, but there was no money for such a thing. Maxim and Tuska agreed to personally finance it, and in December 1915 the first, sixteen page issue of QST was sent free to all members. Further issues would be supplied through subscription at $1.00 per year » (De Soto, Clinton B., Two Hundred Meters and Down, the Story of Amateur Radio, Hartford: ARRL, 1936)


Une biographie claire et concise est disponible Ă lâadresse ci-dessous : http://www.qcwa.org/w1aw-sk.htm
Une biographie exhaustive fut publiée en 1970 :
Schumacher, Alice Clink, Hiram Percy Maxim, Father of Amateur Radio, Great Falls, MT: Schumachers, 1970


Hiram Percy Maxim, PrĂ©sident de lâARRL et PĂšre du radioamateurisme, dĂ©cĂ©da le 17 fĂ©vrier 1936. Il repose au âRose Hill Cemeteryâ Ă Hagerstown, Maryland.
