Northwest_Territories_and_Yukon_Radio_System

Northwest Territories and Yukon Radio System

Northwest Territories and Yukon Radio System

Defunct Canadian Arctic radio communications service


The Northwest Territories and Yukon Radio System was a radio service spanning the Northwest Territories and the Yukon, in existence from 1923 until 1959. It was created for easy communication between the towns or outposts and the rest of the country and was disbanded in 1959 when the system stations were taken over by the Department of Transport.

Quick Facts Founded, Defunct ...

The NWT&Y Radio System was created in 1923 after the Department of the Interior, realizing the possibilities of wireless telegraphy to cover the vast areas of the northland, requested the Defence Department consider the installation of Army Radio stations to provide a reliable and rapid means of communication. At that time the only means of communication with civilization, or "outside" as it was known, was a limited mail service by boat in summer and dog-team in winter and an unreliable wire telegraph service from Dawson City, Yukon to Hazelton, British Columbia operated by the Dominion Government Telegraph Service.

The first connection was established between Dawson City and Mayo (both in Yukon), in 1923, by the Royal Canadian Corps of Signals (RCCS).[1][2] It was the first wireless radio service to offer communications between the North and the rest of Canada. Although originally built to aid in the administration of the North as well as to facilitate commercial development of the area, the radio system exceeded its original intent by providing communities with both a social centre and a lifeline to link isolated northern communities to one another as well as to the rest of the world.[3]

Once established, the system expanded very quickly and, by 1948, there were 23 northern stations in operation.[4] The number of stations varied over the years expanding and contracting in response to commercial and industrial development.[5]

In addition to the radio-telegraph, the system also provided other services to the general public. From 1938 until 1942, under an agreement with Alberta Government Telephones, a radiotelephone service was provided at the following RC Signals stations: Edmonton, McMurray, Fort Smith, Yellowknife and Goldfields. Repeater equipment was installed in the Edmonton Radio Station with connections to the offices of the Alberta Government Telephones from where local or long distance connections were made in the normal manner. At the northern stations, telephone booths were installed and tied in with the HF transmitting and receiving equipment. It was greeted and used enthusiastically by mining and transportation companies particularly as well as the general public, for both business and social calls.

Another service provided by staff at many of the RC Signals stations was a local radio broadcast service that enabled those in the community to listen to news, weather and music. Starting on 1 April 1949 the NWT&Y Radio System started rebroadcasting the full daily program of the CBC (7 a.m.-midnight). A connection was made between the CBC studios in the MacDonald Hotel and the transmitter site of the Edmonton Radio Station which rebroadcast on 8265 Kcs using a 5 kilowatt Marconi TH41 transmitter. At those stations where RC Signals were operating low-power broadcast transmitters for the benefit of their communities, 8265 Kcs was monitored and the CBC programs again re-broadcast on the local standard broadcast frequency.[6]

Starting in the early 1950s, some of the stations were handed over the Department of Transport. By 1960 all the stations had been handed over or closed, signalling the end of the military control of these stations, and the start of the civilian control. The Department of Transport continued to run the telegraph stations for a time and CBC took command of broadcasting their programming to these towns, leading to the creation of CBC North.[7]

NWT&Y Radio System Stations

More information Town/Outpost, Date Opened ...

The above table based on information from the Northwest Territories and Yukon Radio System History Project.[8]


References

  1. "A HUNDRED YEARS OF MILITARY COMMUNICATIONS AND ELECTRONICS". C&E Museum. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  2. Pigott, Peter (2011). From Far and Wide: A History of Canada's Arctic Sovereignty. Toronto: Dundurn Press. pp. 123–4. ISBN 9781554889891.
  3. Eyre, Kenneth (December 1987). "Forty Years of Military Activity in the Canadian North, 1947-87" (PDF). Arctic. 40 (4): 292–299. doi:10.14430/arctic1786. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  4. Maclennon, Anne F. (2011). "Cultural Imperialism of the North? The Expansion of the CBC Northern Service and Community Radio". The Radio Journal – International Studies in Broadcast and Audio Media. 9 (1): 66–67.
  5. "NWT and Y History project - Stations". rcsigs.ca. Retrieved 24 April 2017.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Northwest_Territories_and_Yukon_Radio_System, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.