Abstract
With the words “Attention, attention! This is the Berlin broadcasting
station at Vox House on wavelength 400 [749.5 kHz],” the announcer
Friedrich Georg Knöpfke made history on October 29, 1923, although
scarcely anyone knew it at the time. Only 500 officially registered
radio receivers existed in Germany to hear the brief station
identification marking the birth of German radio. An untold number of
additional radio sets undoubtedly listened illegally to the inaugural
program—a cello solo with piano accompaniment—but, as Knöpfke explicitly
reminded listeners at the end of his introductory message, “the use [of
wireless receivers] requires a license”
[Die Benutzung is
genehmigungspflichtig]. Coming near the very peak of
hyperinflation, that license would have cost listeners an eye-popping
350 billion marks in the moment, although that fee would quickly fall to
less than a hundred marks after the following month’s currency reform.
Knöpfke transmitted his historic first sentences from a studio in the
headquarters of the Vox Record and Dictaphone Company, known as
“Voxhaus,” on the Potsdamer Strasse in the bustling heart of Berlin.
While Knöpfke may have announced the program, a man by the name of
Hans Bredow had inspired it. Known as the “father of German
broadcasting,” Bredow served at the time as Director of the Department
of Wireless Telegraphy in the Postal Ministry and played the key role in
expanding radio beyond its initial military, business, and ham-operator
uses. He envisioned a new medium that appealed to the broadest possible
audience, declaring, “Radio should offer something to the most
fastidious and to the most unsophisticated taste in equal measure”
[Der Rundfunk soll dem verwöhntesten wie
dem primitivsten Geschmack in gleicher Weise etwas bieten].
Bredow’s inclusive and democratic philosophy helped German radio to
expand rapidly over the course of the 1920s to include around 3 million
listeners and a state-of-the-art broadcasting facility by the end of the
decade.