The true
reason why amateur radio operators came to be called
"HAMS" is no longer known.
More
specifically, the truth has been lost to time over
the many years. Various speculations do exist,
however, each with their own degree of believability.
Presented below are some of the more common theories,
presented in no particular order of importance or
preference. The theories presented have been
gleaned from internet searches, printed works, and
word of mouth from some of our more experienced...
(Older) hams !
Theory One: The
three letters (H.A.M.) are initials, which pay
homage to the last names of three of the great radio
experimenters of bygone years. George HERTZ,
who demonstrated the existence of electromagnetic
waves in 1888, Edwin ARMSTRONG, who
developed a resonant oscillator circuit for radio
frequency work, and finally, Guglielmo MARCONI, the 1909 Nobel
laureate in Physics, who in the year 1901 established
the first transatlantic radio contact.
Similar to this
name / initials honorarium of the past great minds of
radio,
comes one based on slightly lesser minds, but
nonetheless
most heroic in their own right. Let's look at:
Theory Two: This
theory suggests that "HAM" is the
combination of initials of the last names of three
college students at Harvard, who supposedly had their
own amateur radio station in the early nineteen
hundred teen something. This was at a time when
experimenters had free reign of the radio spectrum,
and any legal administration, red tape or federally assigned
callsigns were in their infancy or altogether
non-existent. Their last names were (supposedly) HYMAN,
ALMAY, and MURRAY, and they operated
their little amateur radio station with a
(self-assigned) call sign of "H.A.M." The
three young men were merely identifying their station
as "theirs" by using their names.
("H.A.M.")
Shortly after this fledgling
station emerged, the government DID start
proceedings to license, administrate, and
"control" all radio operators, amateurs
included. Amateur radio stations, Commercial
broadcast stations, and rogue radio operators were
springing up all across the nation. Some of these
transmissions were causing interference, and thus the
government was attempting to gain control and
administration of the entire radio spectrum. Early
amateur radio operators had quite a fight to maintain
any radio spectrum what so ever for their use in
their experiments. This fight for government control
threatened to eliminate all amateur radio stations
entirely by placing all radio transmissions under the
control of the Department of the Navy. The
Navy’s official position on this issue was,
"the ONLY radio transmissions that should be
authorized should be those of a military
nature."
Now, with that brief history
concerning the control of radio spectrum in mind,
let’s get back to our college students and their
"H.A.M." station. "Supposedly",
an impassioned speech was made on the floor of the US
Congress in behalf and support of amateur radio
operators and their commercial broadcast counterpart
stations as well. The Harvard boys, which operated
"H.A.M", became the poster child, so to
speak, of ALL of amateur and commercial radio's
experimental advancements and endeavors nationwide.
They became known as "the little HAM station
that could". This congressional speech, citing
the station "H.A.M.", supposedly turned the
tide and defeated the bill that would eliminate
commercial and amateur radio entirely, and turn the
airwaves completely over to the navy.
The problem with this theory is
that an exhaustive search of the Congressional Record
turns up no such speech, and the Harvard School
histories have no record of the Amateur Radio station
called "HAM". However, that having been
said, it is also a very well known fact there were
inaccuracies in the Congressional Record in the early
part of this century, yielding it a dubious tool for
proof or disproof of any topic. Before Congressional
reforms were enacted later on in the 1900’s, the
rules of Congress were very lax indeed. Enough so,
that just about any member of congress could have
just about anything posted as having been read into
the congressional record, whether it was actually
SPOKEN on the floor of Congress or not. Likewise,
members of Congress who knew the "right
people" and had enough "pull", could
have certain "non-essential" items REMOVED
from the Congressional record, under the guise of
shortening an already impossibly large document. The
potential here for misuse and abuse is obvious. Back
then, many members of Congress could appease their
constituents and special interests by claiming to
have made an impassioned plea for their cause on the
floor, and pointed to the "Congressional
Record" as proof. This led to many obviously
ridiculous paradoxes on "matters of
record," such as speeches made by members days
or weeks AFTER they boarded a plane or boat which
crashed or sank, killing them. These paradoxes and
inaccuracies have been documented, so the fact that
no (congressional) record exists of the HAM debate
remains suspect and subject to conjecture.
Theory Three:
Drawing from the congressional "control"
theory above, and in an attempt to explain
"technical, radio, and electronic matters"
to a non-technical congress and general public, here
is yet another theory of why Amateur Radio operators
are called HAMS: During the earlier days of radio
communication, the commercial and Amateur Radio
broadcasters had won their fight against the NAVY,
(see above). The government (not the military)
stepped in to organize and control frequency
allocation of these new "short-wave"
frequencies. When all was said and done, the
government allowed radio amateurs to operate only on
certain frequencies which were scattered in an
amongst the other licensed (authorized) frequencies.
This holds true to this day. The Amateur Radio
frequencies were said to be sandwiched "like
the HAM in a sandwich" between the other
frequencies, and so Amateur Radio frequencies came to
be known as the "HAM" segments of a
particular band.
Theory Four:
Another theory attributes the term "HAM"
to: Hugo Gernsback, publisher of a magazine called "Home
Amateur Mechanic" which was
very, very popular back in the early days of radio.
It was so well know, it was a household word, just as
the magazines "People", or
"Reader’s Digest" are today. Although
it was primarily more mechanical in content, it did
contain fairly regularly, Amateur Radio construction
projects. Thus, when asked what sort of radio a
person had, the reply, more often than not, was he:
"had one of those "H.A.M." (using just
the initials of the well known magazine name.) This
theory becomes a bit more believable when you
consider the Amateur Radio practice of using just
initials or letters for many commonly understood
words in order to shorten transmissions and ease
sending of messages, especially when using Morse
Code. "Home Amateur Mechanic" was simply
shortened to H.A.M.
Theory Five: Some
speculate the term "HAM" stands for "Help
All Mankind" as reflected in the radio
amateur’s long history of service towards people
in distress during natural calamities, disasters and
civil emergencies. In fine S.O.S. tradition, this
gives us H.A.M.
Theory Six: Others
believe the term "HAM" derives it’s
origin from the British. From late in the nineteenth
century forward, British sports writers used the
"AM" to describe rank AMateurs in sports.
It first came into the "electronics arena"
from the "wire telegraphers" used by these
sports writers. The telegraph operators originally
applied it to the younger and inexperienced
"cub" reporters. These young sports writers
often provided illegibly written or poorly worded
copy for the telegrapher to transmit. The
professional news telegraphers had beginners in their
own line of work, and they picked up the 'AM
terminology from the sportswriters, and applied it to
their own field. Often the inexperienced new
telegraph operators were called "AMs", for
the amateurish way they sent messages.
That theory is further
explained in the following account...
Theory Seven: (or maybe
theory: 6.5): This theory holds that the term
"HAM" actually derives from what the
seasoned commercial (professional) telegraph
operators called the (hobby) amateur radio
operators. When the inexperienced hobby radio
enthusiasts began to venture on air with crude
spark-gap transmitters, based on vehicle ignition
coils, their code transmissions must have been pretty
poor compared to the commercial telegraphs of the
day. The commercial operators referred to the
amateurs by using a modification of the old
telegrapher's insult (from above) by saying the
operator was "ham fisted", meaning that
they weren't of professional skill. "Ham
Fisted" referred to their style and proficiency
of sending telegraph code which could have been done
just as well by using a ham (the cut of pork) on the
telegraph key to pound out their rudimentary code.
Theory Eight:
Along those same lines of thought, came this theory
linked to the stage and theater, where the term
"HAM" is used to denote an actor of
indifferent ability, or one who shows off his skill
(or lack thereof), by performing in spite of and
mostly oblivious to his own ineptitude.
Theory Nine: This
following theory seems to combine the "ham
fisted" and the "un-professional
operator" theories from above, but also adds a
bit more insight as to why amateur radio operators
might be called "HAMS": Definition of HAM:
"A poor performer. [in this case:] "An
operator of poor performance and courtesy". Even
before wireless radio, that's the gist of a
definition of the word "Ham" given in the
G. M. Dodge book: "The Telegraph
Instructor." The definition never changed
throughout wire telegraphy history. The first
WIRELESS operators were, of course, originally land
based (wire) telegraphers, who left their offices to
go to sea or to man the coastal stations. They
brought with them to their now jobs their old habits,
both good and bad. Along with them came also slang
terms, operating practices, and much of the tradition
of their older profession.
In those early days, spark-gap
radio transmissions were king, in fact it was the
only type of transmission readily available, and
every station occupied the same wavelength - or, more
accurately perhaps, every station occupied a very
large portion of the bandwidth with its broad spark
signal. Government stations, ships, coastal stations
and the increasingly numerous Amateur Radio operators
all competed for signal supremacy, causing quite a
cacophony noise and interference in each other's
radio receivers. Many of the amateur stations were
very powerful indeed. Two amateurs, who were just
talking to each other across town or in neighboring
cities, could effectively "jam" all the
other operators in a very large area with their
strong signals. When this happened, the frustrated commercial
operators would telegraph the ship whose weaker
signals had been blotted out by the amateurs and
send: "SRI OM THOSE HAMS ARE JAMMING YOU."
("Sorry old man, those "HAMS, (meaning poor
and discourteous performers), are jamming you’).
Amateur radio operators, who
may have been unaware of the real meaning of that
derogatory term "HAM", picked it up and
applied it to themselves and wore it with pride. Much
as the term "Yankee Doodle" started out as
a derogatory term from the British, and then came
full circle to be worn with pride to those it was
once intended to ridicule. As the years advanced, the
telegrapher's original meaning of inept and poor
performing completely disappeared.
These past few derogatory
theories may well be close to the true origin of the
term, but it seems unlikely that amateurs would
willingly adopt a term meant to be insulting to them
as their name. However, consider this: There was an
English professor at University of MD who pointed out
that "bad" or "insulting" words
sometimes fall into a period of disuse, which causes
the meaning to become obscure, setting the stage for
them to be (ironically) resurrected with more polite,
or merely self-deprecating, meanings. Consider, for
example, the word "naughty." In
Shakespeare's time, it directly translated as
"evil" or "demonic," and
therefore fell out of polite usage in most social
circles of the time. In current usage, however, it's
much more benign, and often used to good-naturedly
scold friends or even children. It would not be
implausible then, for what started out as an insult,
to later become adopted by the very group it was
intended to ridicule. Today, to be
"branded" a "good Ham", is one of
the highest compliments an Amateur Radio operator can
receive.