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This is the oldest surviving colour television in the world. It uses a colour system invented in 1937 by Scottish engineer John Logie Baird.
Date
1946
Made in
USA
Made by
General Electric for the Columbia Broadcasting Service
Museum reference
On display
Discoveries, Level 1, National Museum of Scotland
Did you know?
John Logie Baird also invented ‘phonovision’, a video recording device, and stereoscopic, or 3D, television, which is only just appearing on the market now.
Born in Helensburgh in Scotland, inventor and engineer John Logie Baird (1888-1946) achieved many ‘firsts’ in television technology. He started experimenting with television in 1922 and took out his first television patent in 1923. He demonstrated the first prototype television in 1925. Baird then followed this with the first public demonstration of the transmission of images of people in January 1926. He demonstrated the first mechanical colour television system in 1928 and followed this with the first electronic colour system in 1941.
Our colour television at National Museum of Scotland was manufactured in 1946 by General Electric in the USA for the Columbia Broadcasting Service (CBS) and is the only one of its kind known to exist. CBS had been experimenting with Baird’s ideas for colour television for some time, and by 1946 were confident of obtaining a broadcasting licence. So confident, they began advertising the GE 950, the first colour television produced for the consumer market.
Our set comes complete with a printed warranty and 90-day guarantee for parts and labour, so was clearly intended for sale. However, if it was used at all, it can only have been to receive demonstration broadcasts, because on 30 January 1947, CBS was refused a licence for colour broadcasting by the Federal Communications Commission. With nothing to receive, the GE 950 can never have been sold.
The GE 950 works on principles invented by Baird, whereby scenes are filmed with a monochrome camera using a ‘colour wheel’ to shoot each frame through a red, a green, or a blue filter. When the frames are projected through the corresponding coloured filter in the television, the brain merges the three different coloured frames to give a coloured image, just as it merges the still frames of a film to make moving images.
Baird’s inventions were ahead of their time. Colour television made little commercial impact in the USA until the 1960s, and was only introduced in Britain in 1967, 21 years after Baird’s death. But Baird’s invention had lasting application – the first pictures broadcast from the moon in 1969 were recorded and transmitted by a camera based on Baird’s colour system developed over 30 years earlier.