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Many people in Northern New Castle County irreverently
refer to the tower as the fire tower. This is totally incorrect since the
tower was never used as a fire spotting tower. According to the records I
have been able to find, the tower was built in the late 1940s by Western
Union as a microwave relay station. It became part of the cold war defense
communications system between New York and Washington. One half of two of
the walls of the room on the platform are fiberglass and there were
originally two microwave dishes mounted inside pointing out through those
panels, one mounted above the other on massive iron racks. There were
additional side mounted dishes on two of the legs. For more info on the cold
war defense communications system, there is an EXELLENT web site at http://coldwar-c4i.net/
Western Union abandoned the site and the county seized it for back taxes.
A company in New Jersey bought it from the county for the back taxes as an
investment and tried to rent out space. They managed to draw three customers.
Two commercial remote base two way radio systems were installed there as well
as a microwave relay system carrying HBO and Prism to the local cable TV
operator from a MDS system in Philadelphia.
The Delaware
Repeater Association had its Amateur Radio (HAM)
repeater up there as a public service, free of charge in return for minor
maintenance and keeping the property up. The DRA received a letter stating
basically that if the "following" were not done in 30 days, their
equipment would be confiscated. The "following" was three pages of
things including painting the tower which would be really stupid since it is
not required to be painted and it is galvanized. I saw that letter and
immediately contacted them asking how much they wanted for it. We agreed on a
price and I became the proud owner of the Brandywine Tower. At the time I had
no idea of the historic past it had.
Very soon after I bought it, the Cable operator moved out leaving me with
more expenses than income, but I started doing some strategic marketing
and managed to get it making money again. Then in 1979 two of us got together
and formed Delaware Amateur Supply, selling and servicing ham radio
equipment. Since I had the tower, the obvious extension was to open a two way
radio shop of my own, which I did in the upstars loft of the radio store. That
two-way company was Brandywine Communications Service. I started
selling radios to and servicing radio equipment for many local
companies.
One day the district sales manager for the E.F. Johnson walked into the
store, being a ham radio operator himself. He saw the meager commercial radio
display I had in the store and asked if I wanted to become a Johnson Dealer.
I scraped the money together for the initial stocking order and became the
Johnson dealer for New Castle County, Delaware and Cecil County, Maryland.
Things were slow until they offered to give me an SMRS license that they had
on a tower owned by their then owner, Western Union, of all companies
licensed on a tower in Elkton, MD. We found that there would be problems
moving the license from Elkton, MD to my tower. We negotiated a deal with the
licensee of a system in Atlantic City, NJ to allow me to construct my system
closer than the 75 mile distance required by the FCC at the time in exchange
for allowing him to move his system in Kaolin, PA to my tower rent free and
hook the two systems together to form a 10 channel system instead of two 5
channel ones. With any trunking system, the more channels you have together,
the more efficient the whole system becomes. They failed to load their system
by the deadline and lost their license so the deal was over and I became the
only Johnson Trunking system in Wilmington for awhile.
Along came Nextel buying up 800 MHZ radio spectrum to build their nationwide
system and I sold my system to them and continued to rent them the space for
the system until they decommissioned all the analog systems that they bought
and used the channels for their digital system. Right after I sold the
trunking system we sold Delaware Amateur Supply to Ham Radio Outlet,
based in Anaheim, California. I bought my partner out of his interest in
Brandywine Communications Service and sold the whole company to Delaware
Communications and Electronics the next day.
My partner went back to his autobody work full time and I ended up working
for Delaware
Technical & Community College as the
Telecommunications Manager for both the Stanton and Wilmington Campuses. I
still operate the tower with the help of my oldest ally, the Delaware
Repeater Association doing all the minor maintenance.
They don't pay any rent but I look at it as giving back to the whole
community due to the public service activities that the club is involved in,
providing communications for all the charity walks and runs, not to mention,
running doctors and nurses to the hospitals during the blizzards that hit the
area. During the blizzard of 1996, I was out on the road transporting
emergency personnel from 9:30 AM until 2:30 the next morning to St. Francis
and Christiana hospitals. Pennsylvania had decreed that any vehicle caught on
the road would be stopped and ticketed. We had a special waiver to enter PA
to pick up a surgeon to perform emergency surgery. The PA State Police met
our member at the border, escorted him to the doctor's house, and then back
to the border. A couple of hours later the Delaware State Police called
on us for help. Our dispatcher sent that same member to a development near
the tower. We all got a good laugh when he announced that he had to pull a
Delaware State Police humvee out of a snowbank!
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