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His face was the
fist in the world to appear on the television screen
He smiled at sneers, disarmed
hostility and when others scoffed he backed inventor John
Logie Baird to the hilt. This is the story I am
proud to tell, writes the "Belfast Telegraph"
Television correspondent, ROBERT RAY.
THIS is a story I am proud to tell.
When
you switch on your T.V. set to-night reflect on, these
points: it was an Ulsterman who came to the aid of John
Logie Baird, the inventor of television, when he was
really up against it, restored his confidence and hope and
assisted him in the formation of the company that gave the
world vision by radio.
It was an Ulsterman who helped and encouraged Baird in
those early days of experiment and who travelled with him
to the U.S. and European countries. Talking T.V. and
explaining to most incredulous audiences the wonder of its
possibilities.
It was a Ulsterman whose face was the first in the world
ever seen on a television screen.
But back to the beginning and the opening years
of the century when a young Belfast boy, Oliver
Hutchinson, fresh from the city's technical school, set
out for Glasgow and his first job as a motor engineering
apprentice at the Argyll Motor Works.
At the same bench was another prentice, a Scottish
minister's son named John Logie Baird. They became
friends'. Then, their training days over, t was not until
the Great war that again Hutchinson by this time a Captain
the 6th Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, Baird also a
soldier.
* * *
IN the trenches the two former engineering apprentices
talked of heir ambitions. Baird spoke of his dream-the
invention of a system of relaying pictures through the air
and Hutchinson, a mechanical genius in his own right with
a great future ahead in civilian life, of his plans. But
he was a good listener, too, and he was fascinated by the
idea of television.
The end of hostilities brought another parting.
Hutchinson returned to his base, now in London, and
prospered in various commercial enterprises.
A few years later he was walking own the Strand when he
noticed a familiar figure on the crowded pavement. He
paused, looked and looked again. It was Baird. hey went
for a cup of tea and they talked-or Baird talked. He had
been working on his dream, those pictures that could be
sent through the air. Only now, it was o longer a dream.
He knew he could do it. He had mastered the principle.
He was on the brink of a great discovery, but he was
all but broke. He had told his story to others, but there
was no-one who understood, no-one who believed him, The
dream -television-was over,
The Ulsterman who was again the listener, patient,
sympathetic, intelligent, had other ideas. Television was
Just beginning.
Within a few weeks he had given Baird back something he
thought he had lost for ever-faith in humanity and the
courage to go on. And he had also provided him with the
funds to purchase equipment and set up research studios.
But make no mistake about this. Oliver Hutchinson was
no idle, rich, sleeping partner backing a great man-and
Baird was a great man-with an inventive ideal. Hutchinson
could speak Baird's own language, could, and did, help him
with his intricate problem.
They worked together, these two until that memorable
day in 1926 when at his first demonstration it was the
Belfastman's face that was Televised- the first true T.V.
picture in the world.
Who was this Oliver Hutchinson? A son of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel Corbett Hutchinson, of Combermere House.
Hillsborough (County Down), he was born and educated in
Belfast, and died in April 1944. His brother, the late
Captain S. J. Hutchinson, was for many, years a director
of J. B. Ferguson, Ltd., Chichester Street, and also of
another well known motor engineering firm, Hutchinson,
Haddow and Co., Ltd., of Oxford Street.
Living in Belfast to-day are his three sisters: Mrs.
Samuel Leith, 57 Edgecumbe Gardens-her son, Dr. J. D. F.
Leith is Editor of "The Medical World"---Mrs. A. Johnston,
6 Wandsworth Road, and Mrs. J. G. Connor, 29 Orpen Road,
Finaghy.
It was from Mr. Sam Leith that T heard much of Oliver's
story, which, if I may drop a hint to the B.B.C., should
surely be of very special interest to their programme
planners. But perhaps you feel the tale would come better
from someone not in anyway connected. with the Hutchinson
family.
***
ALL right, here is Mr. Sydney A. Moseley,
who, I believe, wrote the first book on T.V. ever
published, and who was also closely associated with Logie
Baird. Back in 1929 he had this to say about Oliver:
"When the story of television comes to be
written the name of Oliver George Hutchinson will be
emblazoned therein at the one great power who translated
the new science from a big idea into big business.
"Geniuses are repeatedly un-commercial, "
Moseley went on. "But John Logie Baird is somewhat of an
exception for a more level-headed man it is impossible to
meet. Nevertheless he will be the first to admit that
without the vision, the extraordinary energy, the intense
belief and thorough going business mind of this man
Hutchinson, television in Europe - certainly in England -
would not have advanced to the position occupies to-day.
"The Gods were indeed in happy mood when they threw
these two together . . Baird, a ro** genius whose ideas
chased another with such rapidity that he had no
time-indeed if he had inclination-to convert them into
practice; Hutchinson of inexhaustible energy, a fighter to
the last ditch.
"Pioneers of science are usually left high and dry when
it comes to cashing in, but Captain Hutchinson has proved
himself to be a loyal colleague all through.
"Once realising, as he did so instantaneously, the germ
of Baird's television idea, he seized upon and wrestled
with a world of sceptics, astonishing a centre who one
used to think had no more room left for surprise--The
City.
"Later, London was the first to pay tribute to
the business genius of the young Ulster man who had smiled
at the sneers and disarmed the hostility as and when he
met it"
***
MOSELEY'S story goes on to tell Hutchinson formed
the company and became joint managing director the Baird
Television Development Company and how he induced some of
the soundest men in the world. Lord Ampthill and Sir
Edward Manville to join him and Baird on its Board.
And Moseley finishes like this, "The present position
of television in England and Europe generally is such that
Hutchinson can afford to look back with placidity and
pride on work nobly done."
"The tributes that reach London in regard to the work
accomplished for this science show his reputation has
become world wide."
So there you have it. Television In your homes-and a
fair anount of the credit due to a man from Northern
Ireland.
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