Subj : Ham Radio History (C)
To   : ALL USERS
From : DARYL STOUT
Date : Fri Mar 04 2016 12:03 am

CQ

The telegraph call CQ was born on the English Telegraph nearly a century
ago as a signal meaning "All stations. A notification to all postal
telegraph offices to receive the message." Its meaning was close to the
present meanings of QNC and QST. Like many other telegraph terms which
originated on the landlines, CQ was brought over into radio and used as
a general call to all ships by the Marconi Company. Other companies used
KA until the London Convention of 1912, which adopted CQ as the
international general call or "attention" signal. CQ still means,
literally, "attention" but in amateur radio its meaning is perhaps more
accurately described by Thomas Raddell who compared it to yelling "Hey,
Mac!" down a drain pipe.

But why the letters CQ? It's apparently from the French word for safety...
or, as intended here, pay attention.


--- BgNet 1.0a12 - The Thunderbolt BBS  wx1der.dyndns.org  Little Rock, AR