Edward Harper was an engineer who travelled to Colombo in 1921 to work in the Ceylon Telegraph Department. Harper was appointed Chief Engineer. He had an innovative mind and his passion was broadcasting.
Harper together with Ceylonese and English radio enthusiasts founded the Ceylon Wireless Club. They experimented with radio broadcasts in 1923 the first experiments took place from a tiny room in the Central Telegraph Office - gramophone music was broadcast with the aid of a small transmitter captured from a German submarine. The transmitter was built by Ceylon Telegraph engineers. This was historic because it happened three years after the inauguration of broadcasting in Europe. Ceylon plays an equal role in the early beginnings of broadcasting alongside Europe and the United States of America. Optical Telegraf of Claude Chappe on the Litermont near Nalbach, Germany Telegraph and telegram redirect here. ... World map showing Europe A satellite composite image of Europe Europe is one of the seven traditional continents of the Earth. ...
Colombo Radio
On December 16th 1925 a regular broadcasting service was launched in Colombo. Edward Harper is known as the 'Father of broadcasting in Ceylon.' The radio station in 1925 was known as Colombo Radio, adopting the call sign, 'Colombo Calling.' As a result of his efforts and that of the pioneering Ceylonese engineers Radio Ceylon came into being - it is the oldest radio station in South Asia. // The Launching of Broadcasting in Ceylon Radio Ceylon is the oldest radio station in South Asia. ... Map of South Asia (see note on Kashmir). ...
Eighty Years of Broadcasting in Sri Lanka
In December 2005, Sri Lanka celebrated 80 years in broadcasting, a historic landmark in the world of broadcasting - thanks to the pioneering efforts of broadcasting giants like Edward Harper. In January 2007 the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation, formerly known as Radio Ceylon will commemorate forty years as a public corporation.
HarperÕs interest lies in graphic translation, where a photograph is taken and the simplified using computer imaging until the unity of the image begins to decay.
Rendered with the contrived simplicity of Warhol paint-by-number, HarperÕs Columbia Road is a carefully manipulated still-life, focusing on the hidden abjection of domesticity.
Harper takes a photograph and then simplifies it on his computer, building it up from areas of continuous colour before projecting the image onto a large canvas and painting it.
EdwardHarper was born in Bloomfield on April 25, 1921, the son of Fred and Verdie Harper.
On Sept. 16, 1940, Edward married Theola Geraldine Cardwell in Bloomfield.
Edward is survived by his wife of 65 years, Geraldine; two sons, Nolan Eugene Harper of Mancos, Colo., and James EdwardHarper of Hesperus, Colo.; one brother, Charles Harper of Springfield; and two sisters, Louise Banks of Bloomfield and Betty Banken of Dexter; four grandchildren; two step-grandsons; and seven great-grandchildren.