-
Philips 2634
Philips - Enlarge image
Philips 2634
- Object:
Wireless
- Place of origin:
Holland (designed)
Surrey, England (made) - Date:
1931 (designed)
1931 (made) - Artist/Maker:
Philips (designer)
Philips Lamps Ltd (maker) - Materials and Techniques:
Bakelite
- Credit Line:
Bequeathed by Mr David Rush
- Museum number:
W.25-1981
- Gallery location:
In Storage
Radio broadcasting was made possible in the UK in 1920 by Marconi’s experimental radio station in Essex. The station was based in an ex-army hut in Writtle and daily half-hour broadcasts of news and light entertainment were made. Marconi brought together the work of many earlier pioneers to create broadcast radio, including Michael Faraday, James Clark Maxwell and Heinrich Hertz.
Radio became a popular form of entertainment through developments such as the founding of the British Broadcasting Company (BBC), the widespread use of short-wave radio in the mid 1920s and an increase in the number of broadcasting stations throughout the country.
This is an early example of a mass-produced mains table model, with an integrated speaker, housed in a plastic cabinet. The plastic is Bakelite, made from phenol-formaldehyde, a compound suitable for moulding complex shapes in high-speed industrial processes.

