John Logie Baird demonstrated the world's first mechanical television system on 26 January 1926.
See Londonist's excellent post . We love it when our friends do the work for us!
John Logie Baird demonstrated the world's first mechanical television system on 26 January 1926.
See Londonist's excellent post . We love it when our friends do the work for us!
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Television
From The Register: "On the afternoon of 26 January 2017 – exactly 91 years to...
In 1926 in this house John Logie Baird, 1888 - 1946, first demonstrated telev...
John Logie Baird John (Logie) Baird, the inventor of the first television, wa...
Our picture of the plaque is taken from the NW9 section of the excellent and ...
The stone was erected on the base of one of Baird's television masts. Our pic...
Inventor and founder of the British rubber industry.  Born Wiltshire.  After schooling he moved to London and is recorded in1815 as a coach builder in Pulteney Street with a shop in St James's Stre...
Equitable Life, the world's oldest mutual insurer, started business in 1762 in the parsonage of St Nicholas Acons in Nicholas Lane. It pioneered scientific life assurance by basing premiums on age ...
Chemist.  Born King David's Lane, Shadwell.  While a student at the Royal College of Chemistry, aged 18 he discovered the first aniline dyestuff while working in his home laboratory.  He dropped o...
Physiologist and anthropologist. Born Aberdeenshire. Trained as a doctor and practiced in Siam but returned to become an academic and researched in the fields of anatomy, physiology, palaeontology ...
Born Bologna. Arrived in London, with his mother, in 1896 to patent his method of communication without wires. In 1897 he established the Wireless Telegraph & Signal Company, which survived und...
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