Sponsored by Utah State History
 


History Home

Digital Collections Home

Place an Order

Philo T. Farnsworth Television Tubes Collection

STATE HISTORY MS C 445

Browse photos of the collection

Philo T. Farnsworth was born in Beaver, Utah, in 1906 and attended Brigham Young University. While a young teenager, he developed a theory for the electronic transmission of images. an He graduated from Brigham Young University in 1925. In 1927 he demonstrated the first working model of a television system.

His invention, the "image dissector" tube, divided an image into particles that, when transmitted, could be restored to form a replica of the original image. Over the next several years, the Farnsworth Television and Radio Corporation continued to create and perfect cathode ray tubes.

After winning a patent dispute with RCA, Farnsworth held the patents for the technology from which commercial television was developed. Farnsworth died in 1971.

State History acquired this collection of Farnsworth's cathode ray tubes from the Hansen Planetarium.

Print this Page. This page was last updated {date}. For research questions, contact the Research Center. For comments about this website, contact the webmaster.