(Xenia, Ohio - May 19, 2017) - The CQ Amateur Radio
Hall of Fame has 18 new members for 2017, CQ magazine announced today.
This brings to 310 the total number of members inducted since the hall's
establishment in 2001.
The CQ Amateur Radio Hall of Fame honors those
individuals, whether licensed hams or not, who have made significant
contributions to amateur radio; and those amateurs who have made
significant contributions either to amateur radio, to their professional
careers or to some other aspect of life on our planet.
The 2017 inductees (listed alphabetically) are:
- King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand, HS1A (SK)
- John
Brosnahan, W0UN (SK) - President of Alpha Power, NOAA physicist
and instrumental in design and construction of the HAARP facility
in Alaska.
- Garrett Brown, W3AFF - Inventor of the
Steadicam, which earned him both Oscar and Emmy awards for
filmmaking technology
- Britton Chance, W2IBK
(SK) - Pioneer in magnetic imaging; MIT professor, team leader in
MIT Radiation Lab developing WWII radar; US Olympic gold
medalist (sailing, 1952)
- John Crockett, W3KH -
Repeater coordination pioneer; developed Southeastern Repeater Assn
(SERA) Universal Coordination System; managed SCHEART system of
linked repeaters in hospitals; VP Engineering for SC Educational TV
network
- Julius T. Freeman, KB2OFY (SK) - Tuskegee
Airman and Congressional Gold Medal recipient; frequent speaker at
schools and civic organizations
- Limor Fried,
AC2SN - Founder of Adafruit Industries, major supplier of
open-source electronics to the Maker community; honored by
President Obama in 2016 as a "Champion of Change" and by the
Internet of Things Institute as one of the 25 most influential
women in the IoT industry
- Robin Haighton, VE3FRH
(SK) - Founding member of Amateur Radio on the International Space
Station (ARISS), former president of AMSAT-NA
- David
Honess, M6DNT - Developed AstroPi project, which sent two
Raspberry Pi computers to the International Space Station as
platforms for students on Earth to write and run their own computer
code in space; honored for this work with the Sir Arthur Clarke
Award, presented by the Arthur C. Clarke Foundation and the British
Interplanetary Society
- Linda Ross Hufft (SK) – Co-founder of Optoelectronics and leader in the
amateur radio industry in the 1980s and ‘90s. Built company from small
specialty operation to a leader in the digital frequency counter
industry
- Pete Kemp, KZ1Z (SK) - Author and educator, directly responsible for licensing over 700 new hams
- Kristen
McIntyre, K6WX - Apple software engineer and inventor (her name is
on 22 granted or pending patents), promoter of STEM (science,
technology, engineering and math) subjects for girls through
various talks and YouTube presentations
- Pat McPherson, WW9E (SK) - Founder and longtime coordinator of SATERN (Salvation Army Team Emergency Radio Network)
- Andy Nguyen, VK3YT - Pico-ballooner, pioneered round-the-world microballoon flights carrying amateur radio
- Tim
Peake, KG5BVI - UK astronaut very active in ARISS program during
time on International Space Station; coordinated ISS end of the
AstroPi project (see David Honess, above)
- Mike
Santana, WB6TEB (SK) - Two-way radio engineer, designed Clegg
FM-76 220-MHz transceiver and President line of CB rigs, favorites
for conversion to 10 meters
- Allan Steinfeld, W2TN,
ex-KL7HIR (SK) - Longtime Race Director of the New York City
Marathon, considered one of the fathers of the modern running
movement
- Gerald Youngblood, K5SDR - Pioneer of software defined radio (SDR) and founder of FlexRadio
Two new members each are also being inducted into the CQ DX and Contest Halls of Fame at the respective Dayton DX and Contest dinners. Their names will be announced separately.
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