Transceiver

This is a rare piece of surviving modern technology in the HBC Museum Collection, but exactly where this transceiver was operated remains a mystery.

Written by Cortney Pachet

Posted November 15, 2019

This transceiver, model SB-60, was designed for radio communication across great distances, particularly in remote locations or aboard seafaring vessels.

Manufactured by Spilsbury & Tindall Radio Communications Limited, a Vancouver-based company that operated from 1941 to 1972, the transceiver features a ventilated steel mesh cover with seven dials, including one for switching between channels — B was reserved for HBC communications. The hand-held microphone hooks on to the side of the box.

Exactly where this transceiver was operated remains a mystery, but it was in use by the Hudson’s Bay Company around 1968. Radio communication was a welcome and essential convenience for northern HBC posts, which previously relied on written correspondence to receive and to dispatch information.

This is a rare piece of surviving modern technology in the HBC Museum Collection, as a 1987 memo notes: “Old HBC radio equipment seems to be scarce.”

The same memo states that when Tom Roach — a researcher who also wrote for The Beaver — “was looking into the possibility of the National Museum of Science & Technology doing a display re. early HBC radio network, he was having difficulty finding equipment.”

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Cortney Pachet is the assistant curator of the HBC Collection at the Manitoba Museum.

This article as orginally published in the December 2019-January 2020 issue of Canada’s History.

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