Feature
Story/ Oliver (RayJack)
Stubblefield Photo
Top: The Chilldren, their
spouses, and grandchildren of
Oliver J. Stubblefield
(1897-1964)
and
Priscilla
Alden
(1904-1989)
at
Christmas, 1989. Priscilla
Alden-Stubblefield is seated at
table left, in red dress, between
grandson, Scott
and daughter, Olive Mae
Stubblefield. Jackie, is standing
far left. Troy,
Priscilla
and Josie
Cory
- Stubblefield are pictured just
above his mother. Troy named his
daughter, after his mother.
Alden
Stubblefield
is not pictured. He was on Air
Force assignment to Holland.
Son of
William Jefferson Stubblefield
(Capt. Billy) 1830-1874 and
Victoria Bowman. Victoria died at
age 32 of Scarlet Fever. Nathan
is buried near his father and
mother in the Bowman cemetery
founded by her father. CHILDREN
OF NATHAN B. STUBBLEFIELD AND ADA
MAE: 1883
Frederic (died 6 mos old
1884)
1885 Carrie F. / No Children
1887 Bernard
Bowman
-- Nickname:
Bernie
/ No Children
1890 Pattie Lee / No Children
1892 Victoria Edison / No
Children
1895 Nathan Franklin / No
Children 1897
- 1964 Oliver J. -- Nickname:
RayJack Father
of / Keith
(Troy)
Stubblefield.
1901 Helen Joe / No Children
1905 William Tesla (died 17 mos
old 1906)
GRANDCHILDREN
OF NATHAN B. STUBBLEFIELD AND ADA
MAE: Only
Oliver J. Stubblefield and
Priscilla Alden:
Married:
Sept 22, 1921, Wichita, Kansas,
had Children, They
are:
NATHAN
B. STUBBLEFIELD --
(1860-1928)
Wireless Telephony -- AM radio
Firewire -
1892 -- 1902 All-in-One Radio
Patent -- 1908 Nine
Years Before Smart-Daaf Boys
Marconi and Deforest
mastered sending Dit Dahs around
the family home in Italy, and
DeForest finished his studies at
Yale, Nathan Stubblefield was the
patent holder and owner of his
own mechanical telephone,
telephone company and telephone
system. By 1892, Nathan's
vibrating phone could transmit
voice without wires from grounded
electromagnetic wave energy, then
through the atmosphere to a
companion receiver. It was the
17-year-old Rainey T. Wells (b.
Dec. 25, 1875, d. June 15, 1958)
who attentively heard his first
words over a wireless telephone
in 1892, at
Teléph-on-délgreen,
now Murray State
University.
Fifteen
years later, Rainey, now a
judge in
the Kentucky Calloway Court
system, opened his 1907 Christmas
Day birthday toast with the
truism that most legal scholars
quote on the first day in law
school, to keep a step or two
ahead of the freshman. "De
minimis non curat lex" ("The law
does not concern itself with
trifles").
-----By
1898, Nathan's portable telephone
could transmit voice as far as
one mile through the atmosphere
&endash; by means of his newly
patented firewire, "electrolytic
coil aerial" and a special loop
antenna connected to his
transmitter.
-----But
So What!
Shortly
after receiving his earth
electrolytic
battery patent, (1898) --
Nathan commenced selling
franchises to various investors,
to help finance and market his
wireless demonstrations held in
Philadelphia, New York and
Washington, D.C., in 1902. He
used the orchards around his
Teléph-on-délgreen
Industrial School, and the lawn
surrounding of the Court house in
Murray to display different uses
for his telephone and wireless
system. *(See Footnote.) * .
-----By
leaving a remote wireless
receiver on overnight, sitting in
the barn, the unit operated as a
wireless microphone and listening
surveillance system. The
electricity being emitted from
the earth was an unlimited free
flowing uni-directional stream of
electricity, which never switched
off and did not diminish with the
time of day or length of use.
These little coils had the
ability to convert an electric
current into alternating
radio-frequency waves when
passing through a field of action
created by the human voice.
*(See
Footnote, John Hopi.)
-----These
series of pulses which varied in
strength, (amplitude) &endash;
could then be transmitted through
the atmosphere by a coil aerial
placed near the field of action,
to one or more companion wireless
systems. One unit was designed
with output sockets to connect to
the local Murray telephone
exchange for wired online
broadcasting. (See
Chapter 05, "The Phony Craze" --
for more
details.) In
November 1906, when Nathan
------
Please
Enter Your Name next to the Name
of The Person you are related to
-- found in the Comment Section
below. Also, please state
relationship, if your name is
different from the last name of
STUBBLEFIELD or any of the
members of the Kentucky "Big
Six", please clarify..
------Comments
on the MONETARY CLAIMS made by
the Wireless Telephone
Stubblefield Family Trust Fund,
on behalf of the the inventors
and patent holders of the
original 1907 Wireless Telephone
patent, would be appreciated. The
relevancy of Wi-Fi to the
Internet and to the Wireless
Radio Telephone frequencies sold
to the general public for over
$30 Billion, since 1996, would
also be appreciated.
Buy A Book or DVD Where Nathan
B.
Stubblefield
is Acknowledged and the truth comes
out. "Disappointments
Are Great!"
Beverly B. Stubblefield
andRebecca Wilson /
William Jefferson Stubblefield
(Capt. Billy) /
Victoria Bowman /
CHILDREN OF CAPT.
BILLY AND VICTORIA
BOWMAN:
Walter W. Stubblefield /
Nathan B. Stubblefield /
James Franklin Stubblefield /
William Victor Stubblefield /
CHILDREN OF CAPT.
BILLY AND CLARISSA
JONES
Alene Stubblefield /
CHILDREN OF NATHAN B.
STUBBLEFIELD AND ADA MAE:
Victoria Edison Stubblefield
/
Carrie F, Stubblefield /
Bernard (Bernie) Stubblefield
/
Pattie Lee Stubblefield /
Nathan Franklin Stubblefield
/
Oliver J (RayJack) Stubblefield
/
Helen J Stubblefield /
DESCENDANTS OF THE CO-OWNER'S
of the 1907 NATHAN B.
STUBBLEFIELD Wireless Telephone
Patent
MEMBERS OF THE "BIG SIX"
01. Senator Conn Linn /
02. B. F. Schroeder /
03. R. Downs /
04. J. D. Roulett /
05. Geo. c. McLarin /
06. John P. McElrath /
and
Samuel E. Bynum / Rainey
T. Wells /
DESCENDANTS OF THE STUDENTS OF
THE NATHAN B. STUBBLEFIELD
industrial School and
Tele-phon-del-green