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"Ham: a poor operator. A
'plug.'"
That's the definition of the word given in G. M. Dodge's The
Telegraph Instructor even before radio. The definition has never changed in wire
telegraphy. The first wireless operators were landline telegraphers who left their offices
to go to sea or to man the coastal stations. They brought with them their language and
much of the tradition of their older profession. In those early days, spark was king and
every station occupied the same wavelength--or, more accurately perhaps, every station
occupied the whole spectrum with its broad spark signal. Government stations, ships,
coastal stations and the increasingly numerous amateur operators all competed for time and
signal supremacy in each other's receivers. Many of the amateur stations were very
powerful. Two amateurs, working across town, could effectively jam all the other operators
in the area. When this happened, frustrated commercial operators would call the ship whose
weaker signals had been blotted out by the amateurs and say "SRI OM THOSE #&$!@
HAMS ARE JAMMING YOU."Amateurs, possibly unfamiliar with the real meaning of the
term, picked it up and applied it to themselves in true "Yankee Doodle" fashion
and wore it with pride. As the years advanced, the original meaning has completely
disappeared.
Acknowledgement : ARRL homepage