A few hours before the flight took off, a mechanic inspected the Halifax bomber being used for a test run but failed to properly tighten a tappet bolt on the outer starboard engine. Flying at about 300 feet, the engine caught fire, and the fire quickly engulfed the entire airplane, causing it to flip and crash upside down. The entire RAF crew and the civilian engineers who were working on the radar system had no chance to escape and everyone aboard perished in the crash.
One of the engineers on board the ill-fated flight was 38-year-old Alan Blumlein who was the architect of the H25 radar system. At the time of the crash, Blumlein already held multiple patents for an amazing array of audio and electrical circuits. In fact, he was so accomplished that Prime Minister Winston Churchill ordered the news of his death to be withheld completely so as not to give Hitler any positive news whatsoever. With the wartime censorship of Blumlein’s death came the near loss of all of his technical achievements. Because of the War, Alan Blumlein almost became a forgotten man but if not for his early death and the vagaries of war, Blumlein would be held in the same esteem as Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Edison.
Blumlein was born in 1903 in London. In an interview before his death, his sister said Blumlein could not read until he was twelve. In the same interview, Blumlein countered by saying “yes, but I knew a lot of quadratic equations.” At age seven he fixed the doorbell on the family home and presented his father with a bill, signed “Alan Blumlein, Electrical Engineer.” Unfortunately, how much he charged for his services has been lost to time.
In 1933 he married Doreen Lane, who was said to be every bit his intellectual equal, and by all accounts, Doreen Lane and Alan Blumlein were a great match for each other.
But first we need to fly back to the US and talk about Bell Labs, based at the time in Holmdel and Murray Hill, New Jersey. Bell Labs developed the synchronous sound system that gave us the motion picture “talkie,” the transistor, trans-Atlantic telephone communication, the mp3 and the earliest computers, just to name a couple of minor things. Bell Labs was responsible in some way for almost all of the technology we take for granted today.
In the early 1940s, engineers at Bell Labs were working on developing a two-channel recording and playback system for music. What they didn’t realize was that Alan Blumlein already held the patent for his system he called ‘stereo.’
Shortly after that he developed a way to cut the grooves on each side of an acetate record to play in stereo – one side of the groove for the right and one for the left. And pretty much to the joy of everyone but the engineers at Bell Labs, that is how stereo came to be.