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“Send SOS,” one of the Titanic’s radio operators supposedly said to another after the famous ship struck that infamous iceberg. “It’s the new call and besides this may be your last chance to send it.”
That “new call” is 100 years old today, and people around the world who owe their lives to that piece of Morse code may reflect this morning on its importance.
In the past century, “SOS” has become a firm part of popular culture used in everything from DIY programme titles to Abba hits. But it began life in a far more serious setting after being adopted by the international community on July 1, 1908, as the globally recognised distress signal for ships at sea.
At that time voices could not yet be carried across the airwaves and sailors needed a standard means of saying, in Morse code, that they were in trouble.
Until then, the most commonly used distress call was the “CQD” signal, which was open to misinterpretation. After much deliberation, SOS was chosen to replace it because the signal – three dots, three dashes and three more dots – is such a clear message to send in Morse code.
There was some early success for the new system a year later when the Cunard liner the SS Slavonia was stricken off the Azores. She sent out an SOS and not a single life was lost.
Even so, not everybody was convinced instantly, and it took the tragedy of the Titanic to reveal just how vital a universal system was. After the collision in April 1912, the ship’s radio operators sent out both the old CQD and the new SOS signals, but some ships in the area ignored both, thinking that they were having a party. They soon learnt otherwise, as international headlines told how Jack Phillips, the Titanic’s first radio operator, and 1,500 others had been lost along with the “unsinkable” ship. The new SOS distress signal was rarely ignored after that.
Of course, technology has moved on dramatically since 1908 and only very occasionally are the telltale dots and dashes that have saved countless lives employed today.
In the Times Archive: on July 2, 1909 wireless telegraphy saved the Cunard liner Slavonia
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It may be dead commerically, but on shipboard it can be used to send a distress when the other equipment can't operate... The "Numbers Stations" still use it. WA6EEB
Gregory Kordes, McKinleyville, Ca. , USA
Morse is dead in the commercial world, but very much alive in the world of ham radio.
Ron, Eagle Lake, USA
"Morse is dead" is a highly popular sentiment. So are ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics, and old pre-Helenic linear scripts, but people still read them. And if you listen to the right radio frequencies, you'll still hear thousands of stations still speaking Morse.
Steve, aka -. ---.. -.-, .--, .-
Steve, Columbus, Oh, USA
Three very simple phrases and easy for all to remember. Better metricate it in some way, that is bound to bring an improvement. Plus it seems to have Anglo Saxon origins so that is another reason to interfere.
D.L. Stephens, York, England
With the titanic they started with QCD and then alternated sending both the QCD *and* SOS messages.
josh, boston, USA
But Ive seen the message sent from the Titanic, as received by Celtic, and it says: CQD require assistance position 41.46 N 50.14 W struck iceberg Titanic. Not SOS.
Mark Burgess, London, UK
its so beautiful, when international bodies put their differences aside and decide on helping the human race. sometimes it costs nothing all they need do is shed their ego. i wonder why its so difficul for them to do this
Irabor, Lagos, Nigeria
Well, even though morse code is now not longer recognized, those in the know will be able to communicate.
chris, Ignacio, USA
There was an arguement as to what "SOS" actually means. To some it mean't "Save Our Souls". It was a simple easily remembered sequence in the International Morse Code that anyone would recognize. Only radio hobbyist (HAMS) use it much anymore since all the new digital modes have been devised.
Russ, Pasco WA., USA