Quincy native father of modern automotive electronics

"The radio may have made the car fun, but the alternator made everything else possible," said Elmer H. Wavering, co-inventor of the car radio and alternator and later president of Motorola Inc. (now Motorola Solutions and Motorola Mobility).
Wavering, a consummate inventor, was born on April 22, 1907, in Quincy. He attended St. Boniface Elementary School and became an Eagle Scout. He built his first radio in 1921 at age 14.
When in high school, Wavering worked in the Quincy Radio Laboratory at Seventh and Hampshire. The shop was owned by William Lear, a native of Hannibal, Mo., and later automotive and aviation legend in his own right.
Wavering graduated from Quincy High School in 1925, sold radios at Halbach-Schroeder department store, and later attended George Washington University in Washington, D.C. However, he left the university after his first year. "I was afraid radio would pass me by," he later said. In 1928, he opened Waverite Radio Shop (later Waverite Electronics) with Lee Wright at 334 N. 12th.
One evening in 1929, Wavering and Lear drove their girlfriends to Riverview Park in Quincy to watch the sunset over the Mississippi River. While the setting was already romantic, one of the women commented it would be even nicer if they could listen to music in the car.
Wavering and Lear took a battery-operated radio and strung up an antenna to create a workable, but clumsy, car radio. The radio worked well until the auto's engine was turned on. Then the motor noise and electrical interference from the ignition switch, generator, spark plugs, and other equipment drowned out the sound.
Methodically, Wavering and Lear identified and eliminated each source of electrical interference. When they finally got their radio to work, they took it to a radio convention in Chicago. There they met Paul Galvin, owner of Galvin Manufacturing Corporation. He liked the prototype and invited them to set up shop in his factory in 1930. When they perfected their first radio, they installed it in his Studebaker. Galvin drove his car nearly 800 miles to Atlantic City, N.J., to show off the radio at the 1930 Radio Manufacturers Association convention.
Galvin could not afford a booth, so he parked the car outside the convention hall and cranked up the radio so that passing visitors could hear it. During the Great Depression, Americans were more concerned with necessities than luxuries. "The people needed a loaf of bread – not a car radio," Wavering reflected in October 1989. Nevertheless, Galvin obtained enough orders at the convention to put the radio into production in September 1930.
In those days many companies in the phonograph and radio businesses used the suffix "ola" for their names such as Radiola and Victrola. Because the radio was intended for use in a motor vehicle, Galvin and Wavering called it the "Motorola."
Wavering joined Galvin on a full-time basis in 1932 and sold his interest in Waverite Electronics in January 1933. He was promoted in 1934 to manager of Galvin's automobile radio division, which included the police two-way communications business. He met his wife, Vera Deremiah, a teacher in St. Louis, on one of his trips to sell his radio. They married in 1935 and had a child, Lynne, in 1942.
"In the 1940s, Wavering coordinated a national effort to supply quartz crystals for the radios and radar used by the U.S. military. "We went to Brazil to get the best crystals available for our radios, and we found that by the time we arrived, Germany and Japan had already bought all the best quartz," Wavering said in March 1989. So, he developed artificial quartz out of silica sand, which was lauded later as second in importance only to the Manhattan Project for its strategic role in the war. In recognition of his contribution to the war effort, he received a War Production "E" Award from the U.S. government."
Wavering also co-invented the "Handie Talkie," a mobile two-way communication device used by the military during the war. Later it became known as the Walkie Talkie.
In 1944, Wavering became the company's vice president of auto products. In 1947, Galvin Manufacturing Corporation was renamed Motorola Inc., in recognition of its most famous brand.
In 1948, Wavering played a pivotal role in the location of a Motorola plant in Quincy. Motorola officials had nearly decided against a move to Quincy because of opposition from residents near the proposed plant site and possibly other manufacturers who feared the effects of a spike in labor demand.
City and industrial leaders joined forces to overcome these obstacles and formally invited Motorola to Quincy. Still skeptical Motorola directors ended in a tie vote on the Quincy move. Wavering cast the tie-breaker, and Motorola came to Quincy. Credit was given to the quality of the Quincy workforce as a selling point.
The Motorola plant began production in the former roller rink at Baldwin Park at 30th and Maine. Later the company added locations at 17th and Locust and Third and Broadway. In 1956, the company built a new plant covering 185,000 square feet on a 35-acre lot on the southeast corner of 30th and Locust to consolidate its operations. That same year Wavering became Motorola's executive vice president of auto products.
Expansions through the 1960s resulted in a facility exceeding 850,000 square feet. Over time, it included the production of Motorola radios, phonographs, automotive products, and television sets. At its peak the plant employed approximately 3,500 people and was the area's largest employer.
Wavering never stopped inventing. In the 1950s, he developed the first automotive alternator, which led to such luxuries as power windows, power seats, and eventually air conditioning. He contributed to Lear's development of the 8-track tape cartridge player, and Wavering helped create the first industry standards for videocassettes and discs. He also contributed to the creation of the radio for NASA's Lunar Rover in the Apollo missions.
Wavering was "reaching for something bigger," a philosophy that let him "ride the leading edge of the information and high-technology age," he later said.
Despite the successes, there were challenges. The automobile industry was "very reluctant to let us do what we could do with electronics in the post-war day," Wavering later said. For example, Wavering co-developed the intermittent windshield wiper in the 1940s, but automotive industry executives thought it would break a driver's concentration. The first patent ran out 17 years before General Motors installed the first intermittent wiper in the 1970s. The electronic ignition was tabled because auto executives feared maintenance problems.
Nevertheless, Wavering contemplated a bright future in 1989. "As electronics become more accepted, drivers will find they have very little to do in driving the car. Computers will operate virtually everything the driver does now. Automobiles will become much safer and much more comfortable."
Wavering became president and chief operating officer of Motorola in 1964 and later served as vice chairman of its board. He retired in 1972. Two years later the company sold the television manufacturing operations to Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd, of Japan. That company closed the Quincy plant in 1975-76. Motorola had already planned to relocate its remaining manufacturing operations to other plants.
Quincy honored Wavering's life-long contributions by dedicating a 22-acre park in his name in 1970. He and his wife Vera donated $635,000 over time to the Quincy Park District for the development of what is now Wavering Park and the Wavering Aquatic Center.
Wavering wanted a "use" park to complement the many scenic parks in Quincy. The parks today boast pools, ball diamonds, shelter houses, tennis courts, a miniature golf course, lake, paddleboats, Frisbee golf, archery, and other activities. An ice-skating rink was originally contemplated as well.
The Waverings served as grand marshals of the Quincy Dogwood Festival Parade in 1972. Wavering received an honorary degree in technology and communications from Quincy University (then Quincy College) in 1977, and donated funds to enable the college to buy a communications system to link its North Campus on Seminary Road and its main campus at 18th and College.
Wavering received the WGEM Community Service Award in 1980 and the St. Mary Hospital Heritage Award in 1989. He was inducted into the Automotive Hall of Fame in 1989. In 1991 Gov. Jim Edgar presented him with the Lincoln Academy of Illinois' Order of Lincoln, the highest honor Illinois can bestow on an Illinois resident or native.
Wavering loved Quincy. "My hometown has been wonderful to me," he said. "The elementary and secondary school system gave me the educational background to accomplish the things I've accomplished. I not only had the technical background, I had the math and science and language background to do the things necessary to become president of a company like Motorola. I had little higher education, and I have always felt I owed Quincy a lot."
Wavering died on Nov. 20, 1998, in Naples, Fla. A video biography of Wavering and other information regarding his life are available at the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County and the Quincy Public Library.
Hal Oakley is a lawyer with Schmiedeskamp, Robertson, Neu & Mitchell LLP and a civic volunteer. He has authored several legal articles and edited, compiled and/or contributed to books and articles on local history.
Sources
"The Elmer Wavering Legacy," a video biography narrated by WGN news anchor Robert
Jordon, Video Family Biographies (2008).
"The Story of MOTOROLA in Quincy – A Tribute To Its Men and Women," The Quincy Herald-Whig, June 16, 1968.
"Motorola plan to close by first quarter of 1976," The Quincy Herald-Whig, June 4, 1975.
"Waverings' gifts for a ‘people's use park'," The Quincy Herald-Whig, September 1979.
"Fund drive to build Wavering Aquatic Center set," The Quincy Herald-Whig, March 16, 1980.
"Waverings believe it's ‘fun' to give during their lifetime," The Quincy Herald-Whig, March 16, 1980.
"Drive leaders say pool can be bargain for city," The Quincy Herald-Whig, March 16, 1980.
"Waverings see pool dream come true," The Quincy Herald-Whig, May 19, 1980.
"Elmer and Vera Wavering: couple with many hometowns," The Quincy Herald-Whig, January 21, 1981.
"Wavering pool a ‘splashing' success," The Quincy Herald-Whig, May 4, 1981.
"Vera Wavering dies at 82, was partner in philanthropy that created aquatic center," The Quincy Herald-Whig, May 22, 1988.
"Vera Wavering bequeaths $50,000 to Quincy Park District ," The Quincy Herald-Whig, October 19, 1988.
"St. Mary Hospital to honor Elmer Wavering for his loyalty and generosity to Quincy," The Quincy Herald-Whig, March 12, 1989.
"QC reception fetes Wavering," The Quincy Herald-Whig, May 24, 1989.
"Thank you, Mr. Wavering," The Quincy Herald-Whig, May 25, 1989.
"Hospital honors Wavering," The Quincy Herald-Whig, May 25, 1989.
"Sunset was inspiration for Wavering's first automobile radio," The Quincy Herald-Whig, May 26, 1989.
"Quincy native's pioneer spirit earns him place in Automotive Hall of Fame," The Quincy Herald-Whig, October 11, 1989.





