This is the first biography of the important but long-forgotten American
inventor Charles Francis Jenkins (1867-1934). Historian Donald G.
Godfrey documents the life of Jenkins from his childhood in Indiana and
early life in the West to his work as a prolific inventor whose
productivity was cut short by an early death. Jenkins was an inventor
who made a difference.
As one of America's greatest independent inventors, Jenkins's passion
was to meet the needs of his day and the future. In 1895 he produced the
first film projector able to show a motion picture on a large screen,
coincidentally igniting the first film boycott among his Quaker viewers
when the film he screened showed a woman's ankle. Jenkins produced the
first American television pictures in 1923, and developed the only fully
operating broadcast television station in Washington, D.C. transmitting
to ham operators from coast to coast as well as programming for his
local audience.
Godfrey's biography raises the profile of C. Francis Jenkins from his
former place in the footnotes to his rightful position as a true pioneer
of today's film and television. Along the way, it provides a window into
the earliest days of both motion pictures and television as well as the
now-vanished world of the independent inventor.