ARRL -- The national association for Amateur Radio ARRL -- The national association for Amateur Radio
Books, Coax, and a whole lot more -- Ad
Find on this site...
Site Index 
  
Search site:
  
Call sign search:
 
ARRL Member Login...
Username:   Password:

  
Register    Forgot userid/password? 
Quick Links...
Text-only 
Current Feature Articles

  •  
  • Aug 29 ARRL In Action: What Have We Been Up To Lately?
  •  
  • Aug 29 CQ China
  •  
  • Aug 29 Surfin': Opening Up APRS
  •  
  • Aug 27 The Amateur Amateur: Doing It in the Street
  •  
  • Aug 25 Ohio State Parks on the Air
  •  
  • Aug 22 Surfin': Batten Down the Hatches
  •  
  • Aug 20 Antenna Go-kits
  •  
  • Aug 15 Surfin': Conferencing in the Center of the USA
  •  
  • Aug 15 The Amateur Radio Crossword Puzzler
  •  
  • Aug 08 Surfin': Dig Up Dead Web Sites

    ARRL Products:
    Antennas, Transmission Lines & Propagation

    (More)

    More Vertical Antenna Classics -- Includes a collection of articles on the art and science of the vertical antenna, as well as designs for a variety of operating preferences and bands.

    Simple and Fun Antennas for Hams -- Lots and lots of real world, practical antennas you can BUILD YOURSELF!

    ON4UN’s Low Band DXing -- Fourth Edition. Antennas, Equipment and Techniques for DXcitement on 160, 80 and 40 Meters. CD-ROM included!

    Low Profile Amateur Radio -- Second edition. Now you can operate a ham radio station from almost anywhere! All the information you need to operate under restrictive situations and more.

    Antenna Compendium Volume 7 -- The seventh volume in ARRL's Antenna Compendium series includes even more proven, practical antenna designs from the world of Amateur Radio.

       

    It's About Time... and Ham Radio

    By John J. Cline, K7BDS
    January 15, 2004


    What can a centenarian and a young boy--strangers in almost every way--share that draws them together in a bond of friendship? Amateur Radio, of course.


    Neva Heckman, KC7MWB, operates on 2 meters from her home in Boise, Idaho. She's a regular on a number of nets and until recently regularly attended RACES meetings. [Paul Rhines, KB7REX, Photo]

    This is a true story of a bridge across time, an event that briefly brought together two people who likely would not otherwise have met, people separated by more than nine decades of life. The vehicle that brought them together was Amateur Radio and the place was Boise, Idaho.

    Neva Heckman was born on April 10, 1903 into a world filled with the awe and wonderment of new discoveries. The United States was just getting ready to celebrate its 128th birthday. President Theodore Roosevelt would send the first message across the "Pacific Cable" interlocking San Francisco and Manila together in a new age of information-sharing and technology. Helium was discovered that year. Marconi was having great difficulty convincing the world's scientific community that his experiments with transmitting radio signals really did have a practical application.

    Isaiah Livingston was born January 2, 1995, the cusp of the Internet revolution. Talking to Manila had been reduced to the mundane: one merely had to activate a cellular telephone or connect on-line by computer to an international chatroom. The year of Isaiah's birth was also the year that Neva Heckman got her Amateur Radio license.

    Isaiah Livingston, KD7TBQ, sits with Neva Heckman, KC7MWB, this past year during a meeting arranged by Idaho Assistant Section Manager Gary Peek, K7TIH. Both Livingston and Heckman often frequent the Over the Hill Net. [Becky Livingston, KD7STM Photo]

    Covered Wagons and Chat Rooms

    Neva grew up in rural Idaho and said she clearly remembers traveling to Missouri with her family in a covered wagon. After living in Alaska for many years, she returned to Idaho. When asked why at age 92 she got her ham ticket, she quickly answered that it was because her son Paul "Doc" Rhines, KB7REX, wanted her to do so. Neva still lives at home, but requires her son's assistance on a daily basis. Neva Heckman, KC7MWB, turned 100 this past April, remains active on the bands and still participates in local ham radio nets. One of her favorites is the Over the Hill Net, which refers to going over the hill to work, as opposed to being over the hill in age.

    Someone else who participates most days in the Over the Hill Net is Isaiah Livingston, KD7TBQ. At the time he was initially licensed in 2002, Isaiah was Idaho's youngest Amateur Radio operator at the age of 7. Every member of his immediate family is a ham. Isaiah's father, Ed Livingston, is WB6NNW; his mother, Becky, is KD7STM; brother Zachary is WB6UAL, and brother Isaac is KD7STN.

    Ed is a teacher a Vallivue High School in Caldwell, Idaho, an ARRL "Big Project" school, which sports the club call sign K7VHS. At home, Ed infused his family with his passion for Amateur Radio. When Isaiah passed his test in October 2002, his mother remarked that it completed the transformation of the Livingston family into a ham-ily.

    Neva Heckman, at 100, is Idaho's oldest Amateur Radio operator. Last year, she had the opportunity to meet the state's youngest ham, then-8 year-old Isaiah Livingston, KD7TBQ. [Paul Rhines, KB7REX, Photo]

    Crossing the Bridge

    When Idaho Assistant Section Manager Gary Peek, K7TIH, heard that Isaiah had passed his FCC test, becoming Idaho's youngest ham, he put out an inquiry to determine the identity of Idaho oldest living ham. Rhines, an active member of both the Amateur Radio Emergency Service and the state's Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service programs, reminded Gary about his mother, who until recently had also attended RACES meetings herself. With his subjects identified, Peek made arrangements to get Neva and Isaiah together for a picture-taking session.

    In November 2002, Gary brought together Idaho's youngest and oldest living Amateur Radio operators. As cameras recorded the occasion, the two hams talked about their experiences and aspirations. Both openly smiled as they talked in animated fashion, obviously excited about their common bond. For those present, it was as if time bent around, bridged a chasm of age with the shared interest and joy of Amateur Radio.

    John Cline, K7BDS, is a former Section Manager of the ARRL San Diego section. A retired US Navy Lieutenant Commander, he also served as Idaho's Director of Disaster Services from May 1995 until October 2003. He's currently enrolled in a Master's program in homeland security and defense at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. Cline can be reached via e-mail at k7bds@arrl.net.

       



    Page last modified: 02:32 PM, 15 Jan 2004 ET
    Page author: awextra@arrl.org
    Copyright © 2004, American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved.