Claude Gray: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Birmingham Police Department]]
[[Category:Birmingham Police Department]]
[[Category:Radio personalities]]
[[Category:Radio personalities]]
[[Category:Federal employees]]
[[Category:Birmingham Zoo]]
[[Category:Birmingham Zoo]]

Revision as of 23:06, 21 August 2009

Claude M. Gray (born May 1909 in Anniston) is a former police dispatcher, radio announcer and conductor of the Birmingham Zoo Express.

Gray earned his degree in electrical engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. He was one of the first radio dispatchers for the Birmingham Police Department. He made the department's first broadcast, signing onto WPFM-AM at Birmingham City Hall in June 1933. He began working with WAPI-AM in 1935 and left his job as a police dispatcher in 1937.

Gray was on the air during Orson Welles' adaptation of War of the Worlds in 1938 and answered 132 panicked calls to the station. In 1940 he took a job with the Federal Communication Commission, working to detect possible spy transmissions in the New Orleans area.

After retiring he began conducting the Birmingham Zoo Express train at the Birmingham Zoo, going by the name Engineer Claude. He stepped down from that position in 2003 after 20 years.

Gray celebrated his 100th birthday with a visit to the communications room at the current Birmingham City Hall.

References

  • Robinson, Carol (August 20, 2009) "Birmingham's earliest police dispatcher, now 100, revisits department's all-digital radio room." Birmingham News