Stanly County Amateur Radio Club presents its history

Larry Joe Almond was a teenager when he was first introduced to a passion that has stayed with him throughout his life.

One of the members of Anderson Grove Baptist Church took Almond to his house and introduced him to his Heathkit radio and Almond was immediately hooked.

Almond received his amateur radio license in 1956 and became a member of the Stanly County Amateur Radio Club a year later. He is still in the club — his call sign is K4MGA. He is currently the longest serving member.

“There’s a lot of things I could do without, but I would hate to do without ham radio,” Almond said.

Larry Joe Almond looks at pictures of himself during the early days of the club.

Ray Sipe got involved with amateur radio after he traveled to the Gulf Coast with Lutheran Disaster Response to help with those affected by Hurricane Katrina. To better prepare for another possible disaster, Sipe and others in the area got their ham radio licenses.

Sipe, who is the president of the club, said he grew up enjoying radio as a kid.

Members of the club, along with people in the community, gathered Saturday afternoon at Mount Zion Lutheran Church in Richfield as Sipe gave a presentation about the history of the club. There was also historical memorabilia, including old radios and QSL cards, which are written confirmations of two-way radio communication between two amateur radio stations, on display.

The radio club was founded in 1956 and was created as a form of civil defense. The idea was to create a communication network around the county in case a disaster occurred. Members of the club are amateur (or ham) radio operators.

The charter members of the club were Lee Melton, Lewis Sides, Raymond Barker, Bill Hatley, W.H. Seaver and Carl Doby.

Ray Sipe presents a history of the Stanly County Amateur Radio Club to the public.

Over the years, the club, with a call sign of K4OGB and currently around 45 members, has grown and embedded itself in the county. Members help by providing radio communications for foot races, parades and festivals. They also organize electronic fox hunts to search for hidden transmitters and have a station in the basement of the courthouse they can operate if communications in the county somehow went down.

The club also works with ARES (Amateur Radio Emergency Service), which is a public service organization whose purpose is to supply communications during times of emergencies. Last year, the club contributed 1,027 hours of volunteer service with ARES, according to club member Dr. Keith Andrew.

There are currently almost 200 amateur radio operators with call signs in Stanly County, Sipes told the crowd. An instructor teaches a ham radio class at Stanly Community College and the club members help test the students and present them with ham radio licenses.

The club meets once a month at Stanly Community College and has special events such as summer and winter field days.

Stephen Merithew, who received his radio license in high school, has been a member of the club on-and-off for 20 years. He enjoys communicating with people from Europe and Africa on his Yaesu FT-920 radio.

According to the club’s website, amateur radio operators can communicate via voice, Morse Code (CW), computers, amateur television and satellites using HF, VHF and UHF bands using various modes such as AM, FM, Digital, Sideband and text.

“There’s a whole bunch of things we do, so we’re a very active and very busy club,” Sipes said.

Sipe told the crowd the club has something for everyone, as long as they have a basic interest in amateur radios.

“No matter what kind of interest you might have in amateur radio, there’s something for everybody,” Sipe said. “Whether it’s Morse Code, or it’s satellites, or it’s helping to run public service events like races…”

SportsPlus

News

West Stanly Middle School announces perfect attendance

News

Church hosts puppet ministry

News

Colleagues remember Van Sinderen for service to Albemarle, New London, hospital

News

Wine & Dine on the Rails returns to the N.C. Transportation Museum

News

Locust students try out new playground equipment

News

North Stanly player joins 1,000-point club

News

Atrium Health implements visitor restrictions to help protect patients

News

Richfield resident graduates from Carson-Newman

News

PEEKING INTO THE PAST: Anyone remember -7 degrees?

News

Family adopts highway, urges drivers to ‘pay attention’ after student’s death

News

Stanly school board choose early start calendar for second straight academic year

News

Need to get in shape? BBB has tips for joining a gym

News

Albemarle senior uses apprenticeship program to gain firefighting skills

News

National Weather Service issues winter storm warning

News

Tickets available for MLK Unity Prayer Breakfast

News

Misenheimer selects new police chief

News

Albemarle provides update on garbage, recycling collection

News

New 911 dispatch system continues to improve, director says

News

Taylor warns of cold weather dangers: space heaters, candles, carbon monoxide poisoning

News

Fundraisers ongoing to help families displaced by fire

News

Appalachian State University announces chancellor’s list

News

Teen arrested in Stanly County following murder of man in Columbia

News

Stanly County Chamber extends deadline for award nominations

News

Locust resident named to Bob Jones’ dean’s list