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Charles Herrold Award for Excellence in Radio Operations and Production Management

Past Recipients
RAdio Operations |
| 2012 Katharine Mindigo |
| 2011 Gabriella Ventuso |
| 2010 Justin Allegri |
| 2009 Alicia Fuentes |
| 2008 Denise McGillicuddy |
| 2007 Andrea Garcia-Villa |
| 2006 Nick Mikulka |
| 2005 Erin Scullion |
| 2004 Arianna Flores |
| 2003 Not awarded |
| 2002 Tommy Kang |
| 2001 Not awarded |
| 2000 Not awarded |
| 1999 Darren Gaitan |
| 1999 Catherine Leyba |
Production Management |
| 2012 Kate Lambdin |
| 2011 Robert Krakower |
| 2010 Sam Sirico |
| 2009 Rob Soul |
| 2008 Edward Martin |
| 2007 Nicloe Woodson |
| 2006 Erin Haney |
| 2006 Chris Gaoiran |
| 2005 James Eitel |
| 2005 Steve Sajor |
| 2004 Diane Maximo |
| 2003 Michelle Robles |
| 2002 Jack Igoe |
| 2001 Ovales |
Charles David ‘Doc’ Herrold, (November 16, 1875 – July 1, 1948) was an American radio
broadcasting pioneer. Born in Fulton, Illinois, Herrold grew up in San Jose, California
and attended Stanford University where he studied physics and astronomy. When his
electrical manufacturing company in San Francisco was destroyed by the 1906 San Francisco
earthquake he moved into teaching, and opened the Herrold College of Wireless and
Engineering at 50 W. San Fernando St. in San Jose in 1909 to educate wireless operators.
Interested in radio to transmit voice signals, he began broadcasting music and entertainment
on a regular basis between 1912 and 1917 to fellow radio enthusiasts, using the callsigns
FN and SJN. He had the world’s first regularly scheduled broadcasts, allowing listeners
to tune in at a known time. However, in 1917, the US government ordered non-military
radio transmissions to cease. After World War I, Herrold obtained the licence for
KQW in 1921, but he was unable to maintain the financial requirements, and the station
was sold several times. In the 1940s, CBS attempted to buy its then-affiliate in San
Francisco, KSFO. KSFO refused to sell, so CBS purchased KQW, moved it to San Francisco
and changed the call letters to KCBS. However, Herrold did not profit financially
from his pioneering work, and later became a repair technician in the Oakland, California
school district, and a janitor in a local shipyard. He died in a Hayward, California
rest home, aged 72.
