W7LR, operator of
the first commercial DXpedition 1947-1948.
Bob Leo, W7LR was one of the two lucky chosen operators for taking part in the Eleventh Gatti-
Expedition to the Mountains of the Moon. This 1947-1948 DXpedition was like a Hollywood safari movie.
Excitement for the Ham-world, in those early years of the DXCC award. And of course excitement for
the two operators W6PBV and W0LHS.
Introduction
Back in 1982, I (Wino, PA0ABM) had an Eye-ball QSO with Bob Leo,
W7LR and his wife Cobi. A year later, when Bob and Cobi were visiting
relatives in the Netherlands, the Leo's spent a night in my QTH,
Middelburg. Totally, I had made 5 QSOs with Bob on 3 different bands.
Bob did respond on a eMail sent to a news-group, with subject "Not in
the log of ST0RY". This was the trigger to write another story about the
famous Gatti-Hallicrafter's Expedition to "The Mountains of the Moon".
This time however with Bob as the central person.
The beginning
Bob Leo, W6PBV, saw an article in May 1947 QST, a two page advertising from Hallicrafters about the
plans for a Gatti-Hallicrafters Expediton, starting end of the year. Earlier Gatti Expedition They
announced a competition, nationwide to find a lucky ham to join the Expedition for being the radio-
operator, keeping the Expedition in touch with the outside world. The competition-letter should have 250
words at the most. Gatti, the expedition-leader, was 10 times before on Expedition to Dark Africa, the
last one was back in 1939 to Belgian Congo. Gatti then did use the call
OQ5ZZ.
Hallicrafters never sponsored an expedition before. After world-war II, the
company focus changed to civilian applications of which ham radio was one
of the market components. And when Gatti met the chief of Hallicrafters, Bill
Halligan, and talked about going to Africa again, Bill was in for sponsoring
the Expedition. The result was a trailer filled with radio-equipment, designed
and prepaired by engeneers of the Hallicrafters company. And to operate
this trailer-shack, Gatti needed an experienced operator. Of course, Bob responded to the advertising.
Some 9000 applications were received, and judged by Gatti, Halligan (W9WZE) and Handy (W1BDI),
ARRLs Communications manager. Bob still has a copy of his application, which made him a winner. He
included being a member of the Naval Reserve (which is how he was drafted for the Navy in early
1941); school efforts; working for the CAA (now FAA); etc. In his application, Bob mentioned being an
experienced CW-operator, familiar with PHONE contacts, having had already more than five-thousand
contacts with 66 countries and 30 zones. Bob thinks that Hallicrafters
narrowed the number down to perhaps six. Then there were two
hams invited to Gatti's home in Vermont for a personal interview, Bob
Leo, and Bill Snyder (W0LHS). Bob does not know how Bill and he
were selected. He and Bill did have some CW QSOs before the
selection was made. They met each on the way to Vermont, and
hatched a plan get both selected by Gatti. Attilio Gatti was convinced
that the radio-workload was too much for a single person, he agreed
to take two operators with him to Africa. On October 14, 1947 Bob
received a confirmation-letter from Gatti, being the SECOND winner
of the QST Contest.
From the day Gatti and Halligan had that conversation, it took Gatti 25 months of preparation. It was not
easy to collect the proper equipment, trucks, trailers, boats, 10-Kw, 110 Volt power-generators, speciat
tents, etc.. But Gatti was good in convincing people, he got what he wanted.
Sailing out
For Bob, the expedition started with his train-ride from San Francisco to New York on November 19,
1947. On that train , Bob met a nice girl, and had many talks with her. Cobi Kapteyn was her name, born
in the Netherlands. Her father raised flower bulbs in his fields near Amsterdam (actually in the flower
bulb district near Sassenheim), and exported to North America. Their family would travel to USA for the
bulb business and she would attend school where she improved her English while her father contacted
flower bulb businesses. Bob knows the date exactly, because he kept a little notebook of the beginning
of the VQ trip. "We were paid a small amount to be on the expedition and our travel expenses were
covered", remembers Bob.
The expedition left New York on the S.S. African Pilgrim on November 23,
1947. The ship went from NY to Cape Town, then stopped at several SA
ports, and eventually to Mombassa after Zanzibar. "We never got seasick -
the ocean was like a lake", says Bob. They landed after 50 days in Kilindini
(Mombasa), Kenya, on January 13, 1948, 7,700 miles from Chicago, Illinois.
There were 9 white persons within the Expedition, 7 of them did make the
trip with the African Pilgrim, Gatti and his wife Ellen (professional
expeditioners), Bob Leo and Bill Snyder (the radio-crew), Weldon King and
Errol Prince (the photographers), and James Powers (reporter). The other
two joined the expedition in Mombasa, Norm Wakeford (Gatti's Camp
manager) and the other was Gatti's secretary, Doug Edwards. All other members of the expedition were
hired in Africa, to drive the trucks, to play cook, or just a pair of hands. Totally there where 49 men
involved. Bob remembers one name, Asmani, one of his local camp boys. Errol Prince, one of the
photographers, gave Bob many 8x10 black and white photos, when Cobi and Bob visited him in
Southern CA back in 1987. Shortly after that visit Errol Prince died. Besides Bill and Bob, there is one
more survivor from the expedition, Weldon King of Springfield, Missouri. He was also one of the
photographers. His father was with International Harvester, and that company provided the trucks. A few
years ago Bill and Bob visited Weldon in Springfield. Today, his mind has gone and Weldon doesn't
recognize anyone even his girl friend.
Setting up camp
After a hectic time, the expedition did set up its main camp 1 near Kwale, some 30 miles west from
Mombasa. Contacts between Gatti and Halligan were established through W9CGC, the Fifth Avenue
Ham Club, quartered in Hallicrafters plant in Chicago. Hallicrafters did kept the logs, and the company
did also the QSL-chores, being one of the first QSL-managers. the QSL-manager was W9TDF. Setup of
such commercial traffic was always done by Bob or Bill. Gatti did never set up a connection himself.
Bob did get "Kilima dysentary" on the trip, and also ran a pair of pliers in his
eye, but he recoverd from both. Setting up a new camp was a lot of work.
The two hams had to take care of the two power-generators. All trailers were
equipped with electrical systems, so they had to be connected to the 10 Kw,
110 Volt power supply. Of course the Rhombic antenna had to be placed in
action, with the help of the African personell of Gatti. Not an easy task,
neither Bob or Bill spoke Swahili before they did go on this Expedition. In the
process setting up the big heavy antenna-pole, the natives dropped it once
and it whistled just next to Bob's ear - a few inches closer and there might
not be a story like this.
Bob made his first Expedition-QSO with I1KN, Fortunato Grossi in Florence, Italy. The QSO was on
january 24, 1948 on 14 Mc CW, (note from Bobs diary) just one day before Gatti made his First
Conversation with Bill Halligan. During the expedition, Bob and I1KN became close friends, as Bob and
Fortunato had many QSOs. After Bob left Africa for Arabia, Bob started to exchange letters with Cobi,
that girl he met on the train to New York. The result was an "Eye-ball-QSO" in Florence Italy, early 1949.
Cobi came from Holland to Italy, and Bob travelled there from Arabia. They had already plans to get
married there in Italy, so the couple had some paperwork ready. But it turned out they needed a lot more
paperwork. I1KN helped them with that. And I1KN was also the best man at their wedding in Florence in
october 1949. There was one other ham at their wedding, I5IT. Joyce Leo, Bobs daughter, after finishing
high school, went on an European tour and visited the Grossi's. Bob however, never saw I1KN again.
Bob cannot remember what the operating times were, they were probably those established by Gatti,
13.00-15.00 GMT and 16.00-21.00 GMT. They used the callsign VQ3HGE, VQ4EHG, VQ5GHE and
VQ5HEG (for mobile operations).
The following frequencies of 14,160 and 28,030 for CW and 28,375 and 14,380 for AM were proposed
in a pamphlet, which was issued by Hallcrafters after the Expedition took off. They had a VFO available
(HT-18) in the "Shack on Wheels", but Bob does not remember using the VFO. Pile ups of course where
all over the band, because nearly all hams at that time had only Xtall controlled transmitters. The
Expeditions transmitter type was a HT-4E, barely transportable.
Tuning the HT-4E transmitter The Hallicrafters Models SX-42, SX-43 and
S-38 receivers where also build in the radio-wagon. The antenna was a
pre-fabricatet rhombic for 40-20-10 meter. Most AM QSOs where made on
10 meters by Bill, while Bob did most of the CW work on 20 meters.
Therefore he used an iambic paddle. Logs were filled by hand of course,
using pen and ink, but there was a typing machine available in the shack.
They did get mail from home while in Africa, but Bob cannot remember
receiving any qsls from QSOs there. Yet the "Shack on Wheels" was
decorated by some QSL-cards.
Hallicrafter engeneers did produce some basic data for the deserving, such as March Predictions,
calculated from the Bureau of Standards Data, best times to work any of the VQ-calls. The Gatti position
would be approximate 2 degrees and 30 minutes south (South west of Kigali-Rwanda).
At the time the Expedition was on, there had been 28 VQ4, 13 VQ3 and 8 VQ5 calls issued by June
1947.
But things go as they go, Hallicrafters lost all logs - a big disappointment for
the two hams. So after almost 55 years, it is very hard for Bob to remember
stations worked from East-Africa. In his files, Bob found a note from G3NOF
with a list of some calls he heard being worked from VQ3HGE. One was
PA0UN 13 May 1948 1922 utc on 14 MHz 58. Bob had a QSO with DL3AO(a
SWL in 1948), who mentioned he had heard the Expedition, and received a
QSL-card.
Perhaps there are somewhere old
shoeboxes on dusty attics filled with old QSLcards from forgotten
QSOs which can help Bob to upgrade his memory a little. QSL-
Museums, when they get enough old-forgotten QSLcards, can help
people, like Bob, to restore history a bit. PA1AT, Gerard did dig into old
collections, and found some VQ-QSL cards. And special for Bob,
Gerard found a QSLcard filled out by Bob while he was operating
VQ4ERR. The QSL museum in Austria has a huge collection of old
QSLs, but just one was filled out for a Gatti-Hallicrafters QSO. So the
question is, where are those other thousands of VQ-QSLs?
The camp had two facilities, one for the Gatti's and one for the crew. "We had
camp trailers, and Bill and I were in one", says Bob. Each facility had a
number of natives, as cooks, and helpers. There were a number of natives
as truck drivers. One of the targets, during the Expedition, was climbing the
Kilimanjaro. Bob was probably selected over Bill for the mountain climb as
being in better physical shape. It took 4 or 5 days for the climb. It was not a
technical mountain climb, but more a trek. The only difficult part was the last
steep ascent up scree - loose rock. According to one of the stories Gatti wrote
for the Toronto Star 1950, was that Bob was the first who reached the summit
of Mount Kibo. The only difficulty Bob had was a bad headache from being at
such a high altitude. Not all of the climbers were able to complete the ascent to the top. Bob cannot
remember which radio-experiments he made from the top of the Kibo (19,780 feet). But he had a
flashlight QSO with Bill, who was at the 5.500 feet camp below. The idea of the communication by
blinker came from Bill Snyder.
The expedition did set up 8 main-camps on this Expedition, Bob was only QRV in 5 of them. Of course
it was not easy to find the right place to camp, and to get the trucks, trailers etc on the camping ground.
Main camp 3 was set up near Arusha, at Bamboo Flats. The ground however was far from flat, and
there was no sign of growing bamboo. It turned out that the campsite was choosen wrongly, as there
was a dump of the local planters, who burned every day tons of coffee husks. The whole camp could
"Enjoy" the malodorous smoke. Fresh meat was delivered by Gatti himself, by shooting game, which
was available all the time. Bob nor Bill did carry a gun, they had enough other work to do.
It is hard to find out what exactly happened to the Expedition-members during the 6
months the Expedition could be worked from the outside world. The memory of Bob
is not what it was 50 years ago, but Bob is sure that Keith Sisk, mentioned as
member of the team in the Hallicrafters pamphlet, was no member of the crew.
Digging into other sources (magazines, the Hallicrafters pamphlet etc) shows a
very coloured report of what happened back in 1947 and 1948. Bobs notes
showing 3,822 QSOs, while Gatti mentioned 10,000. One source tells about
working all countries of the world, except one, Tibet, AC4, while Bob recalls working
122 countries, but missing zone 23, Tibet, and missing the state of Montana while
being active from VQ3HGE. The states of Utah, Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado,
Rhode Island and Wyoming were not worked from Kenya.
According to Gatti, all members of the Kilimanjaro-party did reach the top of the Mount Kibo, while Bob
states not all climbers completed their climb. Bob has no any idea of the cost of the expedition. Gatti had
organized several expeditions previously and was good at promoting those, and getting sponsors. And
of course Gatti did get some expedition support in turn for providing stories or photos from those trips.
He did write some books about all his African adventures.
The expedition fell apart
After the climb of the Kibo-peak, Bill Snyder and Doug Edwards left the expedition. Attilio Gatti was not
an easy person to deal with. Bob continued to keep the world in touch for another four month's. Then
the expedition fell apart. Gatti, together with King, Prince and Wakeford went on a two month
photograph-safari. They operated from the main-camps 6,7 and 8, however
without a radio-operator.
Bob stayed a month with VQ4ERR, in Nairobi, Kenya. At VQ4ERR, he was
guest operator from July 15 until August 21, 1948, and made 307 QSOs.
The Norwegian tanker M/T Dovrefjell brought Bob from Mombasa to
Bahrein. The expedition did not turn Bob into a millionair, he had just 13
cents in his pocket when he left Africa,. Bob worked for ARAMCO, and was
an operator of HZ1AB, and used MP4BAL from Bahrein, before he did go
back to the States.
W7LR in 2003
After five years in the Navy in WW-II, Bob had some other accomplishments. He was an engineer for
GE to help develop the bank check sorting machine which reads check magnetic characters. At
ARAMCO in Saudi Arabia he was a supervisor at their radio station HZA, and worked for the geology
department in the great Arabian desert and in Persian Gulf survey work. He was an engineer at Stanford
Research Institute (SRI) in communication and computer research, and got EE degrees from Cal Tech
and Stanford. He taught at Montana State University for 20 years as a full professor of EE.
He and his family lived in Thailand in 1963 to 1965, where he was the
director for the SRI communication research laboratory. He operated HS1L
there and was one of the cofounders of RAST - the Radio Amateur Society
of Thailand. A highlight of that time was a journey to see the wonders of
Angkor Wat in Cambodia.
But that is another story.
In 2003, Bob and Cobi were in good health,
Bob was 82 then. They do live in Montana, the
state Bob could not work from VQ3HGE. Bob is
still very active in ham radio and does sometimes consulting work on
electrical fires and accidents. After working all countries, and even P5, his
goal shifted to 160m. In april 2003, he had worked 201 countries on that
band. Bob and Cobi like to see things, one of their last trips was to Alaska.
Bob has been active since 1937 (swl from 1933), and so has worked a lot of
those old-callsigns. As Bob says in his own words "I wasnt much of a dxer in
the early days so missed many now considered very rare". Bob got this year
credit for 352 worked countries.
©W7LR and PA0ABM
LINKS
Most pictures in the story
can be expanded by clicking
on the thumbnails. A popup
window will show the picture
(or document).
Extensive information (links)
can be reached by clicking
underlined subjects. The
links could point to other
internet-sites, or to extra
information available on the
topic.
There are NO links between
the story of W6PBV, Bob and
the story of W0LHS, Bill. To
learn all about this history of
DX-ing, you have to read
both stories.
Anyone who can fill in details
to complete the story, is most
welcome to respond. Please
send your comments to me.
Thanks in advance.
| The Gatti-Hallicrafters Expedition QSOs in 1948 |
| Call |
Start |
End |
QSO# |
W6PBV |
W0LHS |
Ctry# |
Zones |
States |
| VQ4EHG Kenya | Jan 21 | Feb 16 | 942 | 620 |
322 | 51 | 24 | 42 |
| VQ3HGE Tanganyika | Feb 20 Jul 06 | Jun 13 Jul 09 | 2629 | 2447 |
182 | 122 | 39 | 47 |
| VQ5GHE Uganda | Jun 20 Jun 26 | Jun 21 Jun 27 | 233 | 233 |
0 | 19 | 13 | 30 |
| VQ5HEG Uganda | Jun 27 | Jun 27 | 18 | 18 |
0 | 3 | 4 | 7 |
| Total | Jan 21 | Jul 09 | 3822 | 3318 |
504 | 123 | 39 | 48 |