Wendell and his wife, Lillias, lived in Moorestown for many years before retiring to Medford Leas.
Wendell was a fourth-generation engineer. His three children and two of his grandchildren are also engineers. A graduate of Vanderbilt University, he spent most of his career at the Radio Corporation of America. He worked on anti- submarine warfare, missile defense and the global positioning system (GPS), among many other projects.
He was licensed as an amateur radio operator, call sign K2RNF. In 1965, he became the first amateur to create a receiving station for weather satellite photos, using his home-built ham radio apparatus with a motor-controlled antenna mounted on a jungle gym in his Moorestown back yard. The received signals were converted to blinking lights. He used a microscope turned upside down to focus tiny spots of light onto film taped to a wooden rolling pin with its spin and lateral motion precisely controlled by two motors. He developed the film negatives and printed the pictures in his basement photo lab. Thanks to his good friend and colleague Nicholas Pensiero, this became national news in 1966 after the launch of the satellite NIMBUS II and Wendell's successful reception of its pictures.
He was predeceased by his beloved wife of 56 years, Lillias Harris Anderson. He is survived by their three children, Wendell Anderson Jr. (wife Christine Adams), Helen Lillias Anderson (husband George Faulkner) and Thomas Harris Anderson (wife Suzanne Anderson); four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
At the family's request services and interment will be held privately.
Please no flowers. Memorial contributions may be made to charity of donor's choice.
Condolences may be left at the Web site below
Lewis Funeral Home, Moorestown
lewisfuneralhomemoorestown.com
Burlington County Times, January 5, 2014
Wendell and his wife, Lillias, lived in Moorestown for many years before retiring to Medford Leas.
Wendell was a fourth-generation engineer. His three children and two of his grandchildren are also engineers. A graduate of Vanderbilt University, he spent most of his career at the Radio Corporation of America. He worked on anti- submarine warfare, missile defense and the global positioning system (GPS), among many other projects.
He was licensed as an amateur radio operator, call sign K2RNF. In 1965, he became the first amateur to create a receiving station for weather satellite photos, using his home-built ham radio apparatus with a motor-controlled antenna mounted on a jungle gym in his Moorestown back yard. The received signals were converted to blinking lights. He used a microscope turned upside down to focus tiny spots of light onto film taped to a wooden rolling pin with its spin and lateral motion precisely controlled by two motors. He developed the film negatives and printed the pictures in his basement photo lab. Thanks to his good friend and colleague Nicholas Pensiero, this became national news in 1966 after the launch of the satellite NIMBUS II and Wendell's successful reception of its pictures.
He was predeceased by his beloved wife of 56 years, Lillias Harris Anderson. He is survived by their three children, Wendell Anderson Jr. (wife Christine Adams), Helen Lillias Anderson (husband George Faulkner) and Thomas Harris Anderson (wife Suzanne Anderson); four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
At the family's request services and interment will be held privately.
Please no flowers. Memorial contributions may be made to charity of donor's choice.
Condolences may be left at the Web site below
Lewis Funeral Home, Moorestown
lewisfuneralhomemoorestown.com
Burlington County Times, January 5, 2014
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