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GM3TNT
Duncan McArthur

 

Duncan GM3TNT died at home in Peninver, near Campbeltown, on June 19,  2007 at the age of 64.

 

Duncan was a well known figure in Amateur Radio circles, both personally and on the air. He had been in air traffic control, including at Wick and Prestwick airports.

 

In 2005 and 2006 Duncan was one of the prime movers in the events which celebrated the work of Reginald Fessenden. The success of Kintyre's  Fessenden website is due in no small measure to Duncan's contributions and a special page has been dedicated to his memory on that website at  -  http://groups.msn.com/fessenden/inmemorianduncanmcarthur.msnw

Notice from THE CAMPBELTOWN COURIER
Friday 22 June 2007  -  Page 29  -  www.campbeltowncourier.co.uk

McARTHUR - Suddenly,  at home,  Avalon,  Peninver,  on June 19,  2007,  Duncan Ralston McArthur,  in his 65th year,  dearly beloved husband of the late Evelyn,  a much loved father of Diane,  father-in-law of Morris,  loving grandfather of Hannah and much loved son of Alexina and the late Dugald McArthur.  The funeral service will take place in Kilkerran Cemetery,  Campbeltown on Friday,  June 22,  2007,  at 2.00pm to which all friends are respectfully invited.


 

GM3TNT Duncan McArthur
Duncan McArthur
pictured in Russell Carroll's Campbeltown Radio Shack
17th September 2006

 

GM3TNT Duncan McArthur pictured with Georgie Robinson of BBC World Service
DUNCAN McARTHUR
pictured with Georgie Robinson
of BBC World Service

Duncan McArthur  -  Obituary by Nancie Smith
"Campbeltown Courier",  page 4,  Friday,  July 20,  2007

 
The last eighteen months of Duncan McArthur's life were spent commemorating the life of his hero Reginald Aubrey Fessenden,  'the  father of radio'.   Duncan's untimely death at the age of 64 has saddened his many friends,  including those he made researching Fessenden both in this country and in Canada and the U.S.A..   Duncan McArthur was born and raised in Campbeltown and educated in Campbeltown Grammar School.
 
From an early age Duncan showed an  interest in radio and went off to college in Glasgow before joining the merchant navy as a ship's radio officer.   He served two years on various ships,  including The Canadian Pacific Railway Company's "Empress of Britain",  Duncan travelling all over The  World.
 
Duncan's next career move was to Glasgow's Abbotsinch Airport and it was while working there that he met his wife,  Evelyn.   Duncan and Evelyn moved back to Campbeltown so that he could take up a job at the nearby Rhu Staffnish radio station,  their daughter Diane  being born during this time.  Four years later the family moved to Wick,  where Duncan became telecommunications manager at Wick Airport. Their final move was in 1985 when Duncan was appointed manager,  air-ground-air,  working on telecommunications at The Scottish Air  Traffic Control Centre in Prestwick,  a post he held until retiring in 1999 and returning back to his beloved Kintyre,  where he and Evelyn  settled at Peninver.
 
Throughout his life,  radio had remained an enduring interest and the Peninver house was soon sprouting with radio aerials,  the spare room  converted into a 'radio shack' and Duncan spending hours talking to people in many countries   -  He retained his skill in Morse Code and  often used his Morse key to communicate with other 'radio hams'.   Duncan's other interest was aviation and he was an expert on the many plane crashes around The Mull of Kintyre and would spend hours  following the trail of a crash and could identify a plane from a small piece of wreckage.   The Wellington,  LB 137,  which crashed at 'The Mull' in 1943,  killing all six of its crew,  will be commemorated by the R.A.F. thanks to  Duncan's researches.
 
The Fessenden centenary year was exciting and exhausting for Duncan as he and a group of friends began to make plans to celebrate Reginald  Fessenden's great achievement in transmitting the first speech broadcasts across The Atlantic.   Fessenden's work had always been over-shadowed by that of Marconi and Duncan and his friends were determined that Fessenden should have his proper place in history,  a similar group at Brant Rock,  Massachusetts,  U.S.A.,  partnering the celebrations.
 
Duncan visited local schools speaking to the children about Fessenden's work and achievements and children visited the site of Fessenden's  radio mast at Machrihanish where Duncan memorably played the part of Reginald Fessenden while the children asked him questions.   He was interviewed on radio and television in this country and in the United States,  where a three-day celebration was held to commemorate  'the father of radio'.
 

Duncan,  a family man,  will be missed by his friends for his humour and wit and he is survived by his mother,  his daughter Diane and her  husband Morris and their 10-month old daughter Hannah.

Empress fo Britian at Liverpool Pier Head

 

 

 

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