Hurricane Fiona and the Early Shortwave Scene on Guadeloupe

The disastrous Hurricane Fiona struck the French Island territory of Guadeloupe on the outer edge of the Caribbean as its first onslaught during the night of Saturday September 17 (2022). It was in that area that Fiona strengthened and became a Category 4 hurricane, with wind gusts of 155 miles per hour and sustained winds at 130 miles per hour.

Guadeloupe encountered near record rainfall from the hurricane which resulted in serious flooding, even washing away the long standing bridge over the River Goyave. Due to the devastation wrought by Fiona over Guadeloupe, the French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris declared a state of natural disaster for the island territory and he promised government and financial aid for recovery.

Satellite image provided by NOAA shows Tropical Storm Fiona in the Caribbean on Saturday, Sept. 17, 2022. AP. Image from France24 website.

From Guadeloupe, this first hurricane in the new hurricane season swept into the American Island of Puerto Rico, where it blew the avocado crop off the trees. Fiona moved onward and it wrought disastrous havoc in the Dominican Republic, Turks and Caicos, Bermuda and further northwards, right up to Newfoundland and eastern Canada. The measured wind speed of Ferocious Fiona, as it was dubbed, was still gusted with 100 mph winds as it attacked the costal and inland areas of eastern Canada and the island of Newfoundland.

The French territory Guadeloupe is an archipelago of eight inhabited islands in the Lesser Antilles, located between the tropical Atlantic and the Caribbean Sea. The two principal islands are Basse-Terre and Grande-Terre are in the shape of a butterfly, and they are separated by a narrow channel, the Rivière Salée.

The capital town of Guadeloupe is Basse-Terre which is located on the Western Wing, and the larger commercial town, Pointe-á-Pitre, is located on the Eastern Wing. The other nearby islands, known in French as “dependencies,” are Marie-Galante, la Désirade, Petite-Terre (uninhabited), and the archipelago Les Saintes.

This 1963 QSL card from amateur radio operator FG7XL provides a colourful map of Guadeloupe. Image from ebay

The total land area of the entire archipelago is 660 square miles with a population of around a third of a million. Grande-Terre is essentially made up of limestone, with plateaus, plains, and hills; Basse-Terre is volcanic in origin, with high mountains and a tropical rain forest.

Right at the end of the year 1938, a new shortwave broadcastings station in the Caribbean was noted by international radio monitors in the United States. That new shortwave station was on the air with programming in the French language, and the identification announcements in French and in English as Radio Guadeloupe provided the location. The noted international radio monitor in the United States, Roger Legge, was the first to draw attention to Radio Guadeloupe, and the island of Guadeloupe had thus become a new shortwave broadcasting country.

The new Radio Guadeloupe was located at Pointe-a-Pitre on the Eastern Wing and it was an amateur station turned professional. Initially the almost regular programming was on the air for an hour each evening, and it was noted on 7050 kHz, right within the 40 metre amateur band. There were occasions when other nearby channels just outside the amateur band were in use, such as 7435 7440 and 7446 kHz.

The operator of Radio Guadeloupe was Monsieur Andre Haan, and his address was Box 125, Pointe-a-Pitre on the Eastern Wing. The identification melody for Radio Guadeloupe was the popular French tune, March Lorraine, which you heard at the beginning of our program today.

During the earlier part of the European War in the Middle of the last century, Radio Guadeloupe was silenced, from the latter part of the year 1939 into all of the two subsequent years (1940 & 1941), apparently by French government action. However in January 1942, the station was reactivated again, though only for a short while, on 7446 kHz. Then two years later again, in September 1944, the station was noted once more, though again, only for a short while.

However, after the end of World War 2, Radio Guadeloupe was brought into operation again, this time as a government radio broadcasting station. It was listed in the WRHB with 50 watts on 7447 kHz, at a new location, this time on the Western Wing at Basse-Terre. A subsequent channel was 7430 kHz. In addition to local programming, Radio Guadeloupe also took a daily half hour relay from shortwave Radio France International in Paris.

Promotional images for a film documentary about André Haan. Image: Court-Jus Production website.

In 1951, a mediumwave outlet was added, with 1 kW on 650 kHz. Then five years later (1956), the shortwave service was closed (forever!) and an additional mediumwave channel was inaugurated on 1420 kHz.

When the official shortwave channel was closed, it was operating at just 50 watts. The new mediumwave channel on 1420 kHz was also listed with 50 watts, so maybe the shortwave transmitter was modified to a mediumwave operation.

Three different callsigns have been in use for Radio Guadeloupe, though none were ever used on air for the shortwave broadcasting service. Each callsign in some way identified the station owner and operator, Andre Haan.

It is suggested that the licensed callsign for the operation of the radio equipment as a regular amateur station was FG8AH, Andre Haan. It would appear that the operation of the station as a program broadcasting station was under the (unannounced) callsign FG8AA. Then when the station was reactivated as a government operated radio broadcasting station at a new location under the direction of the same Andre Haan the listed callsign was FG8HA.

This feature was written by Adrian Peterson and originally aired on Adventist World Radio’s “Wavescan” DX program of October 16, 2022

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