Arco was born on the estate of his father, Count
Alexander Karl von Arco, in
Großgorschütz,
Upper Silesia,
Prussia (now
Gorzyce, Poland). He belonged to the Arco family, of Italian origin. His noble title was abolished when Germany became a republic after the First World War. As a child he was interested in
machines of all kinds, but after graduating from the Maria Magdalenen High School in
Breslau (now
Wrocław, Poland) in 1889, he did not study engineering sciences, but instead attended mathematical and physical lectures at the
University of Berlin. Afterwards he took up a military career, a family tradition. After three years with the military, however, he left to study mechanical engineering and electro-technology at the
Technissche Hochschule in
Charlottenburg (today
Technische Universität Berlin), from 1893. There he became acquainted with Professor
Adolf Slaby, who had participated in
Guglielmo Marconi's transmission experiments on the coast of the
English Channel. Building on these attempts, Arco and Slaby in the summer of 1897 used the free-standing bell tower of the Church of the Redeemer,
Potsdam, as an
antenna, to verify and understand Marconi's experiments. Here the first German antenna system for wireless telegraphy was established. On 27 August a radio transmission to the German naval base "Kongsnaes," 1.6 kilometers away, was successful. In 1928 a plaque was fixed over the door of the bell tower of the Church of the Redeemer to commemorate to this feat. In the centre of the plaque, which is made from green
dolomite, is
Atlas with the globe, surrounded by lightning and the text: "At this place in 1897 Professor Adolf Slaby and Count von Arco erected the first German antenna system for
wireless communication". On 7 October 1897, the first radio link from
Schöneberg to
Rangsdorf in Berlin was successful, and the following summer
Jüterbog, about 65 km (40 mi) southwest of Berlin, could be reached. ==AEG==