.|alt= Radio (initially known as "wireless telegraphy") was developed in the late 1890s, and was quickly recognized as an important aid to maritime communication. Previously, seagoing vessels had adopted a variety of standardized visual and audio distress signals, using such things as semaphore flags, signal flares, bells, and foghorns. However, cooperation in standardizing radio distress signals was initially limited by national differences and rivalries between competing radio companies. In 1903, an Italian representative at the Berlin
Preliminary Conference on Wireless Telegraphy, Captain Quintino Bonomo, discussed the need for common operating procedures, including the suggestion that "ships in distress ... should send the signal SSS DDD at intervals of a few minutes". However, procedural questions were beyond the scope of this conference, so no standard signal was adopted at the time, although Article IV of the conference's
Final Protocol stated that "Wireless telegraph stations should, unless practically impossible, give priority to calls for help received from ships at sea". Without international regulations, individual organizations were left to develop their practices. On 7 January 1904 the
Marconi International Marine Communication Company issued "Circular 57", which specified that, for the company's worldwide installations, beginning 1 February 1904 "the call to be given by ships in distress or in any way requiring assistance shall be
C.Q.D." An alternative proposal, put forward in 1906 by the U.S. Navy, suggested that the
International Code of Signals flag signals should be adopted for radio use, including NC, which stood for "In distress; want immediate assistance".
Germany was the first country to adopt the distress signal, which it called the
Notzeichen signal, as one of three Morse code sequences included in national radio regulations which became effective on 1 April 1905. In 1906, the
first International Radiotelegraph Convention met in Berlin, which produced an agreement signed on 3 November 1906 that become effective on 1 July 1908. The convention adopted an extensive collection of Service Regulations, including Article XVI, which read: "Ships in distress shall use the following signal: repeated at brief intervals". In both the 1 April 1905 German law and the 1906 international regulations, the distress signal is specified as a continuous Morse code sequence of three dots / three dashes / three dots, with no mention of any alphabetic equivalents. However there was a convention in
International Morse whereby three dots comprise the letter "S", and three dashes the letter "O", and it soon became common to informally refer to the distress signal as "S O S", with the 12 January 1907 Electrical World stating that "Vessels in distress use the special signal, SOS, repeated at short intervals." (In
American Morse code, which was used by many coastal ships in the United States through the first part of the twentieth century, three dashes stood for the numeral "5", so in a few cases the distress signal was informally referred to as "S 5 S".) The first ships that have been reported to have transmitted an distress call were the
Cunard oceanliner on 10 June 1909 while sailing the
Azores, and the steamer SS
Arapahoe on 11 August 1909 while off the
North Carolina coast. The signal of the
Arapahoe was received by the
United Wireless Telegraph Company station at
Hatteras, North Carolina, and forwarded to the steamer company's offices. However, there was some resistance among
Marconi operators to adopting the new signal, and as late as the April 1912
sinking of the the ship's Marconi operators intermixed and distress calls. In the interests of consistency and maritime safety, the use of CQD appears to have died out thereafter. ==Later developments==