The word "HAM" as applied to Amateur Radio, dates back to 1908 and was the call letters of the first amateur wireles station operated by some members of the Harvard Wireless Club. They were Albert S. Hyman, Bob Almay and Reggie Murray.
    At first they call their station Hyman-Almay-Murray, but tapping out a long name in code soon called for a revision. They just change their sign to Hy-Al-Mu, using the first two letters of each name. Early in 1909 some confusion resulted between signals from amateur wireless HyAlMu and the Mexican ship named the Hyalmo. It was then the boys decided to use only the first letter of each name and the call became HAM. In the early days of radio, amateur operators picked their own frequency and their own call letters. Then, as now, some amateurs had better signals than some commercial stations. The resulting confusion and interference finally came to the attention of Congressional committees, and they in turn gave much attention to proposed legislation and designed to critically limit amateur activities.
    In 1911 Albert Hyman chose the controversial wireless legislation bill as his thesis topic at Harvard. His instructor insisted a copy to be sent to Senator Davis A. Walsh, a member of one of the commitee hearing the bill. The Senator was so impressed he sent Hyman to appear before the committee. He took the stand and described how the little amateur station was built. He almost cried when he told the crowded committee room if the bill went through they would have to close the station because they could not afford the license fees and all the requirements that were set up in the bill. The debate started and the little ham became the symbol of all the little amateur stations in the country crying out to save from the menace and greed of big commercial stations that didn't them around.
    Finally the bill got to the floor of congress and every member talked about the poor little station HAM. Thats how it all started and you'll find the whole story in the Congressional Record. Nationwide publicity associated radio station HAM with amateurs. From the day to this, and probably to the end of time, on radio language an amateur is a HAM.