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  1. Esther Marion Armstrong was the widow of Edwin Howard Armstrong, notable for continuing his patent battles after despair drove him to suicide. It took 13 years, but she did win all the patent fights, winning financial settlements that restored her wealth. [2]

  2. Esther Marion Armstrong was the widow of pioneering radio FM inventor Edwin Howard Armstrong. She is notable for continuing — and winning — her husband's patent lawsuits against some of America's largest electronics manufacturers after his suicide. In 13 years of litigation, she was victorious in every battle over her husband's patents, winning financial settlements that restored her vast ...

  3. Edwin Armstrong and wife Esther Marion MacInnis at Palm Beach, 1923.

  4. Esther Marion Armstrong was the widow of pioneering radio FM inventor Edwin Howard Armstrong. She is notable for continuing — and winning — her husband's patent lawsuits against some of America's largest electronics manufacturers after his suicide.In 13 years of litigation, she was victorious in every battle over her husband's patents, winning financial settlements that restored her vast ...

  5. Esther Marion Armstrong was the widow of FM radio inventor Edwin Howard Armstrong. She contined her husband's patent lawsuits against Motorola and Emerson Radio. After 13 years of litigation, she was victorious and won substantial settlements. She used the money to establish awards and promote the legacy and accomplishments of Edwin Howard ...

  6. 28 de nov. de 2023 · The major and his newlywed wife, Esther Marion MacInnis Armstrong, took a honeymoon roadtrip in 1923 to Palm Beach, Florida, in which Armstrong gifted her his new portable superheterodyne receiver. Howard and Marion Armstrong on aFlorida beach with the portable superhet radio, 1923.

  7. 25 de ago. de 2013 · English: American engineer Edwin Armstrong the inventor of the superheterodyne radio receiver, with his new wife Esther Marion MacInnis in Palm Beach, Florida, in 1923. The radio is a portable superheterodyne set that Armstrong built as a gift for her.