Monday, May 23, 2022

BBC Radio 4 adds new programming

 


Radio 4 i
s broadcasting an Archive on 4 program Tuning In this Friday (27 May) at 2100 BST originally broadcast in November 2012:


"The press fulminated, the enthusiasts were frustrated, and the radio manufacturers fumed. Despite the fact that Marconi had invented the radio before Queen Victoria had celebrated her Diamond Jubilee in 1897, radio in Britain took another 25 years to begin an official service to listeners. But when, on November 14th 1922 the British Broadcasting Company's station at Marconi House radiated to an awaiting nation "This is 2LO calling" for the first time under the company's name, it marked the start of the first and most distinguished public-service radio station in the world.

In the BBC's centenary year, historian Dominic Sandbrook explores the long and involved pre-BBC history of radio in Britain, how Britain's broadcaster got going and developed into an institution dedicated to entertainment, education, and information, discovers why Australian diva Dame Nellie Melba was involved, and how the improbably-named Captain Plugge made his first commercial broadcast to Britain, sponsored by Selfridges department store, from the Eiffel Tower. From Marconi to Savoy Hill via an old army hut in Essex, the story of the early radio in Britain."

It's been on BBC Sounds for some time and is now linked to on this week's Radio 4 schedules page.

Tim Wander has just published a new limited edition book Writtle 1922-2022, The Centenary of British Radio Broadcasting with many new, previously published and colorized photographs. 

As well as the history of Writtle it covers the early history of radio broadcasting, equipment used by listeners and broadcasters, the careers of those involved with 2MT, and the birth of the BBC. Some text is from his earlier books. Details at: https://2mtwrittle100.co.uk/
M Barraclough/BDXC)