86 episodes

Be informed, educated and entertained by the amazing true story of radio’s forgotten pioneers. With host Paul Kerensa, great guests and rarely-heard clips from broadcasting’s golden era.

The British Broadcasting Century with Paul Kerensa Paul Kerensa

    • History
    • 4.7 • 9 Ratings

Be informed, educated and entertained by the amazing true story of radio’s forgotten pioneers. With host Paul Kerensa, great guests and rarely-heard clips from broadcasting’s golden era.

    #085 The Earliest BBC Recording and The First Monarch On Air

    #085 The Earliest BBC Recording and The First Monarch On Air

    On 23 April 1924, a landmark broadcast took place - the biggest so far. And on day of podcast release, it's the centenary!
    100 years ago at time of writing, King George V opened the Empire Exhibition at Wembley, becoming the first monarch to broadcast.
    It also stands as the oldest surviving recording of a BBC broadcast - and the only excerpt of the BBC from the 1920s. 
    The BBC couldn't record anything until 1932, when the Blattnerphone came along. So how did this 1924 broadcast manage to be retained?
    For decades, it wasn't. A 1964 episode of Desert Island Discs tells the tale, of how their 1936/1955 Scrapbook for 1924 programme aired without the recording, but with a sad admission that there was none... till a listener got in touch. Dorothy Jones' husband had recorded the king off-air via a home-made device. Thanks to him, and her, and Scrapbook producer Leslie Baily, we have this sole recording of the 20s' Beeb.
    It's quite a tale. The broadcast alone was revolutionary - with 10 million people listening via loudspeakers on street corners, brand new radio sets for their homes... even Downton Abbey hired in its first wireless set (but will Lord Grantham keep it? Oh go on then...)
    Hear all about the momentous exhibition, the broadcast, the recording, and a rundown of royals who ruled the airwaves - and it goes back further than you might think.
    Hear too of brand new research into an unheralded royal radio encounter from 1906 - before even 'the world's first broadcast' took place, King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra (Palace) were enjoying a 'radio' whistling solo and a personalised greeting.
    Thanks for listening.
    Do share, rate, review, rant, rave, tell people about the podcast. It's a solo operation - not made by the BBC, just by comedian & writer Paul Kerensa. So thanks!
     

    SHOWNOTES:
    If you enjoyed this, make sure you've listened to our episode on The History of Coronation Broadcasts and A Brief History of the BBC Archives.
    Listen to the 1924 recording of the Prince of Wales and King George V.
    Listen to the 1923 gramophone record of King George V and Queen Mary.
    Listen to the 1923 recording of President Woodrow Wilson - the world's earliest recording of broadcast radio.
    See the picture of Edward VII and Queen Alexandra encounter 'the talking arc' via our Facebook group or on Twitter. (search for 'talking arc')
    We try to only use clips long beyond copyright - but any BBC copyright content reproduced courtesy of the British Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved.
    Original music is by Will Farmer.
    Support us on Patreon (£5/mth), and gain bonus videos and writings in return - we're reading the first book on radio, Cecil Lewis' Broadcasting from Within, for example. Hear all instalments read to you: patreon.com/posts/patron-vid-savoy-75950901
    ...Interested in joining a live actual walking tour around those first BBC landmarks? I'm thinking of running one, summer 2024. Email paul at paulkerensa dot com for details of when.
    Paul's on tour: An Evening of (Very) Old Radio could be playing in your town. If not (likely), book it! Details: www.paulkerensa.com/tour
    More info on this radio history project at: 
    paulkerensa.com/oldradio

    • 37 min
    #084 Women's Hour on the BBC: 1923-24

    #084 Women's Hour on the BBC: 1923-24

    When Dr Kate Murphy became a BBC's Woman's Hour producer in 1993, the received wisdom was that women's programming began in 1946, when Woman's Hour launched. 
    Kate did some digging in the archives, and discovered the long lost tale of the early BBC's Women's Hour (rather than Woman's Hour), which ran from 1923-24. Why so brief? What impact did it make? Which listeners did it cater for? She's here to tell us everything.
    Hear the topics, the tales, some of the voices, how the regional stations nipped in first, how Men's Talk didn't last quite as long, and how it Women's Hour had one of the first examples of listener feedback. 
    Next time: The earliest BBC recording, as we leap forward a year for one episode, for the centenary of King George V's landmark broadcast - plus the bizarre tale of how we now get to hear it. 

     
    SHOWNOTES:
    Dr Kate Murphy's books are a must if you're interested in this area (and if you're reading this, sorry to break it to you, but you're interested). Behind the Wireless: A History of Early Women at the BBC and Hilda Matheson: A Life of Secrets and Broadcasts. Buy them both - I did. 
    This is an independent podcast, nothing to do with the BBC.
    Any BBC copyright content reproduced courtesy of the British Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved.
    Original music is by Will Farmer.
    Support us on Patreon (£5/mth), and bonus bits include this video meander around (the outside of) Savoy Hill: patreon.com/posts/patron-vid-savoy-75950901
    ...Interested in joining a live actual walking tour around those first BBC landmarks? I'm thinking of running one, early 2024. Email paul at paulkerensa dot com for details of when.
    These recently uploaded plans of Savoy Hill show you everything from Reith's Thames view to the office of Women's Hour boss Ella Fitzgerald: https://www.facebook.com/groups/bbcentury/posts/932696548301466/  
    Catch Paul on tour with An Evening of (Very) Old Radio - for where/when, see www.paulkerensa.com/tour
    Find us on Facebook or Twitter, or Ex-Twitter.
    Your ratings/reviewings of this podcast REALLY help get the podcast noticed. It's solo-run, so thanks!
    More info on this radio history project at: 
    paulkerensa.com/oldradio

    Thanks for listening (-in).

    • 30 min
    #083 The Launch of Savoy Hill: The BBC's New Home, 1 May 1923

    #083 The Launch of Savoy Hill: The BBC's New Home, 1 May 1923

    Welcome to the Savoy Hill era of the BBC!
    Episode 83 opens the doors to the first permanent home of Auntie Beeb, with a grand launch night on 1 May 1923. I think it's one of the most crucial - and funniest - 24 hours in the BBC's history. 
    So we recreate as much as we can of that one day:
    A last-minute dress code sees senior management in far-too-big suits...
    John Reith's tee-total buffet goes terribly wrong....
    The closing speaker goes missing - and is found, sozzled. Will Reith let the drunken lord on the air, and will he string a sentence together? 
    All will be revealed, plus the music, the speeches (from Lord Gainford, Sir William Bull and Lord Birkenhead), the first Men's Talk (next time, it's Women's Hour, the next day) and the launch of the Sykes Inquiry - just that minor thing of the govt and the press loathing the BBC. A reminder: this was 1923. 
    Our guest too covers more recent years of broadcasting - Charles Huff, producer of Tomorrow's World and The Great Egg Race, tell us about radio days of his youth, from Educating Archie to Eastern Bloc jamming. 
    Next time: Dr Kate Murphy joins us to talk about the first Women's Hour progamme, as well as other 1920s women's broadcasting - and why it stopped.

     
    SHOWNOTES:
    This is an independent podcast, nothing to do with the BBC.
    Original music by Will Farmer.
    We're hugely grateful to the BBC Written Archives Centre for access and permission to recreate the Savoy Hill launch speeches. BBC copyright content reproduced courtesy of the British Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved.
    Books consulted include Sir John Reith by Garry Allighan, The Emergence of Broadcasting in Britain by Brian Hennessey, Savoy Hill by Brian Hennessey, and Never Look Back by Cecil Lewis. Among others.
    Support us on Patreon (£5/mth), and bonus bits include this video meander around (the outside of) Savoy Hill: patreon.com/posts/patron-vid-savoy-75950901
    ...Interested in joining a live actual walking tour around those first BBC landmarks? I'm thinking of running one, early 2024. Email paul at paulkerensa dot com for details of when.
    Paul's on tour with An Evening of (Very) Old Radio - for where/when, see www.paulkerensa.com/tour
    Find us on Facebook or Twitter, or Ex-Twitter.
    Your ratings/reviewings of this podcast REALLY help get the podcast noticed. It's solo-run, so thanks!
    More info on this radio history project at: 
    paulkerensa.com/oldradio

     

    • 39 min
    #082 The BBC at Marconi House: 14-11-1922 to 30-04-1923

    #082 The BBC at Marconi House: 14-11-1922 to 30-04-1923

    Welcome to season 6 of The British Broadcasting Century Podcast - and our 82nd episode.
    Back in our podcast timeline, telling the moment-by-moment origin story of British broadcasting, we reach a bittersweet moment: the BBC moves out of its first studios, the temporary studio on the top floor of Marconi House.
    We pay tribute with a look at the Beeb's final day at MH, 30 April 1923 - a broadcast promoting Women's Hour (by a man) and Hawaiian guitar music (hear it here!).
    And we spend much of the episode re-examining Auntie's first day at Marconi House - indeed BBC Day 1 - as I've just discovered a 1942 memoir from Arthur Burrows, first voice of the BBC. And he says some things I've never read anywhere else before. Was there music on the BBC's first day? He thinks so...
    ..but we don't! And by 'we', I mean our invited guests: Newspaper Detective Andrew Barker and The Great Collector Dr Steve Arnold. We look at the evidence, from newspapers to the archives to best guesses, and try to piece together the jigsaw of the BBC's first 3 days.
    Also some more recent BBC memories, as Radio 2 leaves Wogan House, Paul reflects on his memories of broadcasting from there - and working briefly with Steve Wright - a tribute to the great DJ, now Jockin' in the Big Show in the sky.
     
    SHOWNOTES:
    This is an independent podcast, nothing to do with the BBC or anyone else for that matter.
    Original music by Will Farmer.
    BBC copyright content reproduced courtesy of the British Broadcasting Corporation. Al rights reserved.
    Huge thanks to the BBC Written Archive Centre for help and permission regarding the memoir in this episode - and to the Burrows family... if you're out there, I'd love to say hi!
    Listen to the Burrows memoir without interruption here: https://www.patreon.com/posts/audio-first-bbc-96829718
    Some Patreon links for patrons only (do join! £5/mth, cancel whenever)...
    Steve Wright - a video of my waffling away about him a little aimlessly, and walking between Broadcasting House and Wogan House: https://www.patreon.com/posts/vid-steve-wright-98460958?cid=129996334
    I mention on the podcasat a Patreon video of my walk around (the outside of) Savoy Hill: https://www.patreon.com/posts/patron-vid-savoy-75950901
    ...and the walk from Magnet House (first BBC HQ) to Marconi House (first studio): https://www.patreon.com/posts/magnet-house-to-68777192

    ...Interested in joining a live actual walking tour around those first BBC landmarks? I'm thinking of running one, early 2024. Email paul at paulkerensa dot com for details of when.
    My Radio 2 Pause for Thought in tribute to Steve Wright: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0hbpwgr
    Paul Gambaccini's moving tribute to Steve Wright/Wogan House: https://twitter.com/airchecks/status/1759491760827351416
    I also mention my son's Minecraft version of Marconi House. It's got quite a few inaccuracies - but it was made by a 10-year-old with little-to-no knowledge of the Marconi House history - just access to a few plans. So admire the effort if not the accuracy! It's here, if you'd like: https://youtu.be/TatzKmF1z3k
    Details of Paul's tour of An Evening of (Very) Old Radio at www.paulkerensa.com/tour
    Find us on Facebook or Twitter, or Ex-Twitter.
    Join us on Patreon.com/paulkerensa, from £5/mth, and get written updates and videos.
    Your ratings/reviewings of this podcast REALLY help get the podcast noticed. It's solo-run, so thanks!
    Next time: We've closed Marconi House, so let's open Savoy Hill!
    More info on this radio history project at: 
    paulkerensa.com/oldradio

     

    • 40 min
    #081 The Pips at 100! A Brief History of Time at the BBC

    #081 The Pips at 100! A Brief History of Time at the BBC

    Pip pip pip pip pip piiiiiiiiip!
    Is that the time? It must be 100 years (to the day, as I release this episode) since six baby pips were born onto the airwaves. 
    As the Greenwich Time Signal - aka The Pips - turns 100, we look back at their origin story, thanks to horologist Frank Hope-Jones and also his overlooked contribution to broadcasting itself.
    Plus Big Ben's bongs, heard by Manchester listeners days before London's listeners. We explain how... but also why Manchester's time signal was often a little approximate, thanks to too many double doors. 
    SHOWNOTES:
    Original music by Will Farmer.
    Thanks to our Newspaper Detective Andrew Barker.
    Voices include: Harold Bishop, Peter Eckersley, Sir Noel Ashbridge, Kenneth Wright, Frank Hope-Jones... and probably more.
    We try to only use recordings out of copyright. If you have been affected by rights issues involved in this, do let me know. Everything's editable. 
    This is an independent podcast, nothing to do with the BBC or anyone else for that matter.
    I mention Charlie Connelly's excellent podcast about 100 years of the Shipping Forecase. Hear here: https://audioboom.com/posts/8423037-100-years-of-the-shipping-forecast
    Details of Paul's tour of An Evening of (Very) Old Radio at www.paulkerensa.com/tour
    Find us on Facebook or Twitter, or Ex-Twitter.
    Join us on Patreon.com/paulkerensa, from £5/mth, and get written updates and videos.
    Your ratings/reviewings of this podcast REALLY help get the podcast noticed. It's solo-run, so thanks!
    Next time: Season 6 continues with a celebration of Marconi House - its last day as a BBC studio, and its first.
    More info on this radio history project at: 
    paulkerensa.com/oldradio
     

    • 15 min
    #080 SPECIAL: The First Religious Broadcast: Re-enacted

    #080 SPECIAL: The First Religious Broadcast: Re-enacted

    Welcome to 2023's Christmas special/2024's Epiphany special. (Come on, what podcast doesn't have an Epiphany special?)
    It's all just a chance to turn episode 80 into a re-enactment of this remarkable untold tale of Britain's first religious broadcast. Contrary to what some records say, it wasn't the BBC who began religious broadcasting in Britain - it was lone Peckham pioneer preacher Dr James Ebenezer Boon, on 30 July 1922.
    Thankfully he wrote everything down - from the words of his sermon to the gramophone record hymns he played, to the feedback received from listeners, to his thoughts on the opportunities of future religious broadcasting.
    We'll also tell you about America's first religious broadcast (1921) and the first non-radio religious broadcasts - via the Electrophone (in the 1890s!). And we'll propel forward to look at the BBC's first church service on 6th January 1924 (and why it wasn't quite the first after all), with its centenary round about now-ish.
    We discover too the BBC's first Muslim, Jewish, Hindu and Buddhist broadcasters. Have a guess now roughly when each debuted on air? Then find out in this episode. (It was surprisingly early...)
    Whether your religion is religion or radio, I'm sure you'll enjoy this episode. It's different to others we've done, as at its centre is a full re-enactment, so expect a 15min sermon, and hymns - sung along to by the live audience (including several religious broadcasters of note) at Christ Church Evangelical, McDermott Road, Peckham. This was Dr Boon's church, that he wired up back in summer 1922, then left to broadcast INTO it from five miles away - but reaching Coventry and the east coast (who offered to send in a collection, bless 'em).
    Huge thanks to Christ Church Evangelical, especially Adrian Holloway, for allowing us access (I even went to see the roof, where Dr Boon put his aerial!) for that rare thing - recreating a landmark broadcast where it occurred.
    Thanks too to Dr Jim Harris and Andy Mabbett for their help in bringing the story to life. Branden Braganza and Riley King recorded it (a video will appear on Youtube soon - details here when that happens). Will Farmer composed the original music. Oh and we're nothing to do with the BBC.
    Make sure you've also heard our other episode spinning through a century of 'God on the air' - episode 60: A History of Religious Broadcasting.
    And if you'd like to read along to the sermon, or read Boon's full notes, you can, on Wikisource. (Thanks Andy Mabbett)
    Thanks for listening. More info on this project at paulkerensa.com/oldradio, and find me on tour with An Evening of (Very) Old Radio at paulkerensa.com/tour. Or book it for your place?
    Support the show on patreon.com/paulkerensa - where videos and writings await for you £5/mth (cancel whenever, I'll never know). It all helps support the podcast.
    Or support it for free by sharing on your social medias, or with your pals and acquaintances.
    Bless you for listening.
     
    NEXT TIME:
    Season 6 begins! With the BBC leaving Marconi House for Savoy Hill. More re-enactments are coming...
     

    • 55 min

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5
9 Ratings

9 Ratings

YouKnowHowWeDo ,

Very cool

Hadn’t really planned on trying to learn this much about the Beeb but it’s well done and in depth. Bery enjoyable.

Thinking_Fish ,

Enjoying! Pip Pip!

Although I had ZERO interest in early radio going into this podcast, I’m laughing and learning. Fascinating stuff.

ChrisQDawgs ,

Inform...educate...entertain

This podcast is so much fun, and I’m learning a ton about the early days of radio in the UK.

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