Radio in Wales

Radio Broadcasting in Wales began in 1923 with the inauguration of the British Broadcasting Corporation's (BBC) station at Cardiff. Radio broadcasting has been a prime source of news and entertainment for the population of Wales since that date. As well as the public service provided by the BBC, Wales has private regional and national services producing programmes in both the Welsh and English languages; though the provision of Welsh language radio has been historically inconsistent and politically divisive.

Early history

1922-1928

Before the coming of radio stations, radios were used primarily as a means of military and civil communications, with no intent as a medium for sharing information or entertaining the masses. In 1922 under rules set out by the General Post Office (GPO) the British Broadcasting Company (BBC) was formed and began broadcasting in December of that year.[1] Public broadcasting began in Wales the next year with the inauguration of the BBC's Cardiff station (5WA) on 13 February.[2] The Cardiff station was located at 19 Castle Street with its transmitter at the Castle Avenue Electricity works.[3] Listeners tuned in at 5pm to hear the station's first broadcast, and at 9:30pm heard Welsh baritone Mostyn Thomas sing Dafydd y Garreg Wen the first Welsh song to be performed on radio in Wales.[4] It took until 1 March, St David's Day, for the station to broadcast a talk conduct in Welsh.[5]

The Commemorative plaque at 19 Castle Street, Cardiff

The opening of the Cardiff station was quickly followed by the creation of a relay station at Swansea (5SX), which began output on 12 December 1924.[2] Initially everything broadcast from Cardiff was produced by the station, but following the introduction of simultaneous transmission in 1924 roughly 75% of Cardiff's output, and an even larger proportion of Swansea's came from London.[2]

By the end of the decade about 70% of the population of Wales were able to receive broadcasts from the BBC, which renamed itself the British Broadcasting Corporation in 1927.[2] Though it was not until 1935 that the percentage of Welsh households were paying the licence fee. This was primarily due to many people at the time in Wales listening to a wireless in public halls.[2] Despite the large listenership, very few programs were aired in the Welsh language during these early years.[6] The station producing the most substantial amount of Welsh language programs at the time was Radio Éireann located in Dublin, who understood that their broadcasts could be picked up by the Welsh speaking communities of west Wales.[6] The lack of regional or national programming was a decision made by the BBC's Director-General, John Reith and his senior staff, who felt that the 'best' programmes were made from London and the rest of the country imitate their style and content.[6] Despite this, efforts were made within Wales to ensure the Welsh language was part of the Radio schedule. Pressure group Cylch Dewi (formed by a group of cultural nationalists who counted Saunders Lewis as one of its founders) produced their own output to be aired, including the first Welsh-language religious service.[6]

One of the most damning responses to the lack of Welsh-language radio provision came from a 1927 report commissioned by the President of the Welsh Board of Education.[6] In the report the BBC was accused of: "...achieving the complete Anglicisation of the intellectual life of the nation. We regard the current policy of the British Broadcasting Corporation as one of the most serious menaces to the life of the Welsh language."

1929-1939

In February 1929 it was decided that Cardiff should become the main station for the BBC's West Region, which consisted of Wales and South West England.[2] Despite Cardiff's central role as provider, the main transmitter was based in Washford in Somerset and most of north and mid-Wales were unable to receive the signal.[2] In addition, simultaneous broadcast meant that only a small proportion of programmes were made by the station.[2] The biggest impact of the decision to merge Wales with the South West was cultural. With two very different communities to provide for, Welsh language was virtually non-existent on the airwaves, which was mush to the satisfaction of the West Region director, E. R. Appleton.[2] Appleton was a staunch believer in spoken broadcasting being in the English-language only, and stated repeatedly, that as the Government had decided to form a corporation for the function of broadcasting, it was natural that the official language of the United Kingdom be used throughout.[2][7][nb 1]

In the history BBC broadcasting in Wales, the importance of the victory won in sound radio can scarcely be exaggerated. All the subsequent recognition of Wales in the field of broadcasting (and, it could be argued, in other fields too) stemmed from that victory.

John Davies gives his thoughts on the creation of the Welsh Region. Broadcasting and the BBC in Wales (1994)

The lack of Welsh-language broadcasting saw an alliance of organisations who waged a campaign to amend the situation. The University of Wales sent a deputation to London to argue for greater recognition of the nation in late 1928, but by the mid 1930s they were joined by the National Union of Welsh Societies, the Welsh Parliamentary Party and Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru in pressuring the BBC.[7][8] The argument put forward by the BBC was that a lack of wavelengths made it technically impossible to separate the West and Wales.[8][9] This argument was demolished by 19 year-old physicist Edward George Bowen and the resulting pressure resulted in a studio being established in north Wales at Bangor in 1935.[9] In addition a transmitter was erected in Llangoed and Wales was given its first Welsh Regional Director, Rhys Hopkin Morris.[8] Finally, in July 1937, Wales was allocated its own wavelength and broadcast its first program on 4 July.[5] Historian John Davies argued that the establishment of the Welsh Region was an important concession to nationalist sentiment.[10]

By the late 1930s the BBC had increased its staff in Wales, and a pool of bilingual Welsh writers, broadcasters and producers were brought into the corporations to meet the demands of the new region.[8] Seen as the best of Welsh-speaking intelligentsia, they included poet Alun Llewellyn Williams, producer Sam Jones and historian Geraint Dyfnallt Owen.[11] Although the team were joined by those who were not fluent in the language, such as Mai Jones and Philip Burton, the preponderance of Welsh-speaking producers caused resentment among the non-Welsh-speaking staff.[8]

Of the programmes produced during this period, the creation of an all-Wales news is arguably the most important.[8] Before this date there had never been a newspaper that covered the entire country, just regional copies. The fact that all corners of the country could now hear the same report was an innovation for Wales.[8] These broadcasts also brought into existence a standard form of spoken Welsh.[8]

Golden age of Welsh Radio

1939-1952

In 1939, after war was declared, the BBC was forced to transmit a unified service across the United Kingdom; due partly to release wavelengths for military use, partly from the fear of the enemy using wireless beams as a point of target, but mostly to create a unified centralization required during states of war.[8] Despite this fact there was still some Welsh-language output, transmitted to all of the United Kingdom, including a daily news bulletin at 5pm.[8] There were murmors of dissaproval in England to being forced to listen to Welsh broadcasts, but some productions made by the Welsh Region proved very popular, including Mai Jones' Welsh Rarebit.[8][12] Another consequence of the war for Welsh radio was the relocation of much of the BBCs department to the Bangor Studio, due to the risks of air raids on the cities of London and Bristol.[13][14] This decision saw some of the biggest names in British entertainment arriving in north Wales, including Tommy Handley, Arthur Askey and Charlie Chester.[14] The most successful show produced at Bangor during this period was Handley's It's That Man Again, which became the best-loved of all wartime programmes in Britain.[8][14]

In 1945 Hopkin Morris resigned from the BBC to re-enter the field of politics. Alun Oldfield-Davies became the acting director until he was confirmed permanently for the post on 15 June 1945.[15] On the 29 July 1945 the BBC's Welsh Home Service was launched, which was proceeded two days earlier by the first Welsh edition of the Radio Times.[16] Oldfield-Davies initially pushed for more Welsh language programming, in an attempt to 'recover ground lost during the war'.[16] Despite his actions he was also keen to not have the service too closely associated with the Welsh language, and attempted, unsuccessfully, to have the Welsh Home Service named as the Wales Home Service.[16]

In 1946, with most of the former staff now released from war-time commitments, output increased. The news unit returned from London to Wales on 22 January, and several new posts were filled.[17]

Footnotes

Notes
  1. Although Appleton believed spoken broadcast should be in the English language only, he had no issue with songs in Welsh, as he equated it to listening to music in other languages, such as Italian opera.
References
  1. "How did broadcasting begin?". BBC. 22 March 2001. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Davies 2008, p. 86.
  3. Prior, Neil (13 February 2013). "Broadcasting in Wales: 90 years since BBC went on air". BBC. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  4. "First broadcast from BBC Wales". BBC. 10 October 2011. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  5. 1 2 Bartlett, Jim (17 August 2015). "Significant Dates in Welsh Broadcasting". Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Medhurst 2010, p. 16.
  7. 1 2 Medhurst 2010, p. 17.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Davies 2008, p. 87.
  9. 1 2 Davies 2008, p. 77.
  10. Medhurst 2010, p. 19.
  11. Hajkowski 2014.
  12. "Welsh Rarebit: "We'll Keep a Welcome"". BBC. 2 March 2012. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  13. Williams, Bethan (30 October 2015). "Celebrating 80 years of broadcasting from Bangor". BBC. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  14. 1 2 3 Crump, Eryl (12 April 2015). "BBC celebrate 80 years of broadcasting at Bangor". dailypost.co.uk. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  15. Davies, Geraint Talfan (2011). "Alun Bennett Oldfield-Davies". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/101151. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  16. 1 2 3 Davies 1994, p. 148.
  17. Davies 1994, p. 149.
Primary sources
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