1922 • 14 February:
2MT is the first British radio station to make regular entertainment broadcasts, operating from an ex-Army hut next to the Marconi Laboratories at
Writtle, near Chelmsford in Essex. • 11 May:
2LO begins broadcasting for one hour a day from the seventh floor of
Marconi House in London's
Strand, opposite
Somerset House. • 18 October: The British Broadcasting Company Limited is formed but not registered. • 1 November: The first
broadcast receiving licences are issued. • 14 November: 2LO is transferred to the British Broadcasting Company and begins broadcasting on
medium wave from Marconi House to London. The first news bulletin is read by
Arthur Burrows, the company's founding Director of Programmes. • 15 November:
5IT in
Birmingham and
2ZY in
Manchester begin broadcasting. All three BBC stations broadcast the general election results. • 14 December:
John C. W. Reith is hired as the company's managing director. • 15 December: The British Broadcasting Company Limited is registered as an incorporated company. • 24 December: 5NO begins broadcasting to
Newcastle. • 30 December: John Reith begins work as managing director. • 31 December: 35,774 receiving licences have been issued by the General Post Office. The BBC has four employees.
1923 • 18 January:
Postmaster General Neville Chamberlain issues the British Broadcasting Company Ltd. with a broadcasting licence from the General Post Office. • 13 February: 5WA begins broadcasting to
Cardiff. • 6 March: 5SC begins broadcasting to
Glasgow. • 16 March: The first return of shareholders is filed. Substantiated claim. • 1 May: New studios are opened at
Savoy Hill. • 6 June:
Edgar Wallace becomes the first British radio
sports reporter when he makes a report on
The Derby. • 29 August: The first network news bulletin is delivered by all BBC stations. • 28 September: First published edition of
The Radio Times. • 1 October: Publication of Sykes Committee Report on Broadcasting. • 10 October: 2BD begins broadcasting to
Aberdeen. • 17 October:
6BM begins broadcasting to
Bournemouth. • 16 November: 6FL begins broadcasting to
Sheffield as the first relay station. • 26 November: First experimental broadcast to North America. • 30 December: First landline relay from
Radiola Paris, France. • 31 December: First broadcast of the
Big Ben chimes. BBC staff numbers 177.
1924 • 5 February: First daily broadcast of the
Greenwich Time Signal. • 17 February: First daily broadcast of the
Big Ben time signal. • 28 March 5PY begins broadcasting to
Plymouth as a relay station. • 1 May: 2EH begins broadcasting to
Edinburgh as a relay station. • 11 June: 6LV begins broadcasting to
Liverpool as a relay station. • 8 July: 2LS begins broadcasting to
Leeds and
Bradford as a relay station. • 9 July: 5XX begins experimental broadcasts on
long wave from Chelmsford. • 15 August: 6K began broadcasting to
Hull as a relay station. • 15 September:
2BE begins broadcasting to
Belfast. • 16 September: 5NG begins broadcasting to
Nottingham as a relay station. • 21 October: 6ST begins broadcasting to
Stoke-on-Trent as a relay station. • 12 November: 2DE begins broadcasting to
Dundee as a relay station. • 26 November: First transatlantic relay broadcast from
KDKA,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. • 12 December: 5SX begins broadcasting to
Swansea as a relay station. • 31 December: Over 1 million receiving licences have been issued by the General Post Office. The BBC has 20 radio transmitting stations in operation and 465 employees.
1925 • Various dates: Eight sponsored concerts are broadcast by the BBC. • 3 April: BBC Deputy Managing Director Rear-Admiral
Charles Carpendale becomes President of the First General Assembly of the
International Broadcasting Union at
Geneva, Switzerland. • 6 April: 2LO's transmitter power is increased with the move from Marconi House to the roof of
Selfridges department store in
Oxford Street. • 17 July: First published edition of
The Radio Supplement. • 27 July: The 5XX experimental longwave station is moved from Chelmsford to
Daventry where it commences regular broadcasting on 1600 metres. • 31 December: BBC staff numbers reach 658.
1926 • 4 January: John Reith begins to impose his
dress code on the BBC's radio announcers, who must wear dinner jackets in the evening, as a mark of respect towards performers obliged to dress formally. • 16 January: Catholic priest and broadcaster Father
Ronald Knox broadcasts
Broadcasting from the Barricades, a satirical news report of a fictional riot. A significant part of the public believes the programme to be genuine, and Knox's satire provokes a minor panic similar to that caused by
Orson Welles's
The War of the Worlds broadcast twelve years later. • 5 March: The Crawford parliamentary committee publishes its broadcasting report, which calls for the takeover of the British Broadcasting Company Ltd. by a government-owned non-commercial
British Broadcasting Commission. • 18 June: The BBC's
Radio Supplement publication is replaced by its new periodical,
World Radio. • 22 July: Final return of shareholders filed. • 14 November: The International Broadcasting Union publishes its
Geneva Plan, which reduces the number of BBC wavelengths. This forces the company to move towards a restructuring of its services which will see most of its local radio stations replaced by regional stations. • 16 December: Over 100 staff and directors of the British Broadcasting Company Limited attend a dinner party given for Prime Minister
Stanley Baldwin. • 20 December: Publication of the
royal charter and licence agreements creating the
British Broadcasting Corporation. • 31 December: The General Post Offices has issued 2¼ million receiving licences. The contracts of 773 British Broadcasting Company staff are terminated and, with the dissolution of the company, shareholders are paid at par value. All assets, plant and copyrights held by the British Broadcasting Company are transferred to the Postmaster General.
1927 • 1 January: The
British Broadcasting Corporation is established, and all assets received by the Postmaster General from the British Broadcasting Company Limited are transferred. John Reith takes office as the first director general, and all staff previously employed by the company are engaged under new contracts to the corporation. ==See also==