At midnight on 14 August 1967, the
Marine, &c., Broadcasting (Offences) Act 1967 came into effect in the United Kingdom. It created a criminal offence of supplying music, commentary, advertising, fuel, food, water or other assistance except for life-saving, to any ship, offshore structure such as
a former WWII fort, or flying platform such as an aircraft used for broadcasting without a licence from the regulatory authority in the UK. Despite initial plans to the contrary, Radio London decided not to defy the law, and closed before the Act came into effect. It was decided to close at 3pm on 14 August 1967, partly to guarantee a large audience, as well as to enable the ship's DJs and other staff to return to shore and board a train to London. A one-hour recorded show was broadcast from 2pm to allow staff to get ready to leave. The time also described an "L" shape of the hands on a clock face, but whether that was a real consideration is unknown.
Their Final Hour, as the programme was called, had recorded greetings of farewell and remembrance from recording stars; included were the voices of
Mick Jagger,
Cliff Richard,
Ringo Starr and
Dusty Springfield. The 2:30 news bulletin, read by Paul Kaye, was the final live segment on the station. Birch thanked DJs and staff and others involved throughout the station's life, as well as politicians and others who fought for the station – and its 12 million listeners in the United Kingdom and four million in the Netherlands, Belgium and France'. That was followed by the last record, "A Day in the Life" by the Beatles, then Paul Kaye's final announcement: "Big L time is three o'clock, and Radio London is now closing down". Radio London's theme tune, the "PAMS Sonowaltz", popularly called
Big Lil, was played before the transmitter was switched off by engineer Russell Tollerfield, just after 3pm. Just after Radio London closed down,
Robbie Dale on Radio Caroline South (previously Radio Atlanta) broadcast a brief tribute to the station, thanked its staff and DJs, and held a minute's silence. Most offshore stations had already left the air.
Radio Scotland and
Radio 270 closed at midnight. Radio Caroline South said it and Radio Caroline North (the original Caroline) would continue. Owner
Ronan O'Rahilly said they were defending the principle of free broadcasting, rather than being mere business assets. Caroline's offshore broadcasts continued on and off until 1990, after which the station pursued legal means of broadcasting. Radio London staff arriving at London's
Liverpool Street station from Harwich were greeted by large numbers of fans, some wearing black armbands and carrying placards with slogans such as "Freedom went with Radio London". They tried to storm the platform, leading to minor scuffles with police. harbour, 1975 The MV
Galaxy sailed initially to Hamburg,
West Germany, where
Erwin Meister and
Edwin Bollier tried to buy it for what became
Radio Nordsee International. When the deal fell through, Meister and Bollier looked for another ship. In 1979, the
Galaxy, with its 170 ft mast still erect, was sunk in
Kiel harbour as an artificial
reef; but, in 1986, concerns about pollution from the ship's fuel tanks resulted in it being brought ashore and salvaged. ==Further history==