Timeline of the BBC

This is a timeline of the history of the British Broadcasting Corporation.

  • 1922
    • 18 October - The British Broadcasting Company is formed.
    • 14 November - First BBC broadcasts from London (station 2LO).
    • 15 November - First broadcasts from Birmingham (station 5IT) and Manchester (station 2ZY).
    • 24 December - First broadcast from Newcastle upon Tyne (station 5NO).
  • 1923
  • 1924
  • 1925
  • 1926
    • 4 May - The General strike begins. The BBC broadcasts five news bulletins a day as no newspapers are published.
    • 25 July - The previously experimental long-wave station 5XX moves from Chelmsford to Daventry and becomes the first station to achieve near national coverage. The Daventry station will later become the main transmitter of the National Programme.
  • 1927
    • 1 January - The British Broadcasting Company becomes the British Broadcasting Corporation, when it is granted a Royal Charter. Sir John Reith becomes the first Director-General.
    • 21 August - The first high-powered regional station (5GB), forerunner of the Midland Regional Programme, opens at Daventry.
  • 1929
  • 1930
    • July 14 - Transmission of the first experimental television play, The Man with the Flower in His Mouth.
  • 1932
  • 1936
  • 1937
  • 1938
  • 1939
    • September 1 - The BBC Television Service is suspended, in the middle of a Mickey Mouse cartoon (Mickey's Gala Premiere), due to the imminent outbreak of the Second World War. On radio, the Home Service replaces the National and Regional Programmes.
  • 1940
    • January 7 - Start of the Forces Programme on radio, precursor of the post-war Light Programme.
  • 1945
    • July 29 - Regional radio programming resumes, and the Light Programme starts.
  • 1946
    • June 7 - BBC Television broadcasts (405 lines) resume after the war. The first programme shown is the interrupted Mickey Mouse cartoon.
    • September 29 - The Third Programme starts broadcasting on radio.
  • 1947
    • November 9 - First use of telerecording: the Service of Remembrance from the Cenotaph is televised live, and a telerecording shown that evening.
  • 1948
  • 1950
    • May 21 - Lime Grove television studios open.
    • August 27 - First live television from the European continent, using BBC outside broadcast equipment.
  • 1953
  • 1955
    • May 2 - The BBC begins broadcasting on VHF (FM), using the Wrotham transmitter.
    • October 10 - Alexandra Palace begins test transmissions of a 405-line colour television service.
  • 1957
    • December 25 - First TV broadcast of the Queen's Christmas Day message.
  • 1958
    • May 5 - First experimental transmissions of a 625-line television service.
    • October 16 - First broadcast of Britain's longest running children's television show Blue Peter.
  • 1960
  • 1962
    • August 28 - Experimental stereo radio broadcasts begin.
  • 1964
    • April 20 - BBC2 starts broadcasting (on 625 lines); the existing BBC TV channel is renamed BBC1.
  • 1965
    • May 1 - The General Overseas Service is renamed the BBC World Service.
  • 1967
    • June 25 - The first worldwide live satellite programme, Our World, is televised.
    • July 1 - Regular colour TV transmissions (625 lines) begin on BBC2, starting with the Wimbledon tennis championships.
    • September 30 - BBC Radio 1 is launched, as a response to the threat from pirate radio station broadcasts of popular music. At the same time the Light, Third and Home services are renamed Radios 2, 3 and 4.
    • November 8 - BBC Local Radio starts. The first station is BBC Radio Leicester.
  • 1969
    • November 15 - BBC1 starts broadcasting in colour (simultaneous with rival ITV).
  • 1971
  • 1972
  • 1973
    • March - Experimental CEEFAX teletext transmissions begin.
  • 1974
  • 1978
    • April 3 - Regular radio broadcasts from Parliament begin.
    • November 23 - The BBC's radio stations switch medium wave frequencies: Radio 1 moves from 247m (1214 kHz) to 275 and 285m (1089 and 1053 kHz), Radio 2 moves from 1500m (200 kHz long wave) to 330 and 433m (909 and 693 kHz), Radio 3 moves from 464m (647 kHz) to Radio 1's old frequency, and Radio 4 moves to Radio 2's old frequency.
  • 1979
  • 1983
    • January 17 - BBC Breakfast Time - the UK's first breakfast television service - is launched, ahead of the ITV franchise TV-am, which follows on 1 February.
  • 1985
  • 1986
    • April 1 - All commercial activities of the BBC are now handled by BBC Enterprises Ltd.
    • October 27 - BBC1 starts a full daytime television service. Before today, excluding special events coverage, BBC1 showed pages from CEEFAX or closed down at times during weekday mornings and afternoons.
  • 1988
    • September 1 - BBC External Services is renamed the World Service.
    • September 20 - The Radio Data System (RDS) launches, allowing car radios to automatically retune, display station identifiers and switch to local travel news.
  • 1989
  • 1990
  • 1991
    • April 15 - The World Service Television News service is launched. Unlike its World Service radio counterpart, WSTV is commercially funded and carries advertising, which means that it cannot be broadcast in the UK.
    • July 31 - The BBC's Lime Grove studios close.
    • August 31 - BBC television starts officially broadcasting in stereo using the NICAM system. (Some transmtters had been broadcasting in stereo since 1989, but these were classified as tests.)
    • October 14 - World Service TV launches its Asian service.
  • 1992
  • 1994
    • March 28 - Radio 5 is renamed Radio 5 Live and becomes a dedicated news and sport network.
  • 1995
  • 1996
    • June 7 - The BBC is restructured by the Director-General, John Birt. In the new structure BBC Broadcast will commission programmes, and BBC Production will make them.
    • December 25 - The Christmas Day episode of Only Fools and Horses is watched by 24 million viewers, the largest TV audience in two decades.
  • 1997
    • February 28 - The BBC sells its transmitters and transmission services to Castle Transmission Services for £244 million, to help fund its plans for the digital age.
    • October 4 - Current corporate identity adopted. At a repored cost of £5m the new logo was introduced due to the increase in digital services, as it is designed to be more visible at small size it is better suited for use in websites and on screen "DOGs."
    • November 9 - BBC News 24, the Corporation's UK television news service, is launched at 17:30.
    • BBC News Online, a web-based news service, begins to expand and become more popular.
  • 1998
    • August - The BBC's domestic TV channels become available on Sky Digital's satellite service. An unintended consequence of this is that people in the rest of Europe can now watch BBC1 and 2, using viewing cards from the UK, as the signal is encrypted for rights reasons. This even applies within the UK: people in England can now watch BBC channels from Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, and vice versa.
    • September 23 - The BBC launches BBC Choice, its first new TV channel since 1964, available only on digital TV services. The BBC Parliament TV channel also starts broadcasting on digital services.
    • November 15 - Public launch of digital terrestrial TV in the UK.
  • 1999
    • May 10 - BBC network news relaunched with new music, titles and a red and ivory set. This design was used for the October 25 relaunch of News 24 - enhancing cross-channel promotion of the service.
    • May 20 - The BBC's digital teletext service starts.
    • June 1 - BBC Knowledge starts broadcasting on digital services.
  • 2000
    • 15 September - Final edition of Breakfast News on BBC1, the last conventional news broadcast in the morning.
    • October 2 - The first edition of Breakfast is broadcast, the new morning show on BBC ONE and News 24 from 0600-0930 a.m. (0900 on BBC News 24), from Sunday to Friday.
    • October 13 Final edition of the Nine O Clock News on BBC1.
  • 2001
    • March 3 - Bomb explodes outside Television Centre. The blast was later attributed to dissident Irish Republican terrorists and it is suggested the BBC Panorama programme which named individuals as participants in the Omagh bomb was the motive.
    • October 1 - BBC LDN is launched, and Kent and Sussex get their own news programme, South East Today. Oxfordshire, once part of the South East, becomes part of South Today.
  • 2002
  • 2003
  • 2004
    • February 16 - Network news titles relaunched in the style of BBC News 24, introduced two months earlier.
    • 5 July - 50th Anniversary of television news broadcasts.






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