Radio City (pirate radio station)

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Radio City was a British pirate radio station that broadcast from Shivering Sands Fort, one of the abandoned World War II Maunsell Sea Forts in the Thames Estuary.

[edit] Origins

Contemporary sketch of the Radio City fort (c.1966)
Contemporary sketch of the Radio City fort (c.1966)

In 1964, following the launch of Radio Caroline, Screaming Lord Sutch announced his intention to start his own pirate radio station. On May 27 Radio Sutch began broadcasting from the south tower of Shivering Sands. It was a low-powered, low-budget operation, and Sutch soon became tired of it, selling the station to his manager Reg Calvert for a reported £5,000. Calvert bought new equipment and expanded the station into the other towers. One of the original seven towers had been destroyed when a ship collided with it, leaving the northernmost tower isolated. The remaining five were connected by catwalks in an irregular star shape. Calvert's team set about repairing the catwalks and refurbishing the fort's facilities and living quarters. New studios were built, a more powerful transmitter installed, and the station experimented with new antenna configurations. Initially antenna wires were strung around the periphery of the towers. Later a vertical mast was erected on the central tower, supported by guy wires on the surrounding towers, and the station adopted the nickname "your tower of power". Although the station's output never exceeded 2 kW, the efficiency of the antenna combined with the fact that it was located over water (an efficient reflector of radio waves) gave it the equivalent coverage of a much more powerful land-based station.

[edit] Studio equipment

The station's studio equipment was fairly standard for the time, consisting of a pair of turntables, a microphone, tape decks and a mixer. But whereas most radio stations played jingles and commercials from cartridges, City used reel-to-reel. In addition to the usual music programming, subsidised by Dutch and American evangelical shows, City also had the only comedy show on pirate radio - The Auntie Mabel Hour, a recorded programme in which the DJs acted out comic sketches and sang parodies of contemporary songs. Some of the show's material seems to have been stolen from The Goon Show and Round the Horne. Another novelty programme was The Anti-City Show, which invited listeners to send letters and reel-to-reel tapes of complaint about the station. It soon became a forum for listeners' complaints about anything that annoyed them.

The Port of London authority had placed wind and tide gauges on the isolated North tower, and often complained that Radio City's signal was interfering with the gauges' radio link to the mainland and potentially placing shipping at risk. Interference with official communications was a commonly-cited reason for the pirates to be banned, but Radio City was eventually to provide the Government with a much more compelling reason for their closure.

In September 1965, merger talks began between City and Radio Caroline South. A transmitter was delivered to the fort, intended to be used by Caroline when it jumped ship. The merger plans collapsed, and the transmitter was never paid for. Calvert then began discussions with Radio London regarding a merger, in a new venture called UKGM (United Kingdom Good Music).

In the early morning of June 20, 1966, a business associate of Calvert, Major Oliver Smedley (who claimed ownership of the transmitter), sent a group of men to take possession of Shivering Sands. That evening, Calvert visited Smedley's home and in the ensuing scuffle was shot by Smedley. The police were called and Smedley was charged with murder. Smedley was later acquitted on grounds of self-defence.

The killing spurred the Government into legislative action shutting down offshore pirate radio stations, passing the Marine Broadcasting Offences Act.

On 8th February 1967, at midnight the station was closed down.


Radio City is also the name of a Liverpool-based radio station launched in 1974.