Timeline of Australian radio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This page provides a timeline of the main events that charted the course of Australian radio.

Contents

[edit] 1900s

[edit] 1900-1909

  • 1905:
    • Wireless Telegraphy Act (1905) placed broadcasting in the control of the Australian Government. This has remained in place ever since.[1]
    • Italian Guglielmo Marconi’s company builds Australia's first two-way wireless telegraphy station at Queenscliff, Victoria.[1]

[edit] 1910-1919

  • 1913: Marconi and its main competitor Telefunken amalgamated to form Amalgamated Wireless Australasia Limited. (AWA).[1]
  • 1919: The first radio "broadcast" in Australia was organised by George Fisk of AWA on 19th August 1919. He arranged for the National Anthem to be broadcast from one building to another at the end of a lecture he'd given on the new medium to the Royal Society of NSW.[1]

[edit] 1920-1929

  • 1923:
    • Following intensive lobbying for the introduction of radio broadcasting, the Government, in May 1923, calls a conference of the main players in the radio manufacturing industry. This led to the sealed set regulations where stations could be licensed to broadcast and then sell sets to 'listeners-in'. The receiving device would be set to receive only that station.[1]
    • 2FC in Sydney is the first radio station to be licensed on 1 July, 1923 but its opponent 2SB (later to be called 2BL) was first to go to air officially starting on 23 November that year.[1]
  • 1924:
    • 3AR and 3LO went to air on 26 January and 13 October 1924 in Melbourne.[1]
    • The Government introduces a two-tiered licence system in July 1924. In the first half of 1924, only 1400 people took out sealed set licences. It was quite easy to avoid the licence fee by building your own set or modifying one you'd bought to receive more than one station. The radio industry successfully lobbied the Government to introduce a two-tiered system, the 'A' licences to be financed by listeners' licence fees imposed and collected by the Government, and 'B' class licences to be offered to anyone else who wanted to have a go. The B stations would have to generate their own revenue through advertising. A class stations could also advertise but few did. This system was an amalgam of the British system where the non-commercial BBC had a government-imposed monopoly and the USA where the free market was the driving force. The 'A' class stations were the original sealed set stations plus one in each other capital city - 2BL, 2FC, 3AR, 3LO, 7ZL, 5CL, 6WF. By years end, 40,000 licences have been issued.[1]
    • The first 'B' class station on air was 2BE in November 1924.[1]
    • South Australia’s first radio station 5CL (A class) went to air on 20 November.[1]
  • 1925:
    • The oldest surviving 'B' class (commercial) station is 2UE, which went on air on Australia Day 1925.[1]
    • South Australia’s first commercial radio station 5DN goes to air 24 February.[1]
    • Number of licences issued reaches 80,000. [1]
  • 1926: The British Government nationalises radio by buying out the British Broadcasting Company and forming the British Broadcasting Corporation. The Australian Government held a Royal Commission into Wireless but didn't immediately follow the British lead. It did encourage the 'A' class stations to amalgamate in order to maximise efficiencies and maintain standards.[1]
  • 1927: AWA conducts a series of transmissions to Britain. These regular broadcasts were heralded by a kookaburra's laugh - a practice that's still used by Radio Australia today.[1]
  • 1929:
    • 2BE closes due to financial collapse.[1]
    • The Government nationalises the transmission facilities and contracts the provision of programming to the Australian Broadcasting Company, a consortium of entertainment interests.[1]

[edit] 1930-1939

[edit] 1940-1949

  • 1948:
    • Experimental FM broadcasts commence[1]
    • The regulatory body, the Australian Broadcasting Control Board, is created[1]

[edit] 1950-1959

  • 1957: A Government inquiry into FM radio heralds little interest[1]

[edit] 1960-1969

  • 1961: The Government authorises the use of the international VHF FM band for television.[1]
  • 1967: Talkback radio is introduced on 2SM in Sydney and 3AW in Melbourne[4].

[edit] 1970-1979

  • 1972:
    • The Labor government's Media Minister Doug McClelland abolishes radio and TV licence fees, making the ABC funded directly from the federal budget[4]
    • 5UV in Adelaide becomes the first public radio station on air in Australia[4]
  • 1974:
    • The McLean Inquiry into FM rejects the Broacasting Control Board's views on FM radio and recommends that the VHF FM band be opened to FM radio stations, that a community radio sector be established, and that the ABC have an FM network[4]
    • 2MBS Sydney commences broadcasting as the first full-time FM station in Australia, playing classical music 24 hours a day.
  • 1975:
    • 2JJ (Double Jay) Sydney and its shortlived sister station, 3XX Melbourne, are granted the first new radio licences issued in a capital city since 1932. Double Jay is the first non-commercial 24-hour rock station in Australia[4]
    • 3MBS-FM Melbourne commences broadcasting classical music 24 hours a day[4]
    • Public access station 3ZZ is established in Melbourne[4]
    • Twelve Australian community radio stations are licenced as an interim move by the federal media minister, Dr Moss Cass. Because the licences may have been technically illegal under the Act, they are dubbed Cass's "Dirty Dozen"[4]

[edit] 1980-1989

[edit] 2000s

[edit] 2000-2008

  • 2002: The Australian Broadcasting Corporation commences a digital radio service called DiG in November.

[edit] Notes

[edit] References

[edit] External links