1925 in radio

The year 1925 saw a number of significant events in radio broadcasting history.

List of years in radio (table)
In television
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928

Events

  • 1 January In Sweden, AB Radiotjänst (forerunner of Sveriges Radio) broadcasts its first programme.
  • 27 January Australia's second oldest surviving radio station, 2HD, goes on air for the first time in Newcastle, New South Wales.
  • 1 February The Polish Radiotechnical Society (Polskie Towarzystwo Radiotechniczne, PTR) makes its first official broadcast from Warsaw.
  • 22 February First radio transmission of a religious service in Denmark, from the Garrison Church, Copenhagen.
  • 4 March Second inauguration of Calvin Coolidge as President of the United States, the first inauguration to be broadcast.[1]
  • 8 March Westinghouse Electric, owner of KDKA among other stations, announces from its Pittsburgh headquarters a proposal to form "radio networks" via shortwave technology.
  • 22 March JOAK, NHK Radio One of Tokyo, an official inauguration service start, and a first license radio station in Japan.
  • 1 April In Denmark, Radioordningen (Statsradiofonien from 1926, Danmarks Radio from 1959) is established.
  • 23 April KRO (the Katholieke Radio Omroep) is established in the Netherlands.
  • 1 June JOBK, NHK Radio One of Osaka, an official inauguration service start in Japan.
  • 17 June In Spain, Unión Radio opens station EAJ-7 Radio Madrid.
  • 7 July Inauguration in France of state radio station Marseille PTT.
  • 15 July JOCK, NHK Radio One of Nagoya, an official inauguration service start in Japan.
  • 27 July The British Broadcasting Company's Daventry transmitting station on Borough Hill, Daventry in central England opens as the world's first longwave broadcast radio transmitter, taking over from its Chelmsford facility.[2]
  • 25 September The Berliner Funkturm (Berlin Radio Tower) begins transmissions.
  • 1 November VARA (the Vereeniging van Arbeiders Radio Amateurs) is established in the Netherlands.
  • 16 December Colombo Radio launches in Ceylon, origin of Radio Ceylon.

Debuts

  • 14 January First broadcast on Swedish national radio (AB Radiotjänst) of one of the world's longest-running radio programmes, Barnens brevlåda ("Children's letterbox"), which will run for 1,785 editions – all presented by "Uncle Sven" (the radio sports commentator Sven Jerring) – until 1972.
  • 21 March Lowell Thomas is first heard on the radio on Pittsburgh station KDKA.
  • 31 March Radio station WOWO in Fort Wayne, Indiana begins broadcasting.
  • 8 April Station WADC commences regular programming in Akron, Ohio. It had debuted earlier (in February 1925) as a temporary station during a car show held at the Central Garage, the call letters standing for the station's sponsor, the Automotive Dealers Company. Known from June 2, 2005 as WARF, it becomes Akron's oldest surviving radio station.
  • 4 October The Atwater Kent Hour debuts on WEAF and 10 other connected stations.[3]
  • 5 October WSM signs on in Nashville, Tennessee.
  • 15 November First transmission from Radio RV-10 in the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic (modern-day Belarus).
  • 28 November The weekly country music-variety program Grand Ole Opry is first broadcast on WSM radio in Nashville, Tennessee,[3] as the "WSM Barn Dance".
  • 24 December KMOX begins broadcasting in St. Louis, Missouri.

Closings

  • April WGI-Medford Hillside, Massachusetts declares bankruptcy and shuts down for good; this leaves WBZ-Springfield as the oldest surviving station in New England.
  • Undated WAAB 1150 AM ceases broadcasting. 1150 AM will return the next year as WJBO.

Births

References

  1. "Facts, Firsts and Precedents". Fifty-Seventh Presidential Inauguration. United States Senate. Archived from the original on 18 January 2015. Retrieved 3 January 2015.
  2. Tomalin, Norman (1998). Daventry Calling the World (PDF). Whitby: Caedmon. ISBN 0-905355-46-6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 December 2013. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
  3. Dunning, John. (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3.


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