Tuesday, 5 August 2025

#76: Listen In: How Radio Changed the Home

Radio did change the home, though not enough for the Bodleian Libraries, apparently. It was once ‘the disruptive new technology’, they tell us, which ‘transformed, or sometimes failed to transform, domestic and class dynamics, and in 1939 would unite households on the brink of war’. One senses a certain underlying disappointment that it did not wholly revolutionise the home, if not society. However, once past the rather heavy-handed political gloss, there is plenty of evidence of radio’s unifying, sustaining, educational power in this beautifully curated exhibition at the Bodleian’s Weston Library.

This, for example, is from a letter from a Birmingham clerk in the January 1928 Radio Times:

I’m only writing to say how much wireless means to me and thousands of the same sort. It’s a real magic carpet. Before it was a fortnight at Rhyl, and that was all the travelling I did that wasn’t on a tram. Now I hear the Boat Race and the Derby… There are football matches on Saturdays and during the week music and talks by famous men and women who have travelled and can tell us about places…

This listener actually felt physically transported through his set. He seems to listen alone, which was unusual – people usually listened together, and a picture in The Broadcaster magazine of December 1922 shows two couples in Christmas hats ‘listening in on a marconiphone’. When radio started, it was sometimes intimidatingly technical – and in fact, that is where the word ‘set’ comes from, as owners sometimes assembled radios themselves:

In its early days radio meant the BBC (amazingly, no commercial stations were allowed in the UK until 1973), and so one of its missions was to educate. These pamphlets (what design and typography!) accompanied broadcasts which were meant to be listened to and discussed in places like schools, libraries and working men’s clubs by people who had probably left school at 14:

One can’t help seeing this tradition continuing today in the impressively low-tech In Our Time and its reading lists.

So plenty of evidence that radio brought people together – any fears that it would inhibit or even replace conversation, like a 1920s smartphone? Fascinatingly yes, in this pair of cartoons:


Other documents in the exhibition are this early guide to BBC pronunciation (try ‘exquisite’ with the stress on the first syllable):

and this listing, showing how random early programming could be (interesting to see an early version of celebrity gossip):

There is some audio in the exhibition – excerpts of early 1920s broadcasts: ‘Hello Marconi House, London calling’, ‘Hello children’, and an SOS message asking Mrs May Dibble to go to Burton-on-Trent Infirmary ‘where her son is dangerously ill’. There’s also a lovely early bakelite radio (what curves!) and lots of technical equipment.

On the basis of this exhibition one could imagine radio as an old-fashioned technology, now superseded by multimedia. The amazing thing is that it is not. Eighty-six per cent of the UK population aged over 15 listened to radio in the three months to June 2025. This is even more than the figure of 77% in 1939, when the UK population was much smaller and TV yet to arrive.

Why does it remain so popular? The exhibition comments that ‘wireless was (and is) astonishingly inclusive, cheap, and accessible’. But this is only part of the story. Practically, one can listen to it while doing other things – driving, cooking, working. But does it not also allow you to use imagination while listening – encourage you to make your own connections, muse along with the music or commentary, in a way which TV does not? It’s also amazing how much can be done purely through audio – even topics which you would think demand a visual element, such as A History of the World in 100 Objects. There’s something about the auditory.

Listen In: How Radio Changed the Home is at the Weston Library until 31 August.