Topic-2-History of Radio
Topic-2-History of Radio
Topic-2-History of Radio
Unit-1
History of Radio Broadcasting (World
Scenario)
History of Radio Broadcasting (World
Scenario)
• Radio originated in the West. An experimental
physicist at Cambridge, James Clerk Maxwell
(1831-79), made the prediction way back in
1864.
• Twenty four years later, in 1888 to be precise,
the German Physicist Heinrich Hertz (1857-94)
demonstrated the existence and propagation
(travel through a medium) of these radio
waves
History of Radio Broadcasting (World
Scenario)
• The New Zealand born British Physicist Ernest Rutherford
(1871 - 1937) succeeded in sending radio signals through
a distance of 3 1/4 of a mile. Another Englishman, Oliver
Lodge (1851 -1940) discovered and devised the
principles of tuning.
• The first ever radio was called the "wireless telegraph. It
did not have the capacity to transmit any form of sound.
• On August 14, 1894 the first public demonstration of
wireless telegraphy was conducted by Professor Oliver
Lodge and Alexander Muirhead
History of Radio Broadcasting (World
Scenario)
• After a year, another scientist Alexander Stepanovich Popov built
his first radio receiver. This receiver was created on the basis of
Lodge's receiver with the aim of finding out an improved
product and it contained a coherer. And it was Guglielmo
Marconi (1874-1937), the Italian physicist and electrical
engineer, who made use of the knowledge of radio waves and
invented the wireless telegraphy as a device of communication.
• Guglielmo Marconi part from this, Marconi also has the credit of
establishing something very historic. On the Isle of Wight,
England, he established the world's first radio station in 1897.
He also opened the world's first "wireless" factory in Hall Street,
Chelmsford, England in 1898, and deputed around 50 people.
History of Radio Broadcasting (World
Scenario)
• The first vacuum tube was made in 1903 by John
Ambrose Fleming (1849-1945), an Englishman. Fleming’s
vacuum tube was called a diode. Within a diode, there
are two electrical parts: an anode and a cathode.
• Two years later Lee De Forest (1873-1961), an American
improved upon Fleming’s vacuum tube and invented a
triode or audion. A triode has three electrical parts. An
anode, a cathode and a control grid. There are tetrodes
and pentodes: of four and five electrical parts also in
use.
History of Radio Broadcasting (World
Scenario)
• 1906, when the first successful radio program broadcast
was carried out by Reginald Fessenden, from Ocean Bluff-
Brant Rock, Massachusetts. On that day Fessenden played
‘O Holy Night’ on the violin and read a passage from the
Bible which was heard on the radio by the ships at the sea.
• In 1920, an American Westinghouse Company engineer,
Dr. Frank Conrad, began a series of voice broadcast. He
also arranged for the sale of radio sets. In the same year
another official of Westinghouse built a broadcasting
station at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Broadcasting had
come to stay.
History of Radio Broadcasting (World
Scenario)
• 1920 was another important year in the history of
radio. Sociedad Radio Argentina has the credit of
broadcasting the first live performance through radio.
At 9 pm on August 27 it aired a live performance of
Richard Wagner's Parsifal opera from the Coliseo.
• August 31, station 8MK in Detroit, Michigan started
broadcasting the first ever radio news bulletin On the
other hand the first campus radio station began
broadcasting on October 14 from Union College,
Schenectady, New York in the same year
History of Radio Broadcasting (World
Scenario)
• In 1930s, a very important development took place in the field of
broadcasting, when Edwin H. Armstrong invented the FM radio.
FM radio could overcome the interference (static) problem of AM
radio and hence it gained popularity. Moreover stations could be
placed at a greater distance for greater fidelity.
• In the early 1930s, the amateur radio operators invented single
sideband and frequency modulation which became established
commercial modes by the end of the decade.
• Earlier in 1920s, radio was used to transmit visible pictures as
television does today. But it was not until the 1940s when North
America and Europe viewed the commercial transmissions of
television.
Pre-Independence
1. Nov. 1923 – First radio club in Calcutta
2. 16 May 1924 – Radio club in Madras
3. 23 July 1927 – Bombay station
4. 26 August 1927 – Calcutta radio station
5. 15 July 1927 – First radio program journal “The India
Radio’
6. 1930 – Indian broadcasting company handover Bombay
station to government. It was renamed as ISBS (Indian
State Broadcasting Station).
7. 8 July 1936 – It renamed as AIR (All India Radio)
History of Radio in India
• Broadcasting in India actually began about 13 years
before AIR came into existence.
• In June 1923 the Radio Club of Bombay made the first
ever broadcast in the country.
• This was followed by the setting up of the Calcutta
Radio Club five months later.
• Radio Broadcasting was pioneered in India by the
Madras Presidency Radio Club in 1924.
• The Club worked a broadcasting service for three years
Pre-Independence
• 1926 – Indian Broadcasting Company (IBC) – private company given
permission to set up 2 stations
July 23, 1927 – Bombay station set up
August 26, 1927 – Calcutta station followed
Only 3000 licensed radio owners then
• The Indian Broadcasting Company (IBC) came into being on July 23,
1927, only to face liquidation in less than three years.
• In April 1930, the Indian Broadcasting Service, under the Department
of Industries and Labour, commenced its operations on an
experimental basis.
• In 1932 the Government of India took over broadcasting.
• A separate department known as Indian Broadcasting Service was
opened.
Pre-Independence
• The Service was later designated 'All India Radio' (AIR)
and was placed under a separate Ministry -the Ministry
of Information and Broadcasting.
• The AIR is controlled by a Director General, who is
assisted by several Deputy Directors and a Chief Engineer
• Lionel Fielden was appointed the first Controller of
Broadcasting in August 1935. In the following month
Akashvani Mysore, a private radio station was set up.
• On June 8, 1936, the Indian State Broadcasting Service
became All India Radio.
Pre-Independence
• The Central News Organisation (CNO) came into existence in August, 1937.
• October 1, 1939 - External Service started and directed to Afghanistan, Iran
and Arab countries in Pushtu (to counter radio propaganda from Germany)
• 1939 - Controller Broadcasting Lionel Fielden was succeeded by Professor
A.S. Bokhari who remained the head of All India Radio for six crucial years
(In 1943, the designation, Controller of Broadcasting, was changed to
Director General)
• In the same year, AIR came under the Department of Communications and
four years later came under the Department of Information and
Broadcasting.
• When India attained independence, there were six radio stations in India,
at Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta, Madras, Tiruchirapalli and Lucknow.
Post -Independence
1. 1952 – National program of music started
2. 2 Oct. 1957 – Vividh Bharti launched
3. 1967 – Commercials on AIR was started
4. 23 July 1969 – Yuv vani launched
5. 1976 – Doordarshan delinked from AIR (Chanda Committee 1964-66)
6. 1974 – Sky radio channel concept launched. The enable subscribers to receive 20 radio channels
via satellite on FM receivers.
7. 1977 – First FM service launched in Madras
8. Mid 1980s – Phone in program were experimented in Delhi, Pune and other cities
9. 1988 – National channel launched
10.1990s – AIR on network of 219 centers, including 32 Vividh Bharti/ commercial station, 73 local
countries, 114 regional channel. Over 6 radio sets were in rural households. AIR 300 news
bulletins every day in national, regional and external services in different language.
11.1992 – FM broadcast started in Jalandhar
12.1993 – Privatization of FM
13.15 August 1993 – FM channel launched in Bombay by Times FM
14.1997 – Prasar Bharti came into existence
15.1998 – AIR news on telephone and AIR radio on internet. Till now AIR covers 90% of
geographical area and 97% population
Post -Independence
• All India Radio (also known as Akashvani) operates this service,
over a network of broadcasting stations located all over the
country.
• At the time of Independence AIR had a coverage of just 2.5 % of
the area and 11% of the population.
• As a national service, catering to the complex needs of a vast
country.
• All India Radio seeks to represent in its national and regional
programmes, the attitudes, aspirations and attainments of all
Indian people and attempts to reflect, as fully and faithfully as
possible, the richness of the Indian scene and the reach of the
Indian mind.
Post -Independence
• By 1939, in addition to the existing medium wave transmitters, short wave
transmitters had also been Installed at Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta and Madras.
New stations with medium wave transmitters were opened at Lucknow and
Tiruchiraplli.
• In 1941, AIR was again transferred to the department of Information and
Broadcasting, which after Independence in 1947, became a separate ministry
by itself.
• BBC steps in – Fielden and Bokhari reorganise BBC broadcasts to suit Indian
sensibilities .
• 1940 – Shows for Indian troops (WW-2 around the corner)
• 1940 - Bokhari began broadcasting a daily ten minute Hindustani news
commentary. Soon, programmes in Gujarati, Marathi, Bengali, Pushtu, Sindhi,
Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam followed.
Post -Independence
• When Japan joined WW-2 in 1941, thus began
AIR's Burmese, Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Malay
and the Indo-Chinese languages broadcasts.
(Today, AIR broadcasts in 16 foreign
languages) .
• 1947 - total number of radio sets at that time
was about 275,000.
Post -Independence
• At the time of Independence, 9 AIR stations (also including
Peshawar, Lahore and Dhaka) Sardar Vallabhai Patel was the first
Minister of Information and Broadcasting in Independent India.
• AIR stations in Delhi, Madras, Bombay, Calcutta, Lucknow and
Tiruchirapalli.
• Bahujana hitaya bahujana sukhaya ( For the benefit of many and
the happiness of many)
• Emphasis on disseminating information, education, music and
drama.
• 1952 – Vadya Vrinda or National Orchestra with Pandit Ravi
Shankar as the first music conductor.
Post -Independence
• In the 50s, Minister for Information and
Broadcasting Dr. B.V. Keskar, put a ban on
broadcast of Hindi film songs on AIR.
• Radio Ceylon became immensely popular.
Binaca Geetmala and Amin Sayani.
• 1957 – Vividh Bharti started. Emphasis
shifted to entertainment.
Post -Independence
• Vividh Bharti extended to Medium Wave which meant more
listenership.
• 1956- AIR officially called Akashvani.
• 1959 – Satellite Television introduced which later separated to form
Doordarshan.
• 1957 – Rural Radio Forums
• Arrival of Transistor – Low cost and mobile.
• 1964 – Indira Gandhi becomes Minister of I&B.
• Chanda committee
• In 1967, Vividh Bharti was commercialized.
• In 1976, AIR and Doordarshan were separated.
• Prasar Bharati Act.
AIR Network
• Starting with 6 broadcasting stations in 1947, the AIR
today has a network of 82 broadcasting stations. The 82
radio stations, grouped into five zones, are the following:
• North Zone: Ajmer, Allahabad, Aligarh, Bikancr, Delhi,
Gorakhpur, Jaipur, Jodhpur, Jullundur, Lucknow, Mathura,
Rampur, Simla, Udaipur and Varanasi
• East Zone: Agartala, Aizawl, Bhagalpur, Calcutta, Cuttack,
Dibrugarh. Gauhati, Imphal, Jeypore, Kohima, Kurseong,
Ranchi, Pasighat, Patna, Sambalpur, Shillong, Silchar,
Siliguri, Tawang and Tezu ;
AIR Network
• West Zone : Ahmedabad, Bhopal, Bhuj, Bombay,
Gwalior, Indore. Jabalpur, Nagpur, Panaji, Parbani,
Pune, Raipur, Rajkot and Sangli;
• South Zone: Alleppey, Bangalore, Bhadravati,
Calicut, Coimbatore, Cuddapah, Dharwar; Gulbarga,
Hyderabad, Madras, Mysore, Pondicherry, Port Blair,
Tiruchirappalli, Tirunelveli, Trichur, Trivandrum.
• Vijayawada and Vishakhapatnam; and Kashmir Zone:
Jammu, Leh and Srinagar.
AIR Network
• In addition, there are three auxiliary studio centers
at Vado- dara, Darbhanga and Shantiniketan
• Two VividhBharati/commercial centers, one at
Chandigarh and the other at Kanpur.
• These cover all the important cultural and
linguistic regions of the country.
• The expansion of the broadcasting facility
remained limited till independence.
• India's broadcasting network would cover 89 per
cent of the population.
AIR Network
• Till the end of 1976 radio licenses had reached a colossal figure of
nearly 1.74 crores, which fetched revenue of Rs. 23.51 crores.
• Today the radio network has spread to the remote corners of India.
• It is now possible to bring sense of unity not only political but also
cultural among the diverse traditions that enrich our land.