Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-75dct Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-05T02:50:48.740Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

British Colonial Broadcasting Policies: The Case of the Gold Coast

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

Long-distance radio broadcasting might have become a very important and successful tool of colonial administration had it been invented thirty years before its time. As it was, international short wave broadcasting began only a few years before the onset of the immediate forces that led to dissolution of empire. Ad hoc solutions to problems of colonial broadcasting were thus just beginning to give way to conscious policy when the end of the era came. The subject of this paper, therefore, is limited to the years between 1927 and about 1957, that is from the start of the British Broadcasting Corporation's experiments that led to establishing its Empire Service to the onset of postwar colonial devolution.

The very year that the British Broadcasting Corporation was organized it began experiments with short wave transmissions to the colonies. Such long-distance short wave broadcasts involved an untried technology, new concepts of programming, and innovative financial arrangements. The BBC experimented for five years before it was ready to inaugurate the Empire Service formally in 1932.

During that 1927-1932 gestation period of the Empire Service, the Colonial Office had explored the acceptability in the dominions and the colonies of such broadcasts from home. At the 1930 Colonial Conference, the secretary of state for the colonies spoke of “the possibility of creating a new and intimate bond of connection between the different British communities … and also possibly its utilization for the purposes of the natives” (Great Britain, 1930:9. Emphasis added). The priorities were thus clearly set forth. The Empire Service had as its primary role the maintenance of home ties with British expatriates overseas and with the dominions.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1979

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Batson, Lawrence D. (1930) Radio Markets of the World, 1930. Washington, D.C.: USGPO.Google Scholar
Buckman, R.A.S. (1976) Taped personal interview, Accra (15 November).Google Scholar
Ghana National Archives. (1937) ADM 1/2/23/#400. Hodson to CO.Google Scholar
Ghana National Archives. (1938) ADM 1/2/236/#22. Hodson to CO. (8 January).Google Scholar
Ghana National Archives. (1939) ADM 1/2/246/#20. Hodson to CO. (11 January).Google Scholar
Ghana National Archives. (1947) ADM 1/1/585/#ST215. CO. to Gold Coast (21 March).Google Scholar
Gold Coast. (1936) Legislative Council Debates. Accra: Government Printer (20 February).Google Scholar
Gold Coast. (1936) Estimates, 1936-1937. Accra: Government Printer.Google Scholar
Gold Coast. (1937) Legislative Council Debates. Accra: Government Printer (23 March).Google Scholar
Gold Coast. (1938a) Legislative Council Debates. Accra: Government Printer (23 March).Google Scholar
Gold Coast. (1938b) Legislative Council Debates. Accra: Government Printer (15 March).Google Scholar
Gold Coast. (1939) Legislative Council Debates. Accra: Government Printer (14 March).Google Scholar
Gold Coast. (1941) Legislative Council Debates. Accra: Government Printer (18 February).Google Scholar
Gold Coast. (1944) Gold Coast Gazette. Special obituary issue (8 June).Google Scholar
Gold Coast. (1949) Legislative Council Debates. Accra: Government Printer (12 March).Google Scholar
Gold Coast. (1956) Staff List, 1956-1957. Accra: Government Printer.Google Scholar
Great Britain. (1930) Colonial Office. Colonial Office Conference, 1930, Misc. no. 416. London: Public Record Office.Google Scholar
Great Britain. (1933) Public Record Office. CO. 267/642/2113, Hodson to CO. (6 June).Google Scholar
Great Britain. (1935) Public Record Office. CO. 96/724/31173, Hodson to CO. (21 June).Google Scholar
Great Britain. (1937) Colonial Office. Interim Report of Broadcasting Committee (“Plymouth Report”). Colonial no. 139. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Great Britain. (1940) Public Record Office. CO. 875/l/5301/#10. Hodson to CO. (20 November).Google Scholar
Great Britain. (1954) Colonial Office. Handbook of Broadcasting in the Colonies. London: Colonial Office.Google Scholar
Turner, L. W., and Byron, F.A.W.. (1949) Broadcasting Survey of British West African Colonies in Connection with the Development of Broadcasting Service for the African Population. London: Crown Agents.Google Scholar
Williams, J. Grenfell. (1950) Radio in Fundamental Education in the Undeveloped Areas. Paris: Unesco.Google Scholar
Wilson, John. (1950) “Broadcasting in the Gold Coast Idiom,” pp. 4451 in Williams, (1950).Google Scholar