Doris Arnold was a highly popular BBC radio personality. She was especially feted for her gramophone record programme These you have Loved which she produced and presented from 1938, making her the UK’s first female ‘Disc Jockey’. But, despite her fame, Arnold is oddly absent from BBC histories and little is known about today. Hers was one of the best known ‘rags to riches’ narratives of the early BBC: a young woman who started as a meagre typist but whose musical talent was spotted so propelling her to stardom. This article explores Arnold’s rise to fame in the 1920s and 1930s. It does this through a detailed evaluation of her personal staff files, using these as a vehicle to demonstrate a key way that the early history of women in the BBC...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 286-294)Ruth Ashton Taylor's career in broadcast journali...
This thesis is a study of women’s employment in the BBC during the 1920s and 1930s and poses the que...
This article considers the relationship between BBC radio and mass secondary education in Britain th...
From its earliest days in 1923 the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in su...
From its beginnings in 1923, the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in supp...
In May 1923, the fledgling BBC launched its first daily programme to be aimed at a female audience, ...
This is a working paper on women and the early BBC television service, prior to September 1939. It ...
On 2 May 1923, the newly established BBC, launched the Women’s Hour, a daily bespoke programme aimed...
For most of the first hundred years of the history of the BBC Richard Hughes (1924 & 1928) has been ...
Between 1926 and 1938, the Foreign Department of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) played a...
This is a working paper on women and the early BBC television service, prior to September 1939. It c...
Women listeners were the key daytime audience for the BBC during the inter-war years. Within months ...
The BBC's women's radio in the British post-war period (1945 – 1955) is still a very much neglected ...
In this interview, Dorris Erdahl reminisces about the golden era of radio. Mrs. Erdahl was born on D...
This historical dissertation examines the career of Edythe Meserand, a broadcast executive and the f...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 286-294)Ruth Ashton Taylor's career in broadcast journali...
This thesis is a study of women’s employment in the BBC during the 1920s and 1930s and poses the que...
This article considers the relationship between BBC radio and mass secondary education in Britain th...
From its earliest days in 1923 the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in su...
From its beginnings in 1923, the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in supp...
In May 1923, the fledgling BBC launched its first daily programme to be aimed at a female audience, ...
This is a working paper on women and the early BBC television service, prior to September 1939. It ...
On 2 May 1923, the newly established BBC, launched the Women’s Hour, a daily bespoke programme aimed...
For most of the first hundred years of the history of the BBC Richard Hughes (1924 & 1928) has been ...
Between 1926 and 1938, the Foreign Department of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) played a...
This is a working paper on women and the early BBC television service, prior to September 1939. It c...
Women listeners were the key daytime audience for the BBC during the inter-war years. Within months ...
The BBC's women's radio in the British post-war period (1945 – 1955) is still a very much neglected ...
In this interview, Dorris Erdahl reminisces about the golden era of radio. Mrs. Erdahl was born on D...
This historical dissertation examines the career of Edythe Meserand, a broadcast executive and the f...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 286-294)Ruth Ashton Taylor's career in broadcast journali...
This thesis is a study of women’s employment in the BBC during the 1920s and 1930s and poses the que...
This article considers the relationship between BBC radio and mass secondary education in Britain th...