Ramblings of a nonagenerian (vintage 1923). Grew up in Lambeth in the 20s and 30s. Lived and worked in London during World War II. I have been attempting to do the Telegraph Cryptic Crossword since 1939! (My daughter says I *have* to write this, but I am troubled as it sounds so conceited.) I bought my first computer aged 85 and am continually frustrated by the vagaries of the technological age.
Sunday 14 September 2014
Voices from the Past
I listened recently to a radio programme about the beginings of commercial broadcasting. Sir John Reith, head of the BBC, was a staunch Presbyterian and decreed that only religious programmes should be broadcast on Sundays. This left a gap in the schedules which a certain Captain Plugge decided to fill by broadcasting dance music intersperced with advertisements from France which he called Radio Normandy. We heard Sir John Reith's voice declaring this was unacceptable and another voice that was raised against it, that of the Reverend Archibald Fleming, the Minister of St. Columba's Scottish Presbyterian Church, Pont Street, London. This latter was the gentleman whose two daughters had been very kind to us at Christmas coming with their Girl Guides bringing us gifts of food at a time when our finances were low. We were invited to tea at their kensington house and met Dr. Fleming. It was strange to hear his distinctive voice again after over eighty years.
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