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Sunday 10 October 2021

The Fab 4 Pirates from Newry 1965

 


Both Radio Caroline and Radio Atlanta slipped their moorings at Greenore Port in County Louth in March 1964 and headed towards the North Sea to begin broadcasting illegally to the East coast of Britain. It was a direct challenge to both the broadcasting status quo and the Government. The newspapers were full of exciting tales of pirate radio as the youth of the early 1960’s rebelled against the stereotyping of their generation, expressing a newfound freedom and embracing pop music.

 

In September 1965 it was neither Caroline, Atlanta or Veronica who were dominating the newspaper columns in Ireland but a new station, Radio Telstar. Just miles away from Greenore was the County Down town of Newry and it was here, not Dublin, Derry or Belfast where the authorities were to be challenged by a pop music pirate radio station. Four students from the Abbey Grammar School in the town decided to put their ingenuity and enthusiasm to good use and Radio Telstar, broadcasting on 180m medium wave, was born. The name came from the satellite that just a couple of years earlier had facilitated the first transatlantic live television broadcast. The station’s theme tune was the instrumental 1962 Tornados chart hit, ‘Telstar’ written by Joe Meek.

 

The 10 watt[1] transmitter was built from Army surplus material by sixteen year old Dermot McArdle[2], whose family owned a chemist shop in the town and the station studio would be built in the loft of the family home[3]. With a 100 ft aerial attached to a tree in the back garden and for the meagre cost of £2 10s they were ready to entertain the listeners over a radius of five to six miles. When interviewed by the Sunday News, McArdle said

‘we’re not in it for the money, just for the kicks’.

 His fellow students and pirates were Tommy Hollywood from Coleman’s Park in the town and Ciaran McAteer of Kilmorey Street, both sixteen and fifteen year old Blaise Cronin. They began broadcasting on Sunday September 5th 1965 and would come on air each night for the next week between 6.30pm and 7.30pm, off course once the homework was done.


They quickly built up a reputation with the youth of Newry, accepting requests in the schoolyard. On air they were known as DJ’s Arnold, Tony, Ricky and Napoleon. Local resident Olwen McLeod recalled that the town,

‘was buzzing when the boys were broadcasting’

From the requests they received they were able to compile their own top ten chart with the Rollings Stones ‘Satisfaction’ coming out tops. Joe Carlin of Carlin Records, who supplied the station with singles to play, said,

‘It is fantastic the number of people listening to the broadcasts’


The newspapers were covering the broadcasts but disparagingly as they began their article, despite a photograph on their front page, defying their description that,

‘four long haired schoolboys’

were behind the pirate station. After almost a week of broadcasting, it was not difficult for the GPO and the RUC to isolate where Radio Telstar was broadcasting from and a phone to a parent forced the Fab Four to announce their final broadcast on Sunday September 12th but that they would extend their hours to cater for the growing audience. On that final day, the transmitter sparked into life initially from 10am – 12.30 and then from 2pm to 4 pm. Their final tracks were according to Blaise Cronin[4], Barry Maguire’s 1965 hit ‘Eve of Destruction’, which had been banned by British radio, and finally a dig at the authorities with The Dave Clark Five’sCatch me if you Can’. The end of Radio Telstar was described by Blaise as follows,

‘My father received a call from someone suggesting we desist as we were breaking the law, as did the headmaster of the school. So, the fun and games ended’.

 

Unfortunately, Tommy Hollywood has passed on but one of their number the aforementioned Blaise Cronin has gone onto a stellar career in education becoming a Professor Emeritus at the Indiana University in Bloomington. He became an information scientist and bibliometrician and at Indiana University, he was appointed Dean of the School of Library and Information Science for seventeen years. From 1985-1991 he held the Chair of Information Science and was Head of the Department of Information Science at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, U.K.

According to his Indiana University website,

‘Professor Cronin taught, conducted research or consulted in more than 30 countries: clients have included the World Bank, NATO, Asian Development Bank, UNESCO, U.S. Department of Justice, Brazilian Ministry of Science & Technology, European Commission, British Council, Her Majesty's Treasury, Hewlett-Packard Ltd., Commonwealth Agricultural Bureau, Chemical Abstracts Service, and Association for Information Management.

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Radio Telstar was a short lived pirate broadcaster but it is still fondly remembered by those who excitedly tuned in. In the 1970’s another station Radio Free Newry appeared on the airwaves and we will cover their story soon.

 

Sources:

Professor Blaise Cronin Indiana University

John Savage, Newry

Old Videos and Pictures of Newry Facebook Group

British Newspaper Archives

The Belfast Telegraph

The Sunday News

The Irish News

Irish Newspaper Archives

US Library of Congress Archives

 

 

 

 

 



[1] Belfast Telegraph

[2] The Sunday news

[3] Anne Hill

[4] In correspondence with the author

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