For the past three years we have been collecting, curating and digitizing a large collection of pirate radio material which will be housed, stored and made available for future generations of radio students in The Irish Pirate Radio Archive at Dublin City University. Why is this important? Why should you donate your memorabilia? The golden age of pirate radio from the mid seventies to the new Wireless Telegraphy Act of 1988 has had a profound affect on the Irish radio landscape and captures a period of social change and history. It's a snapshot in time. Ireland has a long association with pirate radio from the very early days of the state and thousand of people have been involved over the decades and each of those pirate stations produced rate cards, letterheads, photographs, commercial merchandise, car stickers and even employee contracts and we would like you to consider donating them to the Archives to build up a truly accurate picture of how important pirate radio has been. There also has been thousands of hours of pirate radio broadcasts taped and these too tell a story from the on-air personality, the music played and even the advertising broadcast. Each tells a vital art of the story and the historical significance of free radio. The tape recordings also tell an integral and vital part of the story and separately are currently being digitized and preserved by pirate.ie and radiowaves.fm. Ireland has had a unique association with illegal broadcasting.
To illustrate the importance and scope of the collection, the
following is part of the incredible donation made by Paul Davidson of Anoraks
Irelands to the Archives which included thousands of tapes, thousands of
photographs of the pirate stations across the country and multiple boxes of
memorabilia and archives. These are the photographs and recordings of Tony
Boylan's Radio Galaxy.
The Story..
Dubliner Tony Boylan was a pioneer of pirate broadcasting and operated a
number of stations throughout the fifties right through to the 1980's. Tony began experimenting with transmitters
in the mid-forties opening a station called The Killeen Road Home Service
broadcasting on 200m medium wave named after his home in Rathmines. This station
closed in 1950 when the Boylan family moved and the new station became the
Waddlade Road Home Service. His stations would later be known as Radio 200, Radio
Laxy and famously Radio Galaxy which Tony operated until the mid-1980’s when Tony and
his wife left Ireland for retirement on the Isle of Man, where they both passed
away.
Radio Galaxy on 217mMW was known as
‘the station of the stars’ the station continued in various guises including Radio
Laxy on 220mMW which was closed by the Department of Posts and Telegraphs in 1955.
Some of the other station names used by Tony Boylan included Radio 200 and Moonlight Radio on 259m MW. (From a 'Century of Irish Radio 1900-2000 book)
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