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Wednesday, 15 December 2021

Major Announcement - The Anoraks Ireland Archive Donation

 



PRESS RELEASE – IMPORTANT ANNOUCEMENT

The ‘Anoraks Ireland’ Digitisation Project

 

‘Anoraks Ireland’ was a one-stop resource for Irish radio enthusiasts of the 1980s and early 1990s allowing them to buy or swap cassette recordings and other materials relating to the hundreds of pirate radio stations that existed back then. The organisation extensively documented the unique golden era of pirate radio in the form of photographs, magazines, detailed bandscans, station surveys and much more. Earlier this year ‘Anoraks Ireland’ founder Paul Davidson agreed to donate his vast collection of Irish radio materials to The Irish Pirate Radio Archive at DCU. The materials, primarily from the pirate radio era of the 80s, offer a fascinating insight into the Irish broadcasting landscape of the time and consist of thousands of cassette recordings; photos of DJs; studios & transmitter sites; advertising rate cards; newspaper cuttings along with lots of other materials. The Irish Pirate Radio Archive, ably assisted by the teams at http://Pirate.ie and http://Radiowaves.fm, are in the process of digitising the huge collection and are about to start archiving it across the three websites. We all look forward to making this invaluable collection available to historians, students and visitors to our websites. The digitisation teams are: 

Eddie Bohan, The Irish Pirate Radio Archive & https://ibhof.blogspot.com/

Brian Greene & John Walsh @ http://Pirate.ie

John Fleming @ http://radiowaves.fm

 Thank you to Paul Davidson

ANNOUNCEMENT ENDS


To bring you a flavour of the breath and depth of the extensive ‘Anoraks Ireland’ collection that has been donated by Paul Davidson, the three archive sites, radiowaves.fm, pirate.ie and the one you are currently reading are today featuring just a small fraction of those archives. The thousands of hours of recordings and the large collection of memorabilia will allow listeners, readers, students, educators and historians analyse the Irish pirate radio era, its impact on the Irish broadcasting landscape and the social history of Ireland.

 

To announce this important donation, we are bringing you here the archives of Kandy Radio. This Ballinasloe, County Galway based station began broadcasting in July 1986 on both 216m medium wave and 98mhz FM. Kandy FM closed in December 1988 in accordance with the introduction of the new licensing system that closed the pirate era and ushered in Independent legal commercial radio.

These photographs are courtesy of the Anoraks Ireland archive donation to The Irish Pirate Radio Archive at Dublin City University by Paul Davidson

Each year Paul Davidson sought questionnaires from the pirate stations that were on air. This is the Kandy Radio 1987 Survey

The following is a recording of Kandy Radio made on December 27th 1986
https://www.mixcloud.com/TheIrishPirateRadioExhibition/kandy-radio-galway-the-anoraks-ireland-archive/








 




Monday, 8 November 2021

The Radio Galaxy Story Through The Anoraks Ireland Donation

 

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)

The following is a selection of photographs taken for Anoraks Ireland in 1986 and feature Tony operating his home based pirate station Radio Galaxy
Notice he used reel to reel tape to play some of his older recordings
Tony operating his station. In the top right photograph you will see the brown paper sleeves on the 78's he played on his station, some dating back to the 1920's. His gave away his large record collection, some of which can be seen behind him in the bottom left photograph, when he was moving to Douglas in the Isle of Man.
The interior of Radio Galaxy including a red light bulb to indicate when the station was live of the air. The tapes were played through a stereo radio/cassette machine seen below the clock.

To hear Radio Galaxy's final broadcast
LISTEN HERE TO RADIO GALAXY'S FINAL BROADCAST

To read more about Tony and Radio Galaxy read here
pirate.ie Tony Boylan Archives
Radiowaves.fm Radio Galaxy
DXArchive has press clippings and recordings of Radio Galaxy

WHAT CAN YOU DO?
If you have any pirate radio archives and you wish to donate them to The Irish Pirate Radio Archive @DCU, pirate.ie or radiowaves.fm get in touch with an email to : theirishpirateradioarchive@gmail.com
WHAT WE WANT?
Any memorabilia or tapes relating to Irish pirate radio from any year, in any county, in any part of the island of Ireland. Memorabilia can consist of stickers, press clippings, photographs, playlists, merchandise, company letters or just personal memories. 
WHAT IF YOU DON'T WANT TO GIVE YOUR COLLECTION AWAY?
If you wish to loan a personal collection of memorabilia or tapes to us, we can digitize them and then return the collection to you. This will preserve your collection for years to come. 
CAN I DO IT ANNONYMOUSLY?
Yes, there is absolutely no requirement for your name to be made public and we will sign an agreement defining that then you donate. You can also have your name announced when a collection is donated. We will also apprise you of how the digitizing is progressing. 

In the words of Radio Galaxy's door poster, 
HELP FREE RADIO
THANKS








Thursday, 4 November 2021

Simon Young, A Superstar of the Airwaves

 


When Thomas Meade was born into a hard working Finglas family, little did he know the impact this young man would make on the world of Irish radio and television. After a brief stint working in a gift shop on Nassau Street in Dublin’s city centre, the young Meade was already developing a new passion.

 

As a sixteen year old teenager, Meade earned his first eleven pounds as a DJ at a local gig in Cabra and it set him on the road as a broadcaster with wonderful talent emanating from his deep voice. He earned a reputation in the nightclubs around the city and became the club jock at Annabel’s in the Burlington Hotel. The ‘American Disco’ at Sloopy’s nightclub was another popular avenue for the young DJ. In the late Seventies and early eighties, the route to the airwaves was through pirate radio and Simon Young, as he was now known, found himself on ARD and Big D Radio, two of Dublin’s premier pirate stations. In those stations Simon found kindred spirits on the airwaves like Gerry Ryan, Ian Dempsey and Tony Fenton.

 

After sending in numerous tape auditions to RTE (that was the way a DJ introduced himself then) eventually he found himself in August 1982 as a stand in for Gerry Ryan on RTE Radio 2, another DJ who was a product of the pirate era. He would remain at RTE appearing on both radio and television for the next two decades. He proved extremely popular with the listening public. He became a popular guest on the popular ‘The Den’ on RTE 2TV with the extraordinary Dustin the Turkey. He would stand in for presenters Ian Dempsey and Ray D’Arcy on numerous occasions. In 1995 on RTE TV he presented ‘Pay the Price’ with co-host Roscha Murphy but Simon also dabbled in acting. In 1998 he made an appearance as the character ‘Rafferty’ in the hit BBC drama/comedy series Ballykissange[1]l set in County Wicklow. In April 1998 he appeared on stage at the Olympia with Brendan O’Carroll’s creation Mrs Brown. O’Carroll and Simon had worked together on pirate station ARD.

 

In 1999 with the departure of Bill O’Donovan as 2FM head, Simon found himself sidelined. Following the death of his father in 1999 and the break up of his marriage, Simon was plagued with mental health issues, which he both addressed and received treatment for[2]. By his own admission he spent almost four and a half years[3] in hospital being treated for his mental issues. By 2002 he had departed RTE and began working as a freelance broadcaster and Voice Over artist[4].

 

Simon passed away aged 62 years on October 31st 2021 and was survived by his wife Phyl, children Holly and Nathan, brother Glen who is a well known author having penned books including ‘Resurrection Day’. Simon was a talented presenter who brought joy to those who listened and will be missed most importantly by his immediate family and friends but by a wider public who enjoyed his banter, music and talent.

Dustin’s twitter account said upon his passing,

‘I hope there’s a big aul garden in heaven he can tell people to get outta’


 'Ar dheis Dé go raibh a h'anam dílis'



[1] BBC 1996 - 2001

[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yC96O88xkZU

[3] TV 3 Interview with Martin King

[4] Linkedin

Tuesday, 2 November 2021

Kandy Radio, Mayo - Irish Pirate Radio Archives

As some of our team head West towards Galway/Mayo and South to Cork from November 3rd - 6th 2021, the importance of gathering the archives of Irish pirate radio can be illustrated here with archives donated by Anoraks Ireland to the Irish Pirate Radio Archive at Dublin City University relating to Kandy Radio. 

If you have memorabilia, tapes, stickers, mugs or pirate radio archival material relating to pirate radio in Galway or Mayo and would like to donate it to the Archive at DCU, please email theirishpirateradioarchive@gmail.com for further information. 


A 1986 Questionnaire created for Anoraks Ireland

Pictures taken by Paul Davidson of Anoraks Ireland on 26th November 1986

A follow up questionnaire completed in 1987


For further reading

Kandy Radio on pirate.ie

Kandy Radio on the DX Archive

Kandy Radio on radiowaves.fm

Saturday, 30 October 2021

Irish Freedom Radio 1958

 



Ireland has a long tradition of pirate broadcasting and while the majority of the stations that aired were entertainment stations, there have been a number of politically motivated stations. From the anti-apartheid Freedom Radio in 1969 and H-Block protest stations of the 1980’s to Referendum supporting broadcasts during Divorce and Abortion votes, the illegal transmitters have been in action. There has been a number of IRA supporting stations and this is one of the stories.

 

At 1pm on Easter Sunday April 6th 1958 Dubliners were treated to the first broadcast from Radio Saor na hEireann or Irish Freedom Radio. The IRA sympathisers who operated the station on 209m MW began their broadcast by reading the Proclamation that had been read by Patrick Pearse on the steps of the GPO in 1916 in both Irish and English. Their transmitter which was capable of being heard over a thirty mile radius had been ‘expertly assembled from American parts’. The station stayed on air until 2.15pm. The station broadcast on various occasions over the next two weeks early around midnight or Sunday mornings as Radio Luxembourg’s powerful 208 transmitter would have made listening almost impossible due its close proximity on the medium wave band.

 

The following Thursday night the station opened at 11.30pm after Radio Eireann had closed and announced itself as ‘Irish Freedom Radio operating in Occupied Ireland. The media reported that a team of three men and one woman were heard on air and the broadcast lasted just seven minutes.


Shortly after 7pm on April 16th, a large force of Gardai raided a set of apartments at 7 Harcourt Terrace, owned by Treasa Ni Aodhain. The studio location was on the ground floor with the aerial connected to a television aerial on the roof. The station was located almost directly across the road from Harcourt Terrace Garda station. Also found in the search was a Bren gun, revolvers, ammunition and a large quantity of propaganda and paramilitary literature. No arrests were made.

 

Within days on the Northern side of the border the RUC raided a house at Leckpatrick, near Strabane where they seized another transmitter that had been used to rebroadcast some of the Dublin transmissions and was assumed would be moved to Dublin to replace the captured transmitter. The Monaghan transmitter on 209m had been operated in March as Freedom Radio during the Northern Ireland General Election.


The paramilitaries behind the station were back on air in August with a homemade low powered transmitter but reports in the Dublin city area stated that reception was poor. Their transmission on August 12th began at 11.15pm and the single broadcaster ended with the slogan ‘Long live the Republic’ and a patriotic song ended the transmission. The Gardai and Post Office officials using detector vans located the station and it was raided. Just after seven in the morning a large force of plain clothes Gardai and officials raided a house in Windy Arbour and seized a transmitter with the arrests of three men and a woman in connection with the station. They were questioned but released without charge. On January 18th broadcasts from a similarly named station were heard in County Monaghan. Taking to the airwaves at 10.30pm at night, they broadcast on 216m medium wave. The broadcasts from this station spoke out against the introduction of internment with trial in Northern Ireland. In February Gardai traced the broadcasts to two miles outside Monaghan Town and seized the transmitter. In October residents of Clones reported hearing a pirate radio station broadcasting ‘patriotic songs.’



Tuesday, 26 October 2021

Donald Moore (DR. DON) - Obituary

 



As an amateur wordsmith finding words to write an article should be easy but when remembering the full and fascinating life of Donald Moore, most words seem inadequate. The easiest way to convey what this legend was, is to tell you that he was to a generation known as Doctor Don, not that he ever took the Hippocratic oath, but was a Doctor of Words on the Radio. Dr. Don was a larger than life character, that did more to promote the breaking of the RTE’s broadcasting monopoly than anyone else. We owe him a huge debt of thanks even RTE, as his antics woke them from their slumber.

 

Dublin born Don, was a pirate radio pioneer, an extrovert who used his eccentric personality to promote a new genre of radio broadcasting. While the tsunami of change was later led by Chris Cary, Robbie Robinson and the O’Connor family to name a small few, Don was the rock that was thrown into the lake of banality that was Irish radio in the late 60’s and early 70’s. It was his passion that sent out ripples of change across Ireland.

 

From his early days with Radio Dublin, his self-promotion to garner publicity for this new alternative radio landscape was inescapable from both listener and reader. From self-immolation threats outside the GPO at a Radio Dublin protest, to nestling his head in the bra and chest of a model, the zany antics worked a treat as many press column inches featured the new radio buccaneering with Don leading the charge from the front.

 

With his lovely wife Debbie, they gave over part of their home in Killala Road, Cabra to house initially Westside Radio, then Radio Dublin and later Alternative Radio Dublin, as the game of cat and mouse with the authorities attempting to raid and close the pirates gathered pace. No stranger to the courts on charges of illegal broadcasting, Don never let something like the threat of jail slow him down.


According to ‘That’sIreland’,

‘In 1975, Doctor Don Moore arrived. He was a young fast-talking, long-haired electrician, and he relaunched Radio Dublin, broadcasting music at weekends from his home in Cabra. When he needed someone to fix his transmitter, Don turned to the raspy-voiced, early-middle-aged owner of an electrical repair shop, Eamon ‘the Captain’ Cooke.

The Doctor and the Captain soon split, after a row about how the station should be run, and maybe also about the profits from selling t-shirts. For a while, in traditional Irish style, the pair ran rival Radio Dublins from their respective homes.

Don then joined forces with a rival pirate outfit, the imaginatively-named Alternative Radio Dublin, or A.R.D., which had been started the previous year in a garden shed in Drimnagh.’

 

Those run-ins included car ramming’s, physical intimidation and threats. But in the end Don’s ARD became THE station in Dublin, required listening, popular and occasionally profitable. ARD was a game changer and when radio industry professionals like Robbie Robinson (RIP) and Chris Cary (RIP) arrived in Ireland, they saw that the loopholes exploited by Moore’s ARD provided a template for their own stations.

 

In the pirate TV studios of Channel D in 1981

On air, his shows were to put it mildly, organised chaos. Perhaps with hindsight his zany antics are not politically correct but Don wouldn’t let something like that stand in his way. When the hobby stations of the mid-seventies began to become emboldened, Don found a businessman Bernard Llewellyn, owner of Anya TV, to invest in Alternative Radio Dublin. Don oversaw occasional, amateur hobby pirate radio move to a scheduled, tightly run, proper alterative radio. So many names in Irish entertainment can trace the origins of their success to that Georgian House on Mountjoy Square. From Mrs Brown, Brendan O’Carroll to Robbie Irwin, Ian Dempsey, Aidan Cooney and the late Gerry Ryan, they learned their skills firstly at . His access to publicity was legendary as newspapers, entertainment and music magazines and fanzines courted his story, Larger than life tales made his a larger than life character. He even found time to film advertisements for the short lived pirate television station Channel D, promoting a furniture store with of course the obligatory Dr. Don accessories, a scantily clad woman and lots of double entendres.

 

The former home of Moore on Killala Road

As the Super pirates hit the airwaves with Nova, ERI and WLR, Don’s perhaps less than professionalism was side-lined but while he didn’t travel that road, he certainly drew the map. He was a disruptor, a rogue and an amazing raconteur. He reinvented himself yet again and began to operate a successful faith healing service that managed to help many in a way only Don could. His life experiences were those of many who had to overcome troubles.

 

Despite his enormous contribution to Irish radio history, his real pride was in his daughter Lacy. A talented actress who has appeared in Emmerdale, the Fall and numerous other productions, each time she was due on TV or away filming, a text from Don would inform me and his pride shone through brighter than any solar light. He rang me not so long ago to tell me that his brother had died in London and because of restrictions he was unable to travel but he spoke with such sensitivity to me that Lacy had attended to represent the Dublin side of the Moore family.

 

He is fondly remembered by all those who found their feet in pirate radio and later legit radio. He is fondly remembered by those who met him and was always dressed to impress. Personally, since a pirate radio gathering organised by pirate.ie in October 2018, I have met and spoken to Don on countless occasions, he passed on untold stories, memorabilia as donations to The Irish Pirate Radio Archive at DCU and we just chatted about life, loves and the craic. We are blessed that there are so many interviews with Don both in print and in person, that our memories of his will not diminish, that he will forever be in our hearts and his family in our prayers.


Donald (Dr. Don) Moore a deserved recipient of any Irish Radio Hall of Fame Award,

Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam

 

This is the station history of ARD from my book ‘A Century of Irish Radio 1900-2000’ available on Amazon.

Alternative Radio Dublin - 257mMW

As the name suggests the station positioned itself as a breakaway from Eamon Cooke’s Radio Dublin. The station was first launched in July 1976 broadcasting from a garden shed in Drimnagh on 217mMW. The station had been launched by Davitt Kelly, Mark Storey and Declan Meehan who were joined in 1977 by Don Moore (known on air as Doctor Don). The station was moved to Don Moore’s home on Kilalla Road Cabra where it was raided and briefly closed on September 15th 1976. Just after midnight Post and Telegraph officials backed up by the Gardai raided the station. The authorities were becoming increasingly concerned that the station had been expanding its broadcasting hours but even after the raid the station remained broadcasting only on Sunday afternoons. The charges against Moore were dropped in the subsequent court case in June 1977 when a witness Eamon Cooke described as a ‘radio officer’ said that the equipment produced in court could have been used for purposes other than broadcasting. When the Post and Telegraphs engineer Peter Moloney was recalled to the witness box he had to agree with Cooke’s observation.

 

Moore had initially been a partner with Eamon Cooke in Radio Dublin until the men violently fell out. Moore offered the ARD a home which was broadcasting on low power every weekend with a quality of programmes that made them stand out against the other hobby pirate stations including Radio Dublin.

 

In 1978 Moore met with a television retail storeowner Bernard Llewellyn while selling advertising. After several meetings Llewellyn bought into the station at Moore’s request without any consultation with the other owners. One by one they left the station until only Moore and Llewellyn were left. In January the station moved out of Moore’s home into a Georgian building on Belvedere Place and with that move came a frequency change from 217m to 257m.

 

On January 28th 1978, ARD announced ambitious plans to cover the Minister for Finance’s Budget Day speech on February 1st with a reporter at Dáil Eireann, Howard Kinlay and a guest panel in studio to discuss the Budget. Howard Kinlay was a unique broadcaster in pirate radio circles as he was one of the few who had worked for RTE before moving onto pirate radio. The former President of the University Students of Ireland organisation was from the late 1960’s a member of staff at Radio Eireann’s radio headquarters in the GPO. As a presenter in 1969 along with Sean MacReamoinn he presented a special programme on the 50th anniversary of the meeting of the First Dáil. He garnered newspaper headlines in 1972 as the producer on the ‘Opinion’ programme when planned interviews with members of Sinn Fein were pulled by RTE in fear of contravening Section 31 of the Broadcasting Act. He became well known in media circles as both the editor and occasional producer of the popular radio show ‘Here and Now’. In 1973 Howard decided to leave the station and take up a position with the Irish Management Institute. He a 1973 Irish Press article Howard said that

‘a lack of resourses one is forced to work to a lower standard. One is forced to put a programme out on air before it was ready to go on air’

In late 1977 as ARD continued to expand Howard joined the pirate station.

 

Mountjoy Square

In March 1978 at a press conference at ARD headquarters it was announced that Howard[1] was taking on the position as Director of Programming, On January 31st while DJ Jason Maine (real name Pat Long) was on air Gardai and officials from the Department of Posts and Telegraphs raided and closed the station. The station managed to get itself back on the air but the transmitter was of poor quality. In May 1978 was reported by the Irish Examiner,

 

‘A raid by Gardai on the pirate radio station, Alternative Radio Dublin, was described in Dublin District Court yesterday when the owner Bernard Llewellyn of 76, Walnut Rise, Dublin, was fined a total of £25 for having in his possession a radio frequency power amplifier for a radio frequency oscillator without a licence, on January 11. The Court ordered the forfeiture of the apparatus.

Detective Sergeant Bernard McLoughlin, Investigation Branch of the Department, told District Justice Seamus Mahon that he was involved in the investigation of illegal wireless telegraphy apparatus by pirate radio stations. On January 31 he visited 43 Belvedere Place, headquarters of A.R.D. having with him a search warrant. He was accompanied by other Gardai and by members of the Department's engineering branch and in a small room on a landing ne saw wireless telegraphy apparatus actually in operation.

Some of the party heard the announcement being made: "Station A.R.D. is now being closed down due to a raid by the Department of Posts and Telegraphs".

 

Following a visit by Llewellyn to Capital Radio in London to assess their success, a new transmitter was purchased and a new format introduced. A new degree of professionalism previously absent from the Dublin pirate scene was created and the station went from being a hobby operation to broadcasting seven days a week with a full schedule. On the back of programmes like Jason Maine’s ‘Drivetime’ and Paul Vincent’s ‘Pyjamarama’ shows the station became the most popular in Dublin taking the younger audience away from RTE.

 

On January 7th 1979 two DJ’s Conor Downes and John Hassett were injured in an explosion at the station initially blamed on a ‘experimentation with laboratory chemicals’. The TV and stage comedian and creator of ‘Mrs Brown’, Brendan O’Carroll was in the station at the time of the blast.

D.J. "Uncle Bren the kiddies friend" (Brendan O'Carroll) said: "At 9.30 I was just putting on a record when I heard this almighty bang. It threw me out of my chair. I thought it was more car bombing. I ran into an adjoining office and lay on the ground. Later I ran down stairs to see what had happened and there was blood on the steps of ARD headquarters. There were five fire brigades and several police cars and hundreds people around.

 

Mrs. Brown (Brendan O'Carroll AKA Uncle Bren)

In July 1979 ARD was put off the air for four hours when RTE obtained an injunction to stop the station broadcasting for a set period as RTE Radio was conducting a live outside broadcast from the nearby St Francis Xavier Hall featuring the RTE Symphony Orchestra and featured international singer Marian Montgomery. RTE claimed that ARD’s transmitter was interfering with their OB link to Montrose and the injunction was granted with ARD ceasing transmissions for the four hours.

 

After almost two years at the top of the rating, Llewellyn decided to close the station with the intention of applying for one of the new Independent radio licences that were speculated to be on their way. The station struggled when some of its most popular on air talent was taken by RTE’s new national pop station RTE Radio 2. ARD closed down on December 31st 1979 but it would be another ten years before independent commercial radio was launched in Ireland.

     

Don Moore had originally studied to be an electrician but became involved in pirate radio in 1975 when he launched Westside Radio. Westside had been a shortwave station. Moore would later leave the radio business and became a faith healer based in Drogheda, County Louth.  His website describes him as an ‘International Psychic Healer, Mind, Body & Spirit Therapist’.

 

The ARD (Radio 257) aerial above the Crofton Airport Hotel, Whitehall

When Llewellyn decided to close ARD, he sold the station to a group of the stations DJ’s including Dave Cunningham who in an interview in 1991 with Denis Murray said they had paid just under £5,000 for the station but were unable to use the moniker ARD and so it was renamed Radio 257. They moved location to the upper floors of the Crofton Airport Hotel and would later revert to its original name ARD. The station moved yet again to be based above the Walton’s Music South on Frederick Street although technical issues dogged the station. The arrival of the formatted super pirates of Sunshine and Nova in the early eighties fatally damaged ARD both in terms of listenership and advertising and costing about £600 per week to run ARD disappeared from the airwaves. In the same interview in 1991, Cunningham revealed that at a breakfast in the Berkley Court Hotel, he met with Robbie Robinson, Chris Cary, Brian McKenzie and Phil Solomons who instead of setting up a new Dublin pirate radio stations from scratch offered to buy ARD for £33,000 but Cunningham turned it down and Robinson and Cary went ahead with plans to launch Sunshine Radio.  




[1] Howard Kinlay later worked as a Radio critic for the Irish Times passed away in 1987 aged 44 leaving behind a wife Collete and three children.


For further reading see


Friday, 22 October 2021

Ireland's Only Offshore Pirate

 



One of the more unusual Irish pirate radio stations appeared on the airwaves almost by accident but it became widely popular with fan mail and requests arriving from all along the East Coast of Ireland and as far away as Manchester. Unusually too for Ireland it was based not on land but at sea and one man John McGuinness, deserves much of the credit for providing the entertainment.


McGuinness was born in Blackrock in County Louth and after a brief time as a trawlerman he found himself from 1954 working as a relief officer on the Dundalk Pile Lighthouse. Located in Dundalk Bay, the lighthouse dated back to the mid nineteenth century. In May 1958, under the direction of the then chief lighthouse keeper William Hamilton, a radio telephone was installed. This allowed the operators on board to maintain contact with ships entering Dundalk port, transiting through the Irish Sea and other lighthouse and lightship operators. In an interview in the Dundalk Democrat[1] following a feature on RTE TV’s ‘Nationwide’[2] programme, John McGuinness recounted how he became a pirate radio star and to become known as ‘the Singing Lightkeeper’.

 


He said that it began when John Scanlon in the Kish Lighthouse heard John singing in the background and asked him to sing ‘The Boys From County Armagh’ but while he thought he was just doing a colleague a favour, his fame was travelling quickly. The radio transmitter on the lighthouse transmitted on 191.4m medium wave, not far from the popular Radio Luxembourg on 208m. In 1958, Radio Eireann’s output was limited and many tuned into Luxembourg once RE closed down. As they scrolled down the medium wave band, they came across the broadcasts from the Dundalk Lighthouse.

The sing song over the airwaves was a hit. Fan mail began to arrive on the lighthouse along with supplies. Requests to say hello to those listeners were also being delivered and aired. In an interview in 2005 for the Louth Archives project[3], John recounted,

‘we started getting fan mail and I got letters from Manchester, Manchester, Ballycotton, from Howth and Dundalk around and then there was this one came from Warrenpoint and it said “Dear Johnny, We enjoyed your rendering on Saturday last of ‘the boys from the County Armagh’.  What about giving us that good old county Down ballad on Saturday next ‘Dolly’s Brae’”.  I didn’t know what Dolly’s Brae was but I believe it’s an orange song you know.’ 

 

I knew they were receiving me and I’d say “goodnight Marcella, goodnight Pat, my brother, goodnight Sean and goodnight, they were only wee toddlers thing.  So anyway, next I’d be saying goodnight and next anyway, this day was of a Saturday and Larry Butler was the other lighthouse keeper.  He was turned in, he was having a bit of a lie in.  So anyway next (makes a knocking sound), there was someone there.  So next I looked down the ladder here, I looked down and this fella says, “me mammy sent this out to you”.  So, I put down a rope, hauled it up. “me mother says will you say goodnight to her on the radio tonight?”  And when I opened the bag what was in it only a dozen of stout, a dozen of eggs and all the daily papers.  Larry Butler he loved a drink too and I grabbed Larry said I “you better come out”.  This is out in the middle of the Summer, “Santa Claus has arrived” says I.  So next anyhow he comes out and we’d a half a dozen each, a dozen of stout and I said certainly we’ll say goodnight to you and we said “Good-night Mrs Vernon Annalacken Shore and good-night Michael” to the son do you see.  So be Jesus the next evening about 24 hours later here I see someone coming out and wasn’t it the younger brother with another bucket, with another bag and the same thing again.  I’d to say goodnight to the brother, the other lad then Jimmy then.  But it gained momentum you see and we used to get an awful lot of fan mail.  That was before there was any pirates, I was a pirate.  I was a pirate before there was any radio pirates.


The pirate broadcasts continued through 1958 and 1959 but in 1960 John McGuinness found a full time position on land with CIE as a bus driver where he stayed until his retirement in 1999.

 

The Dundalk Lighthouse and their 191.4m frequency made the newspapers again in 1970 when a new offshore pirate radio station in the North Sea, Radio North Sea began broadcasting initially on 186m but in April 1970, they mistakenly moved to 190m causing interference to Lighthouse around the coasts of the British Isles and therefore impacting on the safety of the shipping traversing those seas. After a jamming campaign on the station’s frequency, RNI moved to 217m[4].

 


Radio Scotland was located on board a ship broadcasting off the coast of Scotland near Troon, when pressure from the authorities forced the ship to lift anchor and cross the Irish Sea to anchor off Ballywalter in County Down, following an unscheduled anchorage in Belfast Lough sheltering from a storm. On April 9th 1967 at 12.31p.m., Radio Scotland and Ireland as it announced itself began broadcasting on 242mMW. The station stayed on the air for a month before pressure from Northern Ireland's Customs service forced the ship onto the seas once more and back across the sea towards Scotland.

 

 

Sources & Thanks

Dundalk Democrat

Irish Newspaper Archives

The Louth Archives

RTE Archives

The DX Archive

World Radio History Archives

A Century of Irish Radio 1900 - 2000



[1] Dundalk Democrat 1849-current, April 18th 2007, page 14

[2] RTE Archives

[3] Interviewee: John McGuinness - Interviewer: Russell Shortt - Date: 23 August 2005 at Louth County Archives

 

[4] The Offshore Pirate Radio Museum