Children's Hour, initiallyThe Children's Hour, was theBBC's principal recreational service for children (as distinct from "Broadcasts to Schools") which began during the period when radio was the only medium of broadcasting.
Children's Hour was broadcast from 1922 to 1964, originally from the BBC'sBirmingham station5IT,[1] soon joined by other regional stations, then in theBBC Regional Programme, before transferring to its final home, the newBBC Home Service, at the outbreak of the second World War. Parts of the programme were also rebroadcast by theBBC World Service. For the last three years of its life (from 17 April 1961 until 27 March 1964)[2]Children's Hour was no longer used, the programmes in its timeslot going out under the umbrella heading ofFor the Young.
The programme takes its name from the first verse of thepoem byLongfellow: "Between the dark and the daylight, When the night is beginning to lower, Comes a pause in the day's occupations, That is known as the Children's Hour".
In the United Kingdom,Children's Hour was broadcast from 5 pm to 6 pm every day of the week.[3]
It was founded byCecil Arthur Lewis, or Uncle Caractacus,L. Stanton Jefferies,Rex Palmer andArthur Burrows.[4] From 1923 to 1934, the majority of listeners, few at all then, were part of "Radio Circles", clubs that maintained the BBC's connection to their audience. Birthday greetings were given out until 1933, excised due to overwhelming demand. In 1926 it was decided that the majority of presenters would drop the "Auntie" and "Uncle" from their titles.[5]
Derek McCulloch, however, would retain his identity as "Uncle Mac".[4] He was closely involved with the programme from 1929, and ran the department from 1933 until 1950, when he had to resign for health reasons. From 1928 to 1960,Children's Hour in Scotland was organised and presented byKathleen Garscadden, known as Auntie Kathleen, whose popularity brought crowds to the radio station in Glasgow.[6] By 1933 however, many of the local versions ofChildren's Hour were replaced by regional broadcasts ofLondon production.[5] The Scottish writerJohn Keir Cross was the producer ofChildren's Hour from 1941 to 1944.[7]
From 1928 to 1960[8][9]Request Week determined what were the most popularChildren's Hour programmes.Toytown was #1 for almost thirty years,[10][11] with various popular choices trailing behind beingZoo Man,Jennings at School,Norman and Henry Bones (which endedChildren's Hour),[12]Out with Romany,Worzel Gummidge andWinnie the Pooh.
The programme's closure was decided in 1964 byFrank Gillard following an enormous decline in listenership, as by the end of 1963 the number of listeners had fallen to 25,000. Gillard said that most of them were "middle-aged and elderly ladies who liked to be reminded of the golden days of their youth", and that young listeners had instead turned to watching television, listening to theBBC Light Programme or topirate radio. There was considerable complaint about the closing of the service and questions were raised in Parliament.[13]
Among popular series onChildren's Hour were:
| Title | Author | First broadcast | Last broadcast | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winnie the Pooh | A. A. Milne | 16 September 1927[14] | 23 April 1959[15] | Cycle of stories fromWinnie-the-Pooh andThe House at Pooh Corner (broadcast irregularly) |
| Toytown | S.G. Hulme Beaman | 19 July 1929 (adaptation of story fromTales of Toytown)[16] | 16 September 1964 (asChildren's Hour)[17] | 29 stories written for radio (1929-1932) cycled monthly thereafter (except from 1941-1943[18]) |
| Out with Romany | George Bramwell Evens | 12 January 1934[19] | 2 November 1943[20] | |
| Worzel Gummidge | Barbara Euphan Todd | 10 December 1935[21] | 6 September 1952[22] | Cycle of original stories by Todd (broadcast irregularly) |
| Mary Plain | Gwynedd Rae | 17 February 1936[23] | 2 October 1945[24] | Cycle of original stories by Rae; not broadcast 1940-1945 |
| Norman and Henry Bones | Anthony C. Wilson | 17 July 1943[25] | 9 April 1965[26] | Written for radio |
| Cowleaze Farm | Ralph Whitlock | 9 April 1945[27] | 13 September 1962[28] | |
| Nature Parliament | N/A | 22 January 1946[29] | 29 December 1962[30] | |
| Jennings at School | Anthony Buckeridge | 16 October 1948[31] | 24 March 1962[32] | Written for radio |
| Sherlock Holmes | Arthur Conan Doyle | 15 October 1952[33] | 15 November 1957[33] | Series 1-3 only |
| Tinker and Tapp, Inc. | Muriel Levy | 19 November 1953[34] | 27 February 1962[35] | Written for radio |
Among actors and presenters who were famous for their work onChildren's Hour were:
L. Stanton Jefferies composed music for some early programmes.[36]
Programmes for the young date from the very beginning of radio:Children's Hour originated in Birmingham in 1922.