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Westward Television

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former ITV service for South West England

Westward Television
The Westward region when it lost its franchise in 1981
TypeRegion oftelevision network
BrandingWestward TV
Country
England
First air date
29 April 1961; 64 years ago (1961-04-29)
TV transmittersStockland Hill,Huntshaw Cross,Caradon Hill,Redruth,Beacon Hill
HeadquartersPlymouth
Broadcast area
Devon,Cornwall,South Somerset,Taunton Deane,West Dorset,West Somerset
OwnerSelf-owned (1961-1981)
TSW (c.1981 - 1 January 1982)
Dissolved31 December 1981; 43 years ago (1981-12-31), as branding;
1 January 1982 at 12:40 am (alongsideTSW brand) as channel (after 20 years, 247 days)
Picture format
625- linePAL and405-line
AffiliationITV
LanguageEnglish
Replaced byTSW

Westward Television was the firstITV franchise-holder for theSouth West of England. It held the franchise from 29 April 1961 until 31 December 1981. After a difficult start, Westward Television provided a popular, distinctive and highly regarded service to its region, until heavy competition[1] led to its franchise not being renewed by theIBA. Westward launched the career of many broadcasters who became well known nationally, won numerous awards for its programming, and heavily influenced its successor,TSW.

History

[edit]
Further information:Timeline of Westward TV and TSW

The company's first chairman wasPeter Cadbury, who had left the board ofTyne Tees Television to set up the company and bid for the south-west franchise, which he won against 11 competing bids.[2] Cadbury named the company after the golf course atWestward Ho! in north Devon, where he played. Ironically, Westward Ho! was part of the region that found reception of the television signal most difficult, until the construction of theHuntshaw Cross relay transmitter in 1968. Westward's region was surrounded on three sides by the sea, which was strongly reflected in Westward's output and its company logo, a silver model of theGolden Hind.

In early January 1969, plans were drawn up for a merger between Westward and theKeith Prowse company, as Peter Cadbury was chairman of both.[3] By 17 January, the deal was done.EMI purchased Keith Prowse Music Publishing from Westward in the latter part of 1969.[4] Soon, the Westward board was in continual disagreement, and in January 1970 Cadbury was sacked and re-hired within days as the chairman of the Westward board, after he made outspoken remarks against the levy imposed on advertising revenue imposed by theIBA[5] while also withholding a Westwardcorporation tax bill to theInland Revenue over the same matter.[6] By July 1980, Cadbury was finally removed from the Westward board[7] and over the following six months, he tried to regain control.

Westward began broadcasting in colour in 1971, initially from theRedruth transmitter, and a few months later colour was extended to theStockland Hill andCaradon Hill transmitters. To mark the change, Westward's ident was re-shot in colour.[8]

Franchise loss

[edit]

On 28 December 1980, while the ITV network was showingDrake's Venture (Westward Television's two-hour filmed drama to celebrate the 400th anniversary ofSir Francis Drake'scircumnavigation of the globe, starringJohn Thaw),ITN interrupted a commercial break to announceATV was to undergo major changes andSouthern and Westward had not had their licences renewed by theIBA; the south-west franchise was awarded toTSW (Television South West).

Following the loss of its franchise, Westward's management decided to sell up quickly, and the company (including its staff, premises and programme library) was purchased by TSW, early in 1981, for £2.38 million. TSW continued using the Westward name and symbol on screen until 31 December 1981; thereafter, it was re-branded on screen as TSW.

A special programme,20 Years of Westward, was broadcast on 21 December 1981[9] to look back on the company's achievements. It was presented by Roger Shaw, and recorded in front of a studio audience. Hastings Mann'sWestward Ho![10] was used as the theme music. Studio guests includedAngela Rippon, Kenneth MacLeod and Sheila Kennedy. There were filmed contributions fromAlan Freeman,Jan Leeming andDavid Vine and many clips of Westward programmes were shown. The special programme ended with a message fromPeter Cadbury, in which he wished TSW well.

Closure

[edit]

Unlike the other ITV stations that lost their franchises in this round, Westward (having been run by successor TSW since August 1981) opted to hand over at midnight on 31 December 1981. On that evening they broadcast the first 25 minutes ofScottish Television's Hogmanay show live, and then cut away just before midnight when Roger Shaw appeared on camera in a traditional dinner jacket seated at an antique wooden desk, surrounded by staff wearing formal suits and holding film reels and 2-inch videotapes. He closed Westward Television with this announcement:

Many thanks to our friends at Scottish Television, north of the border. Well, it's very nearly the end of 1981 and, for Westward Television, it's the end of its franchise to provide an independent television service for the south-west. So as we wish you a happy new year from Westward, it's also goodbye and thank you for all your support and kindness over the past 20 years. But a New Year's Eve is also a time for looking ahead and, as Dr.Samuel Johnson said, 'New things are made familiar and familiar things made new.' So as we say goodbye from Westward in 1981....

Launch of TSW

[edit]

TSW then began with a short video clip of a champagne bottle being opened, accompanied by the short audio version of the station ident "That's Soul, Write". Shaw then re-appeared wearing a modern suit, no longer in a dinner jacket and now in a modern chair, surrounded by staff wearing TSW T-shirts and holding 2-inch videotapes. This was clearly to remind viewers of a new modern era as well as a new look. Shaw made the first announcement on TSW:

...let's say welcome to 1982 from your new television station, Television South West, with the promise of a full-bodied blend of the new and the familiar. And from all of us here on duty in these first few seconds of 1982, a happy new year from and withTSW. And to get the new year off to a good-humoured start, we have a brand new comedy withPeter Cook andMimi Kennedy inThe Two of Us.

This was followed by the full version of TSW's ident. One or both of the in-vision announcements had been pre-recorded due to the rapid change of outfits.

The comedy programme was followed by further continuity, an epilogue, weather and shipping forecast and closedown (with the national anthem) - all with TSW branding. However, when the screen finally faded to black at approximately 12:40am on 1 January 1982, Shaw made a final out-of-vision courtesy announcement and managed to mention the now-defunctWestward one last time, saying 'from all the staff here at Westward - good night'.

No recordings of the end of Westward Television were known to exist until 2012 (the 30th anniversary of the end of Westward), but then a full video recording of the evening, including the segment of STV'swiped Hogmanay show, was recovered by the classic television organisationKaleidoscope. Parts of the recording were featured at a Kaleidoscope event[11] and at that year'sMissing Believed Wiped at theBritish Film Institute.

Studios

[edit]

Based at purpose-built studios at Derry's Cross inPlymouth, with a London office (sited at various locations includingNew Bond Street,Marble Arch andSloane Square) and a sales office inBristol.

The Derry's Cross studios were designed by the architects Treadgold and Elsey, who had previously designed theTWW Studios atPontcanna,Cardiff and Arno's Court,Bristol (Howett 1994).

During Westward's tenure, Derry's Cross had three studios. Studio 1 was 2,500 sq ft (230 m2), Studio 2 was 400 sq ft (37 m2) and used for news, sport and interview programmes and an announcers' studio was located beside Master control.

The studios were originally fitted out byMarconi, using top-of-the-range studio equipment. Westward engineer Peter Rodgers recalled: "From the start, where we could afford it, we bought the best." (Howett 1994) By the time Westward began broadcasting, Derry's Cross had cost Westward over £500,000, with the company committed to spending another £20,000 on the studios by April 1962.

In 1981 the studios, along with the company, were purchased by TSW; in 1993 the building was sold to a firm of solicitors and converted into offices. In 2010 the buildings were demolished to make way for a new retail development.

Identity

[edit]

Westward Television'scorporate branding focused on the sea, and mainly used a ship emblem for their on-screen look. The first ident featured an image of a boat on the water, before replacing the image with a stylised ship image in a circle, complete with Westward legend andchannel nine and twelve identifiers (representing theStockland Hill andCaradon Hill transmitters of the time), to a tune of four chimes.[12] This was replaced in the mid-1960s by a model of theGolden Hind, shot against a black background with a simple Westward caption beneath accompanied by theHolly and the Ivy tune on brass instruments.[13] This ident was altered slightly in the late 1960s to update the font toCompacta Bold.

Whencolour television came to the region on 22 May 1971, theGolden Hind was re-shot against a blue background with the caption altered to include a small stylised ship image in a box in the lower left corner, followed by an outlined 'Westward TV' caption, with 'TV' in red. The tune that accompanied the colour television ident was originally a nautical fanfare on brass instruments, based on the song "Come Landlord Fill the Flowing Bowl", arranged by Paul Lewis. This formed part of a longer ident theme titledAn English Overture, used at the start of each day's broadcasts.[14] The short ident theme was changed around 1978 to a seven-note fanfare.[15] This was Westward's final ident and remained with the company until the end of the franchise.

In addition to these idents, Westward used a clock contained in a curved box with both analogue and digital displays, alongside the Westward Television stylised ship logo and name. Westward was a frequent user ofin-vision continuity, with many of the station's personalities becoming well known in the region.

Programming

[edit]

Westward's small size and the structure of ITV (which, at the time, deliberately made it hard for small and medium-sized ITV companies to contribute to the network) meant it produced comparatively little output for the network. Instead, the company concentrated on regional programming. From 1968 until the end of its franchise, theITA (later theIBA) gave Westward a target of providing 6.5 hours of new regional programming a week - a target which they always exceeded.

Westward's programming schedule was always published as a magazine for the public to access. Initially, they published weekly programme listings in its own programme journal,Look Westward. The first edition cost5d, and featured a special article by Westward board memberDaphne du Maurier. Many Westward personalities, such as announcer Sheila Kennedy, also contributed articles to the magazine. As part of the 1968 franchise round, theITA created Independent Television Publications (ITP), and Westward's weekly listings would be obliged to appear solely in the local edition of the nationallistings magazineTVTimes, which was published by ITP.

Local programming

[edit]

Westward Television had a dual policy for its local programming: it produced a wide range of programmes of particular interest to the south-west's rural and agricultural communities, whilst simultaneously producing programming designed to stimulate its audience's interest in new areas.

One of the best known programmes wasTreasure Hunt, a game show presented byKenneth Horne andKeith Fordyce, among others, which ran for 14 years and at one stage featuredJethro as the pirate co-host.[16]

News and current affairs

[edit]

By 1969, Westward had more than 100 correspondents across the region, reporting newsworthy local events, and eight film cameramen who would travel the region gathering footage and compiling reports. The flagship programme wasWestward Diary, which began as a regional magazine programme broadcast three times a week (Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays) between 6:15 pm and 7 pm. Originally, there were three presenters –Barry Westwood,Reginald Bosanquet and Kenneth MacLeod – who rotated on a weekly basis. The regional news was contained in a separate ten-minuteWestward News bulletin, broadcast every weekday at 6.05 pm, and subsequently supplemented by afternoon and late-night bulletins.

Westward Diary was soon merged withWestward News, to become what was known at the time as a 'regional news magazine', and was broadcast every weekday between 6.00 pm and 6:30 pm. Kenneth MacLeod was asked to present the new programme permanently. The news would be read by the duty announcer, so MacLeod's role on theDiary was not as a newsreader but a presenter holding the whole package together.

The weeknightlyWestward Diary had two halves, separated by a commercial break. The first half concentrated on the regional news, whereas the second half included other items of interest to local viewers. A number of experts would visit to present regular features: Ted Tuckerman would present a fishing spot calledTight Lines, Jon Miller (thezoologist, and also presenter ofSouthern Television'sHow) would present a spot about nature, architect David Young would examine local architecture of interest, and Topline Broadhurst would present regular gardening spots. There was a regular spot calledHelp! for charity and voluntary groups; a slot calledPick of the Post in which viewers' letters would be read; and the popular[citation needed]Picture Puzzle, in which viewers had to try to guess the location shown in a photograph taken somewhere in the South West).

Westward staff returned to work a few days before the end of the ITV national strike of 1979. Kenneth MacLeod had to presentWestward Diary in what looked to viewers like almost total darkness, as the union permitted only the house lights to be switched on in the studio.

In the early 1970s,A Date With Danton was a stand-alone weekly programme that provided a round-up of local arts and entertainment events. This later became a spot entitled "What's On", in Friday's edition ofWestward Diary. The Friday edition ofSports Desk was a stand-alone programme in the early '70s, but this too became part of theDiary towards the end of the decade. To accommodate this, the length of Friday's edition ofDiary was extended to an hour, and it occasionally featured a live studio audience. Westward was one of the first ITV regions to broadcast a late-evening regional news bulletin (Westward Late News).[17]

The local weather forecast inWestward Diary, with an emphasis on specialist information for fishermen and farmers, was given by a popular local personality, Graham Danton, who presented several programmes for Westward, includingHoliday Times, an events listings programme aimed at people holiday-making in the region, andLate With Danton, a consumer programme.

OnApril Fools' Day, 1973, Westward broadcast a film about the village of Spiggot, which had boycotteddecimalisation and were still using pre-decimal currency. Many viewers wrote to Westward in support of the villagers' stance, oblivious to the date the film was broadcast.

Children

[edit]

An early programme for young people wasSpin Along, a regional pop music programme presented by disc-jockeyAlan Freeman. The first edition was broadcast on Tuesday 12 September 1961 at 6:15pm, in place ofWestward Diary.[18] A second series began on 24 September 1962 and moved to 7pm.[19]

Another local music programme wasMove Over Dad. In November 1963[20]The Beatles had to be smuggled into Derry's Cross through a tunnel to record an interview with continuity announcer Stuart Hutchison for the programme, due to the number of fans outside the studios.

Other 60s music programmes includedPop And Leslie[21] andThe Westward Beat Competition from 1964. TheWestward Beat Competition had a panel of judges that includedBrian Epstein andDick Rowe and was won by The Rustiks.[22]

In 1969,Angela Rippon joined Westward fromBBC South West, as a producer of children's and women's programmes; she also produced a monthly show during the summer of 1972 which laid claim to being the first "Open Access" TV show for young people in the UK. This was calledThe Show Without A Title, and was the brainchild of the station's then Programme Controller Terry Fleet. The monthly show was presented by members of an editorial team that included David Rodgers, who later went on to become a familiar Westward TV staff presenter. Angela Rippon was the programme's Editor, with Roger Gage being its director. The show's run (which was broadcast at 5.20pm on Fridays after being pre-recorded in Studio One on the preceding Wednesday) was short-lived. A year later, in 1973, another series aimed at young people calledYoung Eyes took to the Westward TV airwaves; this was co-presented by Andy Price and the actressLesley Manville. David Rodgers was again one of the regular contributors.

Another popular long-running programme featured a puppet rabbit,Gus Honeybun, who appeared with the duty announcer who read out birthday greetings to the region's children: The story went that Gus was found wanderingDartmoor by a WestwardOutside Broadcast unit. Children could request that Gus waggle his ears, wink, stand on his head, count their age in "bunny-hops", or turn off the lights. Gus's behaviour tended to be excellent for Roger Shaw, but forJudi Spiers and Iain Stirling he could be rather unpredictable. Gus was retained byTSW when they took over the franchise.

On Sunday mornings, Westward airedLook and See, a five-minute religious slot for the under-8s broadcast from the continuity studio. Its presenters included Norah Thomas, Jill Mapson, Pat Webber and Ann Davey. As with most other ITV companies, the station also produced a nightly Epilogue under the title ofFaith for Life, produced largely from the continuity studio.

In 1980, Westward producedMaggie's Moor, a seven part networked children's drama series about a young girl living onDartmoor during theSecond World War. It starred Tamar le Bailly as Maggie[23] and was produced and directed by John King,[24] the father of wildlife photographer and presenterSimon King, who featured as "The Buzzard Boy" in Episode 5.[25]

Agriculture

[edit]

Agriculture was an important industry in South West England during Westward Television's franchise. Approximately 80% of land in South West England is in agricultural use (19.6% of England's total).[26] Westward TV had an Agricultural Advisory committee chaired by R. G. Pomeroy[27] to advise the company on its agricultural output. For nine months of the year, Westward broadcastFarming News[28] (later retitledFarm and Country News[29]) on Sunday lunchtimes presented and edited by Peter Forde.[30] Westward also produced an adult education series aimed at farmers calledAcres For Profit.

Network contributions

[edit]

Westward's contributions to the network were very rare at first, mainly consisting of one-off programmes and editions of theMorning Service (later renamedMorning Worship).

Initially, Westward had an arrangement withABC Weekend Television (ABC) to provide its network programming. AsChannel Television took its network feed from Stockland Hill, this obliged Channel to affiliate to ABC. These 'affiliate' arrangements lasted until they were abolished in the 1964 franchise round. Westward also had an arrangement withAssociated TeleVision (ATV), to play out any networked Westward programmes onto the ITV network.

On 19 January 1972, there was a relaxation on the restrictions of broadcast hours that had been set by the Minister of Posts and Telecommunications. This allowed regular daytime programming on weekday afternoons, and weekday morning programming during out-of-school term time. These extra off-peak hours gave smaller ITV companies a chance to provide some networked or part-networked programmes. By the mid '70s, Westward had taken advantage of this opportunity by finding a small niche producing adult education programmes for the ITV network. These included the seriesWestcountry Fayre (cookery),Freeze! (freezing food) andKeep Britain Slim (slimming).

About Britain

[edit]

One of the new daytime weekday programmes introduced through the relaxation of broadcast hours wasAbout Britain. This strand was made up of half-hour documentaries contributed by each of the ITV regions covering interesting aspects of their respective regions.

In 1973 theCountryside Commission opened theSouth West Coast Peninsula Walk fromMinehead in Somerset toSwanage in Dorset viaLand's End. Westward Television askedDiary reporter Clive Gunnell to walk the new route and film his journey.[31]

Clive was a Londoner. He had begun his television career as aprops man atAssociated-Rediffusion, where he first met Kenneth MacLeod.[32] He had already walked the newTwo Moors Walk from Plymouth toLynmouth and filmed his journey forWestward Diary. This had proved popular and led to the new seriesWalking Westward.[31]

Clive Gunnell set off fromWeston-super-Mare rather than Minehead, and his journey took many series to complete. It took five series before he reached the south coast.[31] Westward used a selection of Clive's films as part of their contribution toAbout Britain,[33] and due to its network exposureWalking Westward remains one of Westward Television's best remembered programmes. Fifteen-minute sections of Clive Gunnell's walk along the Cornish coast were broadcast by the US Public Broadcasting Service as curtain raisers to the BBC's original version ofPoldark in PBS'sMasterpiece Theatre series.

Clive Gunnell also made documentaries about inland areas that were also contributed toAbout Britain. In 1977 his documentaryToTavistock Goosie Fair[34] won "Most Outstanding Regional Production of 1977".[35] In 1980 he began work on a series of six films onDartmoor calledDartmoor.[36] Some of these films were featured in theAbout Britain strand in 1981.[37]

Doing Things

[edit]

LikeAbout Britain,Doing Things was a series of half-hour filmed documentaries contributed by the various ITV regions and broadcast in the early afternoon. It was broadcast in 1973–74 and looked at hobbies.[38] Westward Television contributedBeachcombing, a film presented and directed by Clive Gunnell, to this series.[33]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^BBC1 - BBC News ITV franchise changes ATV, Southern & Westward, TV-AM 28th December 1980, 24 February 2017, retrieved20 July 2023
  2. ^Obituary: Peter Cadbury,Daily Telegraph, 18 April 2006
  3. ^"Westward in merger discussions",The Guardian, Thursday, 16 January 1969, p.10
  4. ^"EMI: A brief history",BBC News, 24 January 2000. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  5. ^"Mr Cadbury back as chairman of Westward TV",The Guardian, Friday, 30 January 1970, p.22
  6. ^"ITV company will not pay its Tax bill",The Guardian, Monday, 19 January 1970, p.1
  7. ^"Westward oust Cadbury as head",The Guardian, Tuesday, 15 July 1980, p.1
  8. ^"Westward Television - TV Live".TV Live. Archived fromthe original on 9 August 2021. Retrieved30 October 2025.
  9. ^British Film Institute, BFI Database TX listing for20 Years of Westward
  10. ^The Robert Farnon Society, original start-up theme title and composer identified
  11. ^Kaleidoscope Christmas Event and Grand Charity Auction 2012 Saturday 1 December 2012
  12. ^Westward Television Ident from 1961 Retrieved 2 June 2013.
  13. ^Westward Television Ident from mid 1960s Retrieved 2 June 2013.
  14. ^Westward TelevisionTransdiffusion.org. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
  15. ^Westward Television Ident from 28.12.1980[dead link] Retrieved 2 June 2013.
  16. ^The Guardian, 1 April 2011 Keith Fordyce obituary. trieved 3 June 2013.
  17. ^Croston, Eric (editor)Television and Radio 1976 London: Independent Broadcasting Authority, p. 134
  18. ^Missing Episodes forum, post aboutSpin Along
  19. ^Tony Rees Pop Diaries, entry forSpin Along
  20. ^Nemsworld, entry forMove Over Dad
  21. ^Tony Rees Pop Diaries, entry forPop and Leslie
  22. ^Bill Covington's website about The Rustiks
  23. ^British Film Institute, BFI database listing ofMaggies Moor
  24. ^British Film Institute, BFI Database entry for John King
  25. ^British Film Institute, BFI Database entry for episode 7 ofMaggies Moor
  26. ^South West Chamber of Rural EnterpriseArchived 20 October 2009 at theWayback Machine
  27. ^Croston, Eric (editor)Television and Radio 1981 London: Independent Broadcasting Authority, p. 139
  28. ^Croston, Eric (editor)Independent Television 1970, London: Independent Television Authority, p. 215
  29. ^Croston, Eric (editor)Television and Radio 1975, London: Independent Broadcasting Authority, p. 205
  30. ^British Film Institute, BFI listing ofFarm and Country News
  31. ^abcCroston, Eric (Editor):Television and Radio 1978, London: Independent Broadcasting Authority, p.29
  32. ^Westward Shrine, Clive Gunnell obituary
  33. ^abCroston, Eric (Editor):Television and Radio 1975, London: Independent Broadcasting Authority, p.205
  34. ^British Film Institute, BFI Database listing forTo Tavistock Goosie Fair
  35. ^ITW Programme Listing for Westward Television
  36. ^Croston, Eric (Editor):Television and Radio 1981, London: Independent Broadcasting Authority, p.139
  37. ^British Film Institute, BFI Database listing forAbout Britain
  38. ^British Film Institute, BFI Database synopses ofDoing Things

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Croston, Eric (Ed.) (January 1976).TV and Radio 1976. London: Independent Broadcasting Authority.ISBN 0-900485-21-3.
  • Howett, Dicky (Autumn, 1994). "Television Simply Wonderful".405 Alive, issue 23 p. 25–28.
  • Sendall, BernardIndependent Television in Britain: Volume 1 – Origin and Foundation, 1946–62 London: The Macmillan Press Ltd 1982 (1984 reprint)

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