The volunteer broadcasters of York Hospital Radio will be celebrating the radio station’s 60th anniversary on Friday, 26 January.
A special day of live shows, together with two civic visits, will mark 60 years to the day since the very first show was broadcast to listeners in York’s hospitals in 1964.
To celebrate the 60th anniversary, live shows will be broadcast on 26th January from 7am to 10pm, and will include interviews with the High Sheriff of North Yorkshire, Clare Granger, and the York civic party, including the Lord Mayor of York, Councillor Chris Cullwick, and the Sheriff of York, Sue Hunter. The Archbishop of York, The Most Revd. Stephen Cottrell, has also recorded a special message for the occasion.
Ian Clennan, chair of York Hospital Radio, said: “We are very much looking forward to celebrating 60 years of broadcasting programmes aimed mainly at our listeners in hospital. We are still a unique service for the hospital, and we know we can be a valued part of patients’ recovery, whilst also providing information and entertainment for patients during their stay.
“We are also heard online via our website and via our free app, and I am truly proud of the hours put in by so many people both on air and behind the scenes to make it all happen. We have produced many professional broadcasters over the years, but most of our presenters do it simply for the love of it, and the knowledge that they are playing a part in the recovery of many of our listeners.
“We have a full year of activities and events lined up to mark this milestone anniversary, and I hope that more people will want to join the station in the course of 2024, whether as broadcasters, technicians, or fundraisers. As a registered charity, we need financial help to survive, so we are hoping that we will be able to attract new sponsors for our shows and regular features this year, to boost our own fundraising activities.”
The very first show, on 26 January, 1964, was pre-recorded on tape and consisted of listeners’ requests. It was broadcast to the former Fulford Maternity and Naburn hospitals, and the first record ever played was ‘Thank heaven for little girls’ by Maurice Chevalier.
Live shows started in 1967, with the first sports programmes in 1968. Over the years, the station has been based at The Grange on Huntington Road (York’s former workhouse, and now student accommodation); then purpose-built studios in the grounds of the former City Hospital on Huntington Road; and today in studios off Bridge Lane.
The station has two studios and an extensive record library, but now, embracing the latest technology, many shows are recorded at home and presented remotely, in common with many modern radio stations.
At one stage, the station broadcast to ten hospitals in the York area, but today it focusses purely on the York Hospital in Wigginton Road.
Previous Presidents of the organisation include Frank Marlborough, a star of York Theatre Royal many years ago; BBC broadcaster Harry Gration; former ‘York Evening Press’ writer Stacey Brewer; and York panto favourite Martin Barrass. Today, the Patron of the station is Alan Dedicoat, the ‘Voice of the Balls’ and of ‘Strictly Come Dancing’.
Broadcasting around the clock started in 2001 and online broadcasting began in 2017.
This story first appeared on radiotoday.co.uk