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Timeline of Australian radio

1800s

1890–1899

  • Although Australia's first officially recognised experimental broadcast was made in 1905 (see below), there are reliable reports in September 1897[1] (just two years after Guglielmo Marconi's original radio experiments) of demonstrations of wireless communication in Australia conducted by Professor William Henry Bragg of Adelaide University[2][3] following experiments by Bragg, and at some stage in conjunction with G.W. Selby of Melbourne.[4]

1900s

1900–1909

1910–1919

  • 1910: The Maritime Wireless Co. Ltd formed by Edward Hope Kirkby, his workers and Father Archibald Shaw[9]
  • 1910: March 11th, The Wireless Institute of Australia is formed during a meeting held at the Australia Hotel in Martin Place, Sydney.[10]
  • 1911: The Maritime Wireless Co. Ltd sold to The Maritime Wireless Company (Shaw System) Limited[11]
  • 1911: Australian Government employs their own wireless expert, Graeme Balsillie, to build the coastal wireless service after interests representing Telefunken didn't perform to the governments satisfaction on the first 2 at Sydney and Perth.[12]
  • 1911: Balsillie contracts the Maritime Wireless Company (Shaw System) Limited to manufacture all the apparatus for the remaining 17 wireless including the generators and motors[13]
  • 1911: The first long range (520 km) coastal radio station was established in Sydney.[14]
  • 1912: The first Coastal wireless station opened in Melbourne
  • 1912:
    • The Applecross Wireless Station long range station was established in Western Australia.
    • Shorter range stations were established in Melbourne, Hobart, Brisbane and Adelaide.[15]
  • 1913: Marconi and its main competitor Telefunken amalgamated to form Amalgamated Wireless Australasia Limited (AWA).[7]
  • 1919: The first radio "broadcast" in Australia was organised by Ernest Thomas Fisk of AWA on 19 August 1919. He arranged for the National Anthem to be broadcast from one building to another at the end of a lecture he'd given on the new medium to the Royal Society of New South Wales.[7]

1920–1929

  • 1921:
    • Amateur radio broadcasters commenced transition. The first radio licence in Australia was granted to Charles Maclurcan for station 2CM, which broadcast from the Wentworth Hotel in Sydney, an establishment owned by the Maclurcan family. Broadcasts consisted of classical music concerts on air on Sunday nights.
  • 1922:
    • December, "The Regulations: radio laws for the amateur" was issued by the Australian Government. This resulted in Australia's first broadcast licence (2CM in Sydney) being issued to Charles MacLurcan in December 1922.[16]
  • 1923:
    • Following intensive lobbying for the introduction of radio broadcasting, the Government, in May 1923, calls a conference of the main players in the radio manufacturing industry. This led to the sealed set regulations where stations could be licensed to broadcast and then sell sets to "listeners-in". The receiving device would be set to receive only that station.[7]
    • 2SB (from 1924, 2BL) in Sydney is the second official station to be licensed. It was first public radio station in Australia opened in Sydney on 23 November 1923. Sydney's first official national radio station, 2FC with Licence No.1 commenced service on 9 January 1924.[16]
  • 1924:
    • 3AR and 3LO went to air on 26 January and 13 October 1924 in Melbourne.[7]
    • The Government introduces a two-tiered licence system in July 1924. In the first half of 1924, only 1400 people took out sealed set licences. It was quite easy for listeners to avoid the licence fee by building their own sets or modifying one they had bought to receive more than one station. The radio industry successfully lobbied the Government to introduce a two-tiered system, the "A" licenses to be financed by listeners' licence fees imposed and collected by the Government, and "B" class licenses to be offered to anyone else who wanted to have a go. The B stations would have to generate their own revenue through advertising.[17] A class stations could also advertise but few did. This system was an amalgam of the British system where the non-commercial BBC had a government-imposed monopoly and the USA where the free market was the driving force. The "A" class stations were the original sealed set stations plus one in each other capital city - 2BL, 2FC, 3AR, 3LO, 7ZL, 5CL, 6WF. By years end, 40,000 licences have been issued.[7] At this time, there was also talk of the introduction "C" class stations which would exclusively advertise the products of the station owners(s). This concept was abandoned in 1931, but the Postmaster-General's Department was already in talks with the Akron Broadcasting Co. Pty. Ltd in Melbourne, and, so, in lieu of a "C" class license Akron was given a 'B" Class license with some severe restricting conditions (see 3AK).
    • The first "B" class station on air was 2BE in November 1924.[7]
    • South Australia’s first radio station 5CL (A class) went to air on 20 November.[7]
    • Western Australia's first radio station 6WF went to air on 4 June.[18]
  • 1925:
    • The oldest surviving "B" class (commercial) station is 2UE, which went on air on Australia Day 1925 as 2EU.[7] The reputed reason for the change of callsign is that EU sounded like "Hey, You".[19]
    • 3UZ Melbourne begins broadcasting
    • South Australia’s first commercial radio station 5DN goes to air 24 February.[7]
    • 3PB owned by Noel Pemberton Billing began broadcasting in Melbourne in September, mainly to promote Pemberton Billing's Austral Duplex recordings. The station closed in January 1926 after only four months on air. This station has no links whatsoever with the currently-existing 3PB which commenced in 1994 - 3PB now being the official call sign for the Melbourne outlet for ABC NewsRadio.
    • Number of licences issued reaches 80,000.[7]
  • 1926: The British Government nationalises radio by buying out the British Broadcasting Company and forming the British Broadcasting Corporation. The Australian Government held a Royal Commission into Wireless but didn't immediately follow the British lead. It did encourage the "A" class stations to amalgamate in order to maximise efficiencies and maintain standards.[7]
  • 1927:
    • AWA conducts a series of transmissions to Britain. These regular broadcasts were heralded by a kookaburra's laugh - a practice that's still used by Radio Australia today, nicknamed "Jacko".[7]
    • 3DB Melbourne commences broadcasting
  • 1929:
    • 2BE closes due to financial collapse.[7]
    • The Government nationalises the transmission facilities and contracts the provision of programming to the Australian Broadcasting Company (now Australian Broadcasting Corporation), a consortium of entertainment interests.[7]

1930–1939

1940–1949

  • 1945:
    • Hector Crawford Productions, later called Crawford Productions, was founded by Hector Crawford and his sister Dorothy Crawford. They would also run the Crawford School of Broadcasting, which taught radio actors such as Noel Ferrier skills for a radio broadcasting career. Crawford Productions as one of the few companies that successfully made a transition from radio to television.[23]
  • 1948:
    • Experimental FM broadcasts commence[7]
    • The regulatory body, the Australian Broadcasting Control Board, is created[7]

1950–1959

  • 1957: A Government inquiry into FM radio heralds little interest[7]
  • 1958: Top 40 format is adopted by Australian commercial radio

1960–1969

  • 1961: The Government authorises the use of the international VHF FM band for television.[7]
  • 1967: Talkback radio began in early 1967 on 6PR in Perth it was later introduced on 2SM in Sydney and 3AW in Melbourne.[24]
  • 1968: 3AK Melbourne expands to 24-hour transmission

1970–1979

  • 1970:
    • TUNE! FM launches as Australia's first university radio station.
  • 1972:
    • The Labor government's Media Minister Doug McClelland abolishes radio and TV licence fees, making the ABC funded directly from the federal budget[24]
    • 5UV in Adelaide becomes the first public radio station on air in Australia[24]
  • 1974:
    • The McLean Inquiry into FM rejects the Broadcasting Control Board's views on FM radio and recommends that the VHF FM band be opened to FM radio stations, that a community radio sector be established, and that the ABC have an FM network[24]
    • 2MBS Sydney commences broadcasting as the first full-time FM station in Australia, playing classical music 24 hours a day.
  • 1975:
    • 2JJ (Double Jay) commences transmission on the AM band in Sydney. Double Jay is the first non-commercial 24-hour rock station in Australia[24]
    • 3MBS-FM Melbourne commences broadcasting classical music 24 hours a day[24]
    • Multi-cultural radio is launched with the formation of 2EA Sydney and 3EA Melbourne
    • Public access station 3ZZ is established in Melbourne[24]
    • Twelve Australian community radio stations are licensed as an interim move by the federal media minister, Dr Moss Cass. Because the licences may have been technically illegal under the Act, they are dubbed Cass's "Dirty Dozen"[24]
    • Brisbane's 4ZZZ is established, the first community FM broadcaster in Australia
  • 1976:
  • 1977:
    • 6UVS begins broadcasting from the campus of UWA, Perth. (6UVS later becomes 6RTR)
  • 1978:
    • All AM radio station frequencies are changed from 10 kHz to 9 kHz spacing under the Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975 on 23 November.
    • 2WS Sydney begins broadcasting
  • 1979
    • PBS FM starts regular broadcasts on 21 December from the Prince of Wales Hotel studio.[26]

1980–1989

  • 1980:
  • 1982:
  • 1984:
  • 1986:
    • 2UE Sydney and 3AK Melbourne launch the experimental CBC Radio Network, a networked talk-back format
  • 1988:
    • Commercial FM radio is launched in Canberra
  • 1989:
    • Commercial FM radio launches on the Gold Coast
    • Sydney's Triple J begins expansion to other capital cities

1990–1999

  • 1990:
    • 3KZ Melbourne converts from AM to FM. Other stations to convert include 3TT Melbourne, 4BK Brisbane, 6PM and 6KY Perth, 5KA and 5DN Adelaide.
    • May 19, 1990, Australia's first S39 supplementary FM Station goes to air in regional Australia as 2VM Moree Launch 2NOW (NOW FM) on 98.3 From Mt Dowe in North West NSW.
    • Commercial FM commences in Hobart
    • 3AK becomes Australia's first Italian-language commercial radio station
  • 1991:
    • Melbourne radio station 3XY signs off after 56 years of broadcasting
  • 1992:
    • 8DN Darwin has its licence revoked for breaching the ownership conditions of the Broadcasting Act
  • 1994:
  • 1998:
    • NetFM broadcasts Australia's first Internet radio transmission.
    • NetFM commence full commercial broadcasting in Sydney on 13 November.

2000s

2000–2009

  • 2000: Triple J New England was first broadcast
  • 2001: DMG Launches the Nova brand with Sydney's Nova 969 first hitting the airwaves.
  • 2002: The Australian Broadcasting Corporation commences a digital radio service called DiG in November.
  • 2004: 3AK Melbourne becomes an all-sports format as SEN
  • 2005:
    • Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) is formed on 1 July 2005 by the merger of the Australian Communications Authority (ACA) and the Australian Broadcasting Authority (ABA)
  • 2006: Melbourne radio stations 3AW and Magic swap frequencies on the AM band
  • 2009: Digital radio officially launches in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth.

2010–present

  • 2011
    • launches its free online radio portal dedicated to Australian radio.
  • 2014
  • 2015
    • Macquarie Radio Network and Fairfax Radio Network merger is approved, with 2CH Sydney and 4LM Mount Isa to be sold.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ "Public Teachers' Union". South Australian Register. Vol. LXII, no. 15, 869. South Australia. 22 September 1897. p. 6. Retrieved 31 October 2017 – via National Library of Australia. There are earlier reports but this is the clearest and most interesting.
  2. ^ http://www.wia.org.au/members/history/research/documents/WIA%20MAIN%20T-%20LINE-Nov%202013%20EXTENDED.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ Bernard Harte, When Radio Was The Cat's Whiskers, 2002, privately published Dural, NSW
  4. ^ Mimi Colligan, Golden Days of Radio, Australia Post, 1991
  5. ^ Australian Senate, 2003. Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act: Chapter I. The Parliament: Part V - Powers of the Parliament. 2011-10-14 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2011-03-05.
  6. ^ "Wireless Telegraphy Act 1905". ComLaw. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Langdon, Jeff (1995)
  8. ^ R R Walker, The Magic Spark, 1973, Hawthorn Press Melbourne.
  9. ^ Correspondence from Father Guis Archives of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart - Missionarii Sacratissimi Cordis Iesu (MSC) Archives Sacred Heart Monastery, 1 Roma Avenue, Kensington 2033 - 1911
  10. ^ "Information about the WIA". Retrieved 28 August 2017.
  11. ^ Articles of Association of said company Archives of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart - Missionarii Sacratissimi Cordis Iesu (MSC) Archives Sacred Heart Monastery, 1 Roma Avenue, Kensington 2033 - 1911
  12. ^ National Archives of Australia, Melbourne Office: John Graeme Balsillie - Records (1910 - 1920) Information and records in Postmaster-General, correspondence files c1910-20 [MP 341/1].MP 341/1
  13. ^ copy of the contract Archives of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart - Missionarii Sacratissimi Cordis Iesu (MSC) Archives Sacred Heart Monastery, 1 Roma Avenue, Kensington 2033 - 1911
  14. ^ Roger Meyer. "The Role of Coastal Radio Stations in the Early Days of Communications With Aircraft". Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  15. ^ "Coastal Radio Service in Australia during WWII". Peter Dunn's "Australia @ War". Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  16. ^ a b Australian Radio History, Bruce Carty, Sydney, 2011
  17. ^ "Making Radio, 4th Edition - Steve Ahern - 9781032020709 - Routledge - UK". www.routledge.com. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
  18. ^ "BROADCASTING". Sunday Times (Perth). Western Australia. 8 June 1924. p. 7. Retrieved 23 January 2020 – via Trove.
  19. ^ "First commercial startion goes to air". radioinfo. 26 January 2015.
  20. ^ "Radio Station 2WG". Wagga Wagga City Council. Retrieved 24 March 2008.
  21. ^ a b c d History of ABC Radio
  22. ^ "New and Old Wavelengths". Singleton Argus. New South Wales, Australia. 2 September 1935. p. 2. Retrieved 30 October 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  23. ^ Barry York (1 January 1999). Speaking of Us: Voices from Twentieth-century Australia. National Library Australia. pp. 71–. ISBN 978-0-642-10715-2.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h Australasian radio: A Chronology of the first 60 years (2004)
  25. ^ "2MCE", Wikipedia, 4 January 2021, retrieved 10 April 2021
  26. ^ "Our History". 27 March 2018.

Sources

  • History of ABC Radio
  • Australasian radio: A Chronology of the first 60 years (2004)
  • Langdon, Jeff (1995) The History of Radio in Australia: Excerpts from a Lecture given by Dr Jeff Langdon in 1995
  • Johnson, Lesley. "Radio and everyday life The early years of broadcasting in Australia, 1922-1945." Media, Culture & Society 3.2 (1981): 167-178.
  • Browne, Donald R. "Aboriginal Radio in Australia: From Dreamtime to Prime Time?." Journal of Communication 40.1 (1990): 111-121.

External links

timeline, australian, radio, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Timeline of Australian radio news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Contents 1 1800s 1 1 1890 1899 2 1900s 2 1 1900 1909 2 2 1910 1919 2 3 1920 1929 2 4 1930 1939 2 5 1940 1949 2 6 1950 1959 2 7 1960 1969 2 8 1970 1979 2 9 1980 1989 2 10 1990 1999 3 2000s 3 1 2000 2009 3 2 2010 present 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Sources 6 External links1800s Edit1890 1899 Edit Although Australia s first officially recognised experimental broadcast was made in 1905 see below there are reliable reports in September 1897 1 just two years after Guglielmo Marconi s original radio experiments of demonstrations of wireless communication in Australia conducted by Professor William Henry Bragg of Adelaide University 2 3 following experiments by Bragg and at some stage in conjunction with G W Selby of Melbourne 4 1900s Edit1900 1909 Edit 1901 The six states federate into the Commonwealth of Australia Section 51 v of the Australian Constitution gives the federal government power over postal telegraphic telephonic and other like services 5 1905 Wireless Telegraphy Act 1905 6 placed broadcasting in the control of the Australian Government This has remained in place ever since 7 Italian Guglielmo Marconi s company builds Australia s first two way wireless telegraphy station at Queenscliff Victoria 7 1906 first official transmission between Queenscliff and Devonport Tasmania 8 1910 1919 Edit 1910 The Maritime Wireless Co Ltd formed by Edward Hope Kirkby his workers and Father Archibald Shaw 9 1910 March 11th The Wireless Institute of Australia is formed during a meeting held at the Australia Hotel in Martin Place Sydney 10 1911 The Maritime Wireless Co Ltd sold to The Maritime Wireless Company Shaw System Limited 11 1911 Australian Government employs their own wireless expert Graeme Balsillie to build the coastal wireless service after interests representing Telefunken didn t perform to the governments satisfaction on the first 2 at Sydney and Perth 12 1911 Balsillie contracts the Maritime Wireless Company Shaw System Limited to manufacture all the apparatus for the remaining 17 wireless including the generators and motors 13 1911 The first long range 520 km coastal radio station was established in Sydney 14 1912 The first Coastal wireless station opened in Melbourne 1912 The Applecross Wireless Station long range station was established in Western Australia Shorter range stations were established in Melbourne Hobart Brisbane and Adelaide 15 1913 Marconi and its main competitor Telefunken amalgamated to form Amalgamated Wireless Australasia Limited AWA 7 1919 The first radio broadcast in Australia was organised by Ernest Thomas Fisk of AWA on 19 August 1919 He arranged for the National Anthem to be broadcast from one building to another at the end of a lecture he d given on the new medium to the Royal Society of New South Wales 7 1920 1929 Edit 1921 Amateur radio broadcasters commenced transition The first radio licence in Australia was granted to Charles Maclurcan for station 2CM which broadcast from the Wentworth Hotel in Sydney an establishment owned by the Maclurcan family Broadcasts consisted of classical music concerts on air on Sunday nights 1922 December The Regulations radio laws for the amateur was issued by the Australian Government This resulted in Australia s first broadcast licence 2CM in Sydney being issued to Charles MacLurcan in December 1922 16 1923 Following intensive lobbying for the introduction of radio broadcasting the Government in May 1923 calls a conference of the main players in the radio manufacturing industry This led to the sealed set regulations where stations could be licensed to broadcast and then sell sets to listeners in The receiving device would be set to receive only that station 7 2SB from 1924 2BL in Sydney is the second official station to be licensed It was first public radio station in Australia opened in Sydney on 23 November 1923 Sydney s first official national radio station 2FC with Licence No 1 commenced service on 9 January 1924 16 1924 3AR and 3LO went to air on 26 January and 13 October 1924 in Melbourne 7 The Government introduces a two tiered licence system in July 1924 In the first half of 1924 only 1400 people took out sealed set licences It was quite easy for listeners to avoid the licence fee by building their own sets or modifying one they had bought to receive more than one station The radio industry successfully lobbied the Government to introduce a two tiered system the A licenses to be financed by listeners licence fees imposed and collected by the Government and B class licenses to be offered to anyone else who wanted to have a go The B stations would have to generate their own revenue through advertising 17 A class stations could also advertise but few did This system was an amalgam of the British system where the non commercial BBC had a government imposed monopoly and the USA where the free market was the driving force The A class stations were the original sealed set stations plus one in each other capital city 2BL 2FC 3AR 3LO 7ZL 5CL 6WF By years end 40 000 licences have been issued 7 At this time there was also talk of the introduction C class stations which would exclusively advertise the products of the station owners s This concept was abandoned in 1931 but the Postmaster General s Department was already in talks with the Akron Broadcasting Co Pty Ltd in Melbourne and so in lieu of a C class license Akron was given a B Class license with some severe restricting conditions see 3AK The first B class station on air was 2BE in November 1924 7 South Australia s first radio station 5CL A class went to air on 20 November 7 Western Australia s first radio station 6WF went to air on 4 June 18 1925 The oldest surviving B class commercial station is 2UE which went on air on Australia Day 1925 as 2EU 7 The reputed reason for the change of callsign is that EU sounded like Hey You 19 3UZ Melbourne begins broadcasting South Australia s first commercial radio station 5DN goes to air 24 February 7 3PB owned by Noel Pemberton Billing began broadcasting in Melbourne in September mainly to promote Pemberton Billing s Austral Duplex recordings The station closed in January 1926 after only four months on air This station has no links whatsoever with the currently existing 3PB which commenced in 1994 3PB now being the official call sign for the Melbourne outlet for ABC NewsRadio Number of licences issued reaches 80 000 7 1926 The British Government nationalises radio by buying out the British Broadcasting Company and forming the British Broadcasting Corporation The Australian Government held a Royal Commission into Wireless but didn t immediately follow the British lead It did encourage the A class stations to amalgamate in order to maximise efficiencies and maintain standards 7 1927 AWA conducts a series of transmissions to Britain These regular broadcasts were heralded by a kookaburra s laugh a practice that s still used by Radio Australia today nicknamed Jacko 7 3DB Melbourne commences broadcasting 1929 2BE closes due to financial collapse 7 The Government nationalises the transmission facilities and contracts the provision of programming to the Australian Broadcasting Company now Australian Broadcasting Corporation a consortium of entertainment interests 7 1930 1939 Edit 1932 The Australian Broadcasting Company is nationalised by the Australian Broadcasting Commission Act 1932 This finalised the two tier system with the national broadcaster the newly created Australian Broadcasting Commission having 12 stations and the commercial sector with 43 stations The ABC was funded by listeners licence fees until the 1970s when Federal Government appropriation became the primary source of funding Initial plans to permit advertising on the ABC were dropped from the final bill presented to the parliament 7 On 29 June 1932 2WG in Wagga Wagga New South Wales goes on the air on a purpose built 2000 watt transmitter 20 At 8 00pm on 1 July 1932 the Prime Minister Joseph Lyons inaugurates the ABC It then controlled 12 stations 2FC and 2BL in Sydney 3AR and 3LO in Melbourne 4QG in Brisbane 5CL in Adelaide 6WF in Perth 7ZL in Hobart and the relay stations 2NC in Newcastle New South Wales 2CO at Corowa New South Wales 4RK in Rockhampton Queensland and 5CK at Crystal Brook South Australia 21 1935 The Sydney studios of the ABC installs a disc recorder enabling the recording of programs to occur for the first time 21 Many Australian radio stations change frequencies on 1 Sep 1935 to accord Australian 10 kHz frequency raster and to resolve interference problems 22 1936 In March the Bass Strait cable links Tasmania to mainland Australia and permits the ABC to relay national broadcasts to Hobart for the first time 21 1939 Radio Australia was formally incorporated as part of the ABC 21 1940 1949 Edit 1945 Hector Crawford Productions later called Crawford Productions was founded by Hector Crawford and his sister Dorothy Crawford They would also run the Crawford School of Broadcasting which taught radio actors such as Noel Ferrier skills for a radio broadcasting career Crawford Productions as one of the few companies that successfully made a transition from radio to television 23 1948 Experimental FM broadcasts commence 7 The regulatory body the Australian Broadcasting Control Board is created 7 1950 1959 Edit 1957 A Government inquiry into FM radio heralds little interest 7 1958 Top 40 format is adopted by Australian commercial radio1960 1969 Edit 1961 The Government authorises the use of the international VHF FM band for television 7 1967 Talkback radio began in early 1967 on 6PR in Perth it was later introduced on 2SM in Sydney and 3AW in Melbourne 24 1968 3AK Melbourne expands to 24 hour transmission1970 1979 Edit 1970 TUNE FM launches as Australia s first university radio station 1972 The Labor government s Media Minister Doug McClelland abolishes radio and TV licence fees making the ABC funded directly from the federal budget 24 5UV in Adelaide becomes the first public radio station on air in Australia 24 1974 The McLean Inquiry into FM rejects the Broadcasting Control Board s views on FM radio and recommends that the VHF FM band be opened to FM radio stations that a community radio sector be established and that the ABC have an FM network 24 2MBS Sydney commences broadcasting as the first full time FM station in Australia playing classical music 24 hours a day 1975 2JJ Double Jay commences transmission on the AM band in Sydney Double Jay is the first non commercial 24 hour rock station in Australia 24 3MBS FM Melbourne commences broadcasting classical music 24 hours a day 24 Multi cultural radio is launched with the formation of 2EA Sydney and 3EA Melbourne Public access station 3ZZ is established in Melbourne 24 Twelve Australian community radio stations are licensed as an interim move by the federal media minister Dr Moss Cass Because the licences may have been technically illegal under the Act they are dubbed Cass s Dirty Dozen 24 Brisbane s 4ZZZ is established the first community FM broadcaster in Australia 1976 ABC FM begins broadcasting 3MP begins broadcasting the first new commercial radio licence in Melbourne since 1935 Community radio is launched in Canberra 2MCE begins broadcasting from the campus of Mitchell College of Advanced Education now Charles Surt University Bathurst NSW The first non metropolitan community radio station in Australia 25 1977 6UVS begins broadcasting from the campus of UWA Perth 6UVS later becomes 6RTR 1978 All AM radio station frequencies are changed from 10 kHz to 9 kHz spacing under the Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975 on 23 November 2WS Sydney begins broadcasting 1979 PBS FM starts regular broadcasts on 21 December from the Prince of Wales Hotel studio 26 1980 1989 Edit 1980 The first commercial FM radio stations are launched Eon FM and Fox FM in Melbourne Triple M and 2Day FM in Sydney FM104 in Brisbane SAFM in Adelaide 96FM in Perth 1982 7RPH in Hobart becomes the first Radio for the Print Handicapped broadcast service Other stations soon follow in Melbourne Sydney Brisbane Canberra Adelaide and Perth 1984 Stereo AM radio transmission is launched 1986 2UE Sydney and 3AK Melbourne launch the experimental CBC Radio Network a networked talk back format 1988 Commercial FM radio is launched in Canberra 1989 Commercial FM radio launches on the Gold Coast Sydney s Triple J begins expansion to other capital cities1990 1999 Edit 1990 3KZ Melbourne converts from AM to FM Other stations to convert include 3TT Melbourne 4BK Brisbane 6PM and 6KY Perth 5KA and 5DN Adelaide May 19 1990 Australia s first S39 supplementary FM Station goes to air in regional Australia as 2VM Moree Launch 2NOW NOW FM on 98 3 From Mt Dowe in North West NSW Commercial FM commences in Hobart 3AK becomes Australia s first Italian language commercial radio station 1991 Melbourne radio station 3XY signs off after 56 years of broadcasting 1992 8DN Darwin has its licence revoked for breaching the ownership conditions of the Broadcasting Act 1994 2UW and 2WS Sydney convert to FM 2WZD begins broadcasting in Wagga Wagga as FM93 ABC Newsradio is launched 1998 NetFM broadcasts Australia s first Internet radio transmission NetFM commence full commercial broadcasting in Sydney on 13 November 2000s Edit2000 2009 Edit 2000 Triple J New England was first broadcast 2001 DMG Launches the Nova brand with Sydney s Nova 969 first hitting the airwaves 2002 The Australian Broadcasting Corporation commences a digital radio service called DiG in November 2004 3AK Melbourne becomes an all sports format as SEN 2005 Australian Communications and Media Authority ACMA is formed on 1 July 2005 by the merger of the Australian Communications Authority ACA and the Australian Broadcasting Authority ABA 2006 Melbourne radio stations 3AW and Magic swap frequencies on the AM band 2009 Digital radio officially launches in Sydney Melbourne Brisbane Adelaide and Perth 2010 present Edit 2011 Aussie fm launches its free online radio portal dedicated to Australian radio 2014 Macquarie Radio Network and Fairfax Radio Network merger is announced in December Fairfax Radio Network sells 96FM Perth to Australian Radio Network ahead of Macquarie merger 2015 Macquarie Radio Network and Fairfax Radio Network merger is approved with 2CH Sydney and 4LM Mount Isa to be sold See also EditTimeline of radio History of broadcasting Media of AustraliaReferences EditCitations Edit Public Teachers Union South Australian Register Vol LXII no 15 869 South Australia 22 September 1897 p 6 Retrieved 31 October 2017 via National Library of Australia There are earlier reports but this is the clearest and most interesting http www wia org au members history research documents WIA 20MAIN 20T 20LINE Nov 202013 20EXTENDED pdf bare URL PDF Bernard Harte When Radio Was The Cat s Whiskers 2002 privately published Dural NSW Mimi Colligan Golden Days of Radio Australia Post 1991 Australian Senate 2003 Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act Chapter I The Parliament Part V Powers of the Parliament Archived 2011 10 14 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2011 03 05 Wireless Telegraphy Act 1905 ComLaw Retrieved 1 October 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Langdon Jeff 1995 R R Walker The Magic Spark 1973 Hawthorn Press Melbourne Correspondence from Father Guis Archives of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart Missionarii Sacratissimi Cordis Iesu MSC Archives Sacred Heart Monastery 1 Roma Avenue Kensington 2033 1911 Information about the WIA Retrieved 28 August 2017 Articles of Association of said company Archives of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart Missionarii Sacratissimi Cordis Iesu MSC Archives Sacred Heart Monastery 1 Roma Avenue Kensington 2033 1911 National Archives of Australia Melbourne Office John Graeme Balsillie Records 1910 1920 Information and records in Postmaster General correspondence files c1910 20 MP 341 1 MP 341 1 copy of the contract Archives of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart Missionarii Sacratissimi Cordis Iesu MSC Archives Sacred Heart Monastery 1 Roma Avenue Kensington 2033 1911 Roger Meyer The Role of Coastal Radio Stations in the Early Days of Communications With Aircraft Retrieved 30 September 2012 Coastal Radio Service in Australia during WWII Peter Dunn s Australia War Retrieved 30 September 2012 a b Australian Radio History Bruce Carty Sydney 2011 Making Radio 4th Edition Steve Ahern 9781032020709 Routledge UK www routledge com Retrieved 24 August 2022 BROADCASTING Sunday Times Perth Western Australia 8 June 1924 p 7 Retrieved 23 January 2020 via Trove First commercial startion goes to air radioinfo 26 January 2015 Radio Station 2WG Wagga Wagga City Council Retrieved 24 March 2008 a b c d History of ABC Radio New and Old Wavelengths Singleton Argus New South Wales Australia 2 September 1935 p 2 Retrieved 30 October 2017 via National Library of Australia Barry York 1 January 1999 Speaking of Us Voices from Twentieth century Australia National Library Australia pp 71 ISBN 978 0 642 10715 2 a b c d e f g h Australasian radio A Chronology of the first 60 years 2004 2MCE Wikipedia 4 January 2021 retrieved 10 April 2021 Our History 27 March 2018 Sources Edit History of ABC Radio Australasian radio A Chronology of the first 60 years 2004 Langdon Jeff 1995 The History of Radio in Australia Excerpts from a Lecture given by Dr Jeff Langdon in 1995 Johnson Lesley Radio and everyday life The early years of broadcasting in Australia 1922 1945 Media Culture amp Society 3 2 1981 167 178 Browne Donald R Aboriginal Radio in Australia From Dreamtime to Prime Time Journal of Communication 40 1 1990 111 121 External links EditThe Home of the Old Time Radio Shows Group Australia Visit the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia s Women in Early Radio collection for more information about the history of women in radio in Australia including Queenie Ashton Ethel Lang Amber Mae Cecil and Grace Gibson Aussie fm Listen to Australian radio online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Timeline of Australian radio amp oldid 1150654475, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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