This is a list of events from British radio in 1940.
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January
- 7 January – The BBC Forces Programme begins broadcasting in the United Kingdom; it becomes the most popular channel among civilians at home as well as its primary target audience.
February
- 25 February – The Proud Valley is the first known film to have its première on radio when the BBC broadcasts a 60-minute version.[1]
- 29 February – Welsh Rarebit first broadcast by the BBC from its Cardiff studio;[2] the resident 25-strong male voice choir, the Lyrian Singers, premieres the song "We'll Keep a Welcome" with music by the programme's producer Mai Jones.
March
- 20 March – Antisemitic MP Archibald Maule Ramsay uses a Parliamentary question to set out the times and frequency of nightly broadcasts by the 'New British Broadcasting Service', a Nazi propaganda radio station broadcasting from Germany.[3]
May
- May – The evacuated BBC Radio Variety Department relocates to Bangor in north Wales from where it will broadcast until August 1943.[4]
- 10 May (9.00 pm) – Neville Chamberlain makes the first public announcement of his resignation as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, and his replacement by Winston Churchill, on the BBC Home Service.
- 14 May – BBC reporter Charles Gardner working in Reims incorporates the live sounds of a German air raid in a broadcast report.[5]
July
- 13 July – BBC newsreaders first identify themselves by name on air, beginning with Frank Phillips on todays lunchtime bulletin.[12]
- 14 July – The BBC Home Service 9.00 pm news bulletin includes a vivid account of an air battle over the English Channel recorded live the previous day by reporter Charles Gardner.[13] The bulletin is preceded by a speech by Churchill, "The War of the Unknown Warriorsˮ,[14] and followed by J. B. Priestley's Postscript describing the seaside resort of Margate in wartime.[15]
- 19 July – Adolf Hitler makes a peace appeal ("appeal to reason") to Britain in an address to the Reichstag, broadcast simultaneously in English translation by Paul Schmidt.[16] BBC German-language broadcaster Sefton Delmer unofficially rejects it at once[17] and Lord Halifax, British foreign minister, flatly rejects peace terms in a broadcast reply on 22 July.
August
- August – This year's National Eisteddfod of Wales becomes a purely radio event, with broadcasts on the BBC Home Service.[18]
- 10 August – This and the following year's abbreviated seasons of The Proms are without sponsorship by the BBC.[19]
October
- 15 October – Seven staff are killed when an attempt to eject a delayed-action German bomb from Broadcasting House in London fails. Listeners to the nine o'clock evening news bulletin hear a dull thud as it explodes but newsreader Bruce Belfrage continues unperturbed though covered in debris.[12]
December
- 8 December – Explosion of a land mine outside Broadcasting House in central London causes the BBC's European service to be evacuated to its Maida Vale Studios.[12]
- 13 January – Garrison Theatre, BBC Home Service, later Forces Programme (1940–1941)[20]
- 29 February – Welsh Rarebit, BBC Forces Programme (1940–1944, 1948–1952)
- 23 June – Music While You Work, BBC Home Service and BBC Forces Programme (1940–1967)
- 14 July – Sunday Half Hour, BBC Home Service (1940–2018)
- Summer – The Kitchen Front, BBC Home Service
British Broadcasting Corporation (1944). BBC Handbook. p. 50.
Cerutti, Joseph (3 June 1940). "Four-Fifths of British Saved, Eden Asserts". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 1.
Baade, Christina L. (2012). "5: 'Radio Rhythm Club': race, authenticity, and the British swing boom". Victory through Harmony: the BBC and popular music in World War II. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-537201-4.
Gottlieb, Julie V. (28 March 2003). Feminine Fascism. London: Tauris. ISBN 1-86064-918-1.
"1940s". About BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
Cullingford, Alison (14 July 2010). "Postscript 14 July 1940". Special Collections – University of Bradford. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
Schmidt, Paul (1951). Hitler's Interpreter. London: Heinemann.
Delmer, Sefton. Black Boomerang.