Turn On, Tune In And Drop……Everything !

TURN ON, TUNE IN AND DROP…………EVERYTHING !

The Wenvoe Mast is transmitting another Royal Event this June


On 17th April, more than 13 million people in the UK watched live television coverage of the funeral of Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh. The BBC’s coverage of the scaled-back military procession and St George’s chapel service at Windsor Castle alone attracted 11 million viewers. The Queen Mother’s 2002 funeral was watched by 10.4 million, while that of Diana, Princess of Wales, had a record 32 million in 1997. On happier days 26 million tuned in to watch the new Duke and Duchess of Cambridge tie the knot at Westminster Abbey, while Harry and Meghan’s Windsor wedding, pulled in around 18 million across all TV channels.

We have become accustomed to seeing royal events on our TV screens. It was Prince Philip himself of course, who paved the way for national TV coverage of royal events. As chair of the committee organising his wife’s 1953 coronation, the Duke of Edinburgh overruled the fierce view of the then prime minister, Winston Churchill, and the Archbishop of Canterbury, Geoffrey Fisher, that admitting cameras to film the ceremony would destroy the majesty of the occasion. But Prince Philip, already an early adopter of home videos, gambled that letting family pictures into homes would humanise and popularise the Royal Family.

Planning began immediately after King George VI died (on 6 February 1952), and over the following months the sale of television sets rose in anticipation of the big day. The BBC had acquired 100 redundant military transmitters at the end of the War, and BBC engineers went to work converting them for sound and picture transmissions for the north east of England and Northern Ireland – which would otherwise be without coverage.

We did not have that problem of course, because our local Wenvoe transmitter had already been built at a cost of £250,000 and opened in August 1952. Fully operational, the original Wenvoe mast, some 750 feet high, allowed households across South Wales and the West Country to see the Coronation as it happened. By late 1952 it was estimated that about one family in every 25 owned a TV and the mast ensured 8 million people would get the opportunity to tune in to the historic events.

Nearly 70 years later, the Wenvoe transmitter is still enabling us to watch live coverage of royal events. If Covid 19 rules allow, on 12th June many of us will tune in to TV coverage of the Queen’s Official Birthday Parade or Trooping the Colour. The ceremony is believed to have been first performed during the reign of King Charles II (1660–1685) and has been used to mark the official birthday of The Sovereign since 1748. The Queen has taken the salute at every parade since her accession to the throne in 1952 other than in 1955 when there was a national rail strike.

These spectacular royal events make for great television and the British seem to be able to pull them off with a panache and style the envy of other countries. Subject to restrictions, which could mean a scaled down and less public event, F Company Scots Guards will this year Troop their Colour in the presence of Her Majesty The Queen. It is hoped that up to 1,450 soldiers of the Household Division and The King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery, along with up to 400 musicians from the Massed Bands, will take part. Over 240 soldiers from the 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards will line The Mall. A fly past by the Royal Air Force will also take place.