Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Peter Eckersley
Captain Peter Prothero Eckersley (1892-1963) became, in 1920, a pioneer in British broadcasting by becoming the very first on air talent and engineer of 2MT, the very first licensed station in Britain which was located in the village of Writtle, just outside of Chelmsford in Essex, England where Guglielmo Marconi had built his wireless telegraphy factories. Peter Eckersley also became the first Chief Engineer of the British Broadcasting Company, Limited from 1922 to 1927 and Chief Engineer of the British Broadcasting Corporation until 1929 when he was sacked by John Reith when Peter Eckersley divorced his wife.
Brief biography
1920 to 1945
Eckersley left a British broadcasting legacy which until recently British broadcasting has ignored. He was an entrepreneurial pioneer in British broadcasting during an age when Britain was centralizing its power of control within state run enterprises. Between WWI and WWII the General Electric Company of the USA became a giant cartel which had growing commercial interests in Britain and several moves were undertaken by the British Establishment to prevent the Americanization of Britain. These moves were not entirely successful.
There were links between the UK and USA that had been pioneered by Marconi's Wireless Telegraph Company Limited based in Chelmsford, Essex, who employeed Peter Eckersley as an engineer. During World War I General Electric, with help from the US Navy, had consumed the ship-to-shore radio business that Marconi had established in America. In 1919 that business was transfered to a new GE subsidiary named Radio Corporation of America. It was against this backdrop of recent history that Peter Eckersley began his experimental broadcasts from radio station 2MT in the village of Writtle, just outside of Chelmsford. The British military reacted by creating a moritorium for two years on further commercial radio experiments by Guglielmo Marconi's employees.
Due to public pressure created by broadcasts received from America, the General Post Office agreed in 1922 to license one commercial monopoly to be known as the British Broadcasting Company, Ltd. Peter Eckersley became its Chief Engineeer. This company would derive some income from a license sold to listeners to use their receiving sets and the rest from the manufacture and sale of licensed receiving sets. This arrangement did not work because under the terms of the exclusive license, the company could not sell air time. In 1923 Major-General Sir Frederick Sykes headed a committee to review this arrangement and it eventually reached the conclusion that the General Post Office should stop licensing the British Broadcasting Company. The company went out of business in December 1926.
In 1927 the British Crown granted a charter to its own non-commercial British Broadcasting Corporation and the General Post Office licensed that entity instead. Peter Eckersley was also hired as its Chief Engineer. However, John Reith who had been imposed upon the former commercial company as its Managing Director, was appointed to take control of the Crown corporation. Reith was a former military man and a Scottish Calvinist who on the surface seemed to be all of the things that Eckersley was not and in 1929 when Eckersley divorced his wife, Reith forced him out of his job. Years later a daughter of John Reith revealed to the press that Reith had been unfaithful to his wife but that he had kept up the pretense of a marriage.
Beginning in 1930 while Peter Eckersley was seeking work and the General Electric Company was engaged in building and selling European companies such as EMI (Electric and Musical Industries), the political opposition in Britain became extreme on all sides. For a time Eckersley was engaged in working to build a broadcasting station based in continental Europe which could be received in the United Kingdom. Captain Plugge who became a Member of Parliament also set about building his own International Broadcasting Company by leasing transmitters in France and other countries to beam commercial radio into Britain. The IBC venture was very successful and because Reith had banned light entertainment on the BBC stations during Sundays, the IBC statiions gained as much as 80% of the Sunday listening audience by 1938.
Meanwhile Peter Eckersley had sought other ways in which to bring the signals of the IBC stations into the living rooms of Britain. Rather than relying upon a receiving set licensed by the General Post Office, Eckerseley began to wire parts of England for an early form of cable radio. His venture was stopped by intervention from the General Post Office and the IBC stations were eventually silenced by the march of Adolf Hitler's troops through Europe during which they captured the transmitters.
From 1937 onwards Peter Eckersley's talent was tapped by British Military Intelligence MI6 to help combat the propaganda coming from Nazi Germany by the creation of British propaganda stations.
After WWII
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


