Monday, 13 February 2023

Corbett-Smith and his 5WA Comradios

On Tuesday 13 February 1923 from a cramped studio over a cinema opposite Cardiff Castle came the sound of a new BBC station, station 5WA. (1) Anyone tuning in their crystal radio sets to 353 metres will have heard some children’s stories and a concert from the Wireless Orchestra (sounds grand but it was just seven players) and the Carston Quartet that featured Welsh baritone Mostyn Thomas, contralto Gladys Palmer and entertainer Tom Jenkins. There was a brief introduction from John Reith himself (announcing “Hello 5WA, the Cardiff station of the British Broadcasting Company calling”) and speeches from BBC chairman Lord Gainsford, BBC director Sir William Noble and the Mayor of Cardiff, Alderman Sir John James Edgerton Biggs, and two news bulletins.

Station 5WA was the fifth BBC station on air, following 2LO in London, 5IT in Birmingham, 2ZY in Manchester and 5NO on Newcastle. Cardiff was effectively chosen as the base by a 1922 House of Commons Wireless Sub-Committee which proposed a “number of radio-telephone broadcasting stations” in areas centred on London, Cardiff, Plymouth (though in the event this moved to Bournemouth), Birmingham, Manchester, Newcastle, Glasgow or Edinburgh and Aberdeen. At the time Cardiff was the most populous city in Wales but still some three decades away from being declared the capital.

The Castle Street premises are now home to
the Mad Dog Brewery & Taproom

One of the men responsible for getting 5WA on air was Rex Palmer, the BBC’s sixth employee who would become station director of 2LO. ‘Uncle Rex’ was sent over from London to find the accommodation, where he leased that studio space at 19 Castle Street. The first station director, appointed by Director of Programmes Arthur Burrows at the end of January, was Frederick Roberts, a well know local musician and conductor. (2) It was Fred that would conduct the orchestra and read those children’s stories on the opening night. However, after the station went on air he lasted just 48 hours, dismissed after being found drunk in his office, presumably still enjoying the launch party hospitality! To steady the ship both Palmer and then Cecil Lewis (‘Uncle Caractacus’ on 2LO’s Children’s Hour) were sent out from London. From 26 March a new station director had been appointed, yet another ex-military type as so many where in the early days of the BBC, a Major Arthur Corbett-Smith.

Corbett-Smith would bring considerable imagination and flair to the station but his “distinctive outlook towards broadcasting” would ultimately see him moved back to London when the BBC bigwigs became more concerned about standardisation and formality.

Born in Cheltenham in 1879 and educated at Winchester and Christ Church College, Oxford Corbett-Smith had a colourful working career before becoming an artillery officer in the First World War. Those jobs included being called to the Bar (Middle Temple) and deputy secretary to the Shanghai Municipal Council. His time in China would prove useful when he provided background assistance for the 1913-14 production of the Anglo-Chinese play Mr Wu at London’s Strand Theatre. (3) He lectured on Public Health Law – his father had been a leading public health reformer – and in 1914 published the book The Problem of the Nations: A Study in the Causes, Symptoms and Effects of Sexual Disease, and the Education of the Individual therein. Post-war he wrote a number of military history books about the conflict and was the director of publicity for the British National Opera where he produced a number of National Opera Handbooks. No wonder that his Who’s Who entry listed his recreation as ‘change of work’.

He had married Neath-born Tessie Thomas, a violinist of some renown, in 1921. She was the daughter of conductor Oscar Thomas who, under the name Oliver Raymond, would go on to conduct the 5WA Station Symphony Orchestra. The Corbett-Smiths had one son and one daughter.   

As 5WA station director Corbett-Smith saw his role as “to energise and innovate”. Assisting him was his deputy, and programme announcer, Norman Settle. Whereas other stations would offer ‘talks’ the Cardiff station broadcast ‘chats’. So there was, for example, a Chat on Gardening, Chat on Bees and Bee-Keeping, Chat on Wireless for Amateurs, and even a Chat on "Five Minutes Exercise for the Busy Man". The station greeting was changed from “Hullo Everybody” to the less formal “Hullo Comradios” or even “Cymradios”. Like all BBC stations they adopted a Children’s Hour but this was later billed as Hour of the Kiddiewinks. (4)


Corbett-Smith would himself take to the microphone with a regular series of chats in which Mr Everyman Looks at the World. In addition, showing a pioneering zeal, he would do some of the continuity announcing, present Children’s Hour, conduct the orchestra, act (including, unlikely as it seems, appearing as Romeo in a re-enactment of the Balcony Scene alongside Marjory Unett as Juliet), produce and direct adaptations of an astounding twenty Shakespeare plays performed by the ‘Station Repertory Company’ and even write Elizabeth, a one act opera. He also composed the Cardiff Station March known as Comradios under the alias Aston Tyrrold (a number of his compositions use this name). He truly was 5WA’s everyman.

The station also ran a regular Women’s Hour (albeit running for 30 minutes). Corbett-Smith would later write that he was an advocate of more women being involved in broadcasting which might in turn encourage more to listen. Of the female listener he reckoned: “A radio item, even more than a good gramophone record, demands concentration in the listener. Women do not concentrate; except in the things which really matter to them-such as motherhood (sometimes), their men folk, dress, and care of the person”. However he laid this lack of engagement as the door of the predominantly male broadcasters: “since radio, both in manner and in matter, is so patently lacking in personality and vivid human interest, it is only natural that woman should find in it little to interest her”. (Modern Wireless November 1928)

BBC chiefs and civic dignitaries gather for the launch of 5WA 

Station 5WA and had regular theme nights and there was an ambitious and strong emphasis on live classical music with performances devoted to composers ranging from Beethoven to Wagner. Writing in the Musical News and Herald a year before joining the BBC, Corbett-Smith had declared that “every town should make an effort to form (an orchestra). Good music is not a luxury but a necessity.”

Popular music was not neglected so listeners could also hear the likes of Viona’s Syncopated Banjo Trio, the Cymmer Colliery Military Band and regular programmes of dance music. An early radio feature, The Magic Carpet, was broadcast over 19 weeks long before the BBC started a Features Department. It mixed speech, song and music with the idea being that listeners would take an audio magic carpet ride to different countries ‘piloted’ each week by a presenter or expert on that country with appropriate musical accompaniment from the studio orchestra. The 1924 series was, said the Radio Times, “highly popular”.   

There’s no doubt that Corbett-Smith’s approach was noted at BBC headquarters. In Broadcasting from Within Cecil Lewis described him as having a personality and determination that “have resulted in a high level of programmes being transmitted from that station, which have assumed a particular character somewhat different from those of other stations, owing to the wide experience and artistic qualifications of their director”. 

The musicians and singers performing the opening concert 

In 1923 it was not possible to receive programmes by line from London until the late summer of that year, so all early programmes were locally produced. The first outside broadcasts, starting in June 1923, were from the Capitol Cinema with the Orchestra conducted by Lionel Falkman. (5) These afternoon programmes, heard 4 or 5 times a week, ran until May 1926. The engineer tasked with broadcasting the music would switch on his control room equipment, go down to the Capitol Cinema (about a 5 minute walk away) and switch on the amplifier and microphone to announce the opening and then go off to the auditorium to watch the film, popping back to make the closing announcement. 

Notable in these early broadcasts was the absence of spoken Welsh. Welsh songs and music were plentiful and filled the schedules but virtually all the speech was English. This situation persisted under the next station director, Ernest Appleton, who, although claiming to be fluent in the language, was reluctant to permit spoken Welsh on the station. In the 1928 BBC Handbook, he rather pointedly writes: “At present various prominent people in Wales are striving to influence broadcasting, but unfortunately they are often divided against themselves”.     

By the end of 1923 land lines between the BBC stations were now well established allowing for the Simultaneous Broadcast of programmes from one station by another, though programmes from London dominated. With BBC management increasingly wishing to stamp a corporate approach across the network some of what were seen as eccentric decisions of Corbett-Smith were frowned upon. In Reith’s words what was important was “the periodic supervision of stations, the inspection on the spot, the rooting down to all details and the setting matters right”. In his mind “only persons of distinction should be allowed to broadcast”. There was also some criticism of the station’s output in the local Welsh press though the Major dismissed this: “We don’t care two little pins for that”.

Some of the BBC staff at Savoy Hill with 
Corbett-Smith pictured bottom-left

In March 1924 – weeks before 5WA moved into larger premises at 39 Park Place – and just a year after his appointment, Corbett-Smith was encouraged to move back to London and offered a central role as Artist Director. At 5WA chats were again talks and “kiddiewinks and comradios were consigned to oblivion”. A later BBC review noted that Corbett-Smith’s “exuberant personality was found to be a little overwhelming for a Station Director’s post”.     

According to Peter Eckersley (the BBC’s first Chief Engineer and yet another creative maverick) “Corbett-Smith was asked to come to Head Office, where he would have more scope” but that “the scope was, in fact, curiously limited so he left.”  Arthur Burrows, more diplomatically said “he was called to London to undertake more specialised work”. (6) Reith would write that the first choice of Station Directors had to be “a matter of trial and error” and that many mistakes were made.     

Whilst Artistic Director, Corbett-Smith did concern himself with a couple of significant areas of programme policy. On the matter of classical music he issued a memorandum with this call to action: “we pour out a mass of educational matter, of talks by notable authorities, of noble music. But all this remains a misshapen and unwieldy mass, with no steady driving force behind it directed towards a definite end”. On the hugely popular Children’s Hour programmes he issued some of the first guidance on how to present to children. He warned that “Buffoonery and noisy ensemble talking must not be permitted” and that presenters should be natural and not talk down to children. A story should be told and not read out, so the presenter was advised to adapt the script themselves to ensure their personality came through. He recommended only expert artists be used and that BBC officials should not do it for their own amusement. An obvious dig at some of the Uncles and Aunties no doubt. (7)       

After only a few months in post as Artistic Director he moved again in December 1924 to the BBC’s Intelligence section; nothing to do with espionage but a team concerned with the criticism of programmes. He was, however, still involved in some programme-making such as what sounds like an ambitious night’s broadcasting in September 1924 with Sportsmen All! ‘a comedy of sporting memories.’ (8) In the summer of 1926 he was back at the microphone with a series of “Six Radio Recitals with Music” on The Sea Affair and Harry Binns. But by that September he’d been dismissed by the BBC in view of his “general attitude, brought to a head during the recent emergency (the General Strike)” and that “it was decided to dispense with his services as a critic at the earliest possible moment”.   

He would write about his time in radio in My Radio Year (1925) and Our Radio Programmes: What is wrong, and why (1926). In the latter he summarised his thoughts on the company that had employed him thus: “Those men were all men of note in commerce and industry, engaged in the manufacture or sale of radio apparatus. Their interests were wholly industrial or commercial. They began the creation of a great machine. They created that machine – and a machine it remains: a machine without a soul. And that is what is wrong with the BBC”.

In the thirties and forties Corbett-Smith continued to advise on matters of public health and wrote a number of books ranging from a study of Lord Nelson and a book of verse (A People’s War) to, and here demonstrating that no topic was off limits for him, the volume Women: Theme and Variations (9) and even Love Technique: an introduction.

Apparently he was in the habit of making periodic announcements in the press about his imminent suicide. Sadly he did follow up on that threat. In January 1945, aged 65, and by now living in Herne Bay, he shot himself. His note to the police read: "I've had a very wonderful life, but I'm too old now. . . . I view with loathing the incidence and stigmata of old age. Age, with rare exceptions, is repulsive to look upon, and its so-called wisdoms are very problematical. Every man and woman at the age of 60 should show cause why he or she should continue to exist. . . ."

So what happened to pre-war radio in Wales? Briefly this. In December1924 5WA was joined by the Swansea relay station 5SX, the last of the BBC’s original stations. By now plans were already in train to move to regional broadcasting, a plan driven both internally with the desire to rationalise station management and to better dictate policy from the centre and externally with the need to rationalise the use of wavelengths under the proposed Geneva Plan (and the later 1929 Prague Plan). Rolling out from 1927, by which time the BBC was now a Corporation, South Wales would be part of the West Region, under the directorship of Ernest Appleton, and based in Cardiff – much to the annoyance of Bristolians on the other side of the channel. Meanwhile North Wales would effectively come under the Northern Region based in Manchester (though a studio in Bangor was opened in November 1935). This meant mid-Wales was not actually in a region at all and left listeners tuning in to the National Programme (5XX) from Daventry. Eventually, with the opening of a second transmitter at Washford in Somerset and a new site at Penmon on Anglesey, in July 1937 it was possible to split off a true Welsh region service. (10)   

(1) BBC Director of Programmes Arthur Burrows recalled that “No amount of shuttering proved sufficient to cut out the rumbling noises of trams passing below.” The studio space was small and, according to a contemporary report on the launch “would not comfortably hold more than the officials, the musicians, and the two or three guests” Most sources say the studio was above a cinema but Davies quotes a source referring to it being above Mr Kinshot's music shop. 

(2) Fred Roberts was 31 when appointed to the job. He’d served as an Army bandmaster and was an experienced concert and theatre orchestra conductor. The Roberts Band was well-known in South Wales and played at dinners, dances and social functions. 

(3) In the programme for Mr Wu (a play written by Harold Owen and Harry Vernon) the producer (and actor who played the leading role) wrote this dedication: “Mr Matheson Lang desires to acknowledge valuable assistance rendered to him by Mr A. Corbett-Smith in arranging details and Customs of Chinese life of the present day in Hong Kong.” Corbett-Smith would also write about The Chinese and Their Music for the September 1912 edition of The Musical Times.

(4) Later as Artistic Director for the BBC he would write in a memo on Children’s Hour that “to adopt a tone of superiority or aloofness is to court immediate disaster”

(5) Lionel Falkman (1892-1963) would later make regular broadcasts (142 in total) with his Apache Band (formed in 1933) on Music While You Work plus dozens of broadcast on the Forces Programme, Home Service and Light Programme simply billed as Falkman. The Capitol Theatre was demolished in 1983. The site is now the Capitol Centre indoor shopping mall.

(6) Writing further about Corbett-Smith in The Story of Broadcasting (1924) Burrows described him as follows: “Major Corbett Smith is one of the new -comers to headquarters, but is one of the senior officials of the company, having spent over a year at Cardiff as director of the Cardiff station. It was evident from the outset that Major Corbett Smith had a distinctive outlook towards broadcasting and an unusual variety of interests, ranging from music, art, and literature to things naval and military. As the programmes developed so it became evident that an artistic director was needed to clothe ideas in appropriate garments and to link harmoniously together the variety of material which is usually to be found in a night's broadcast entertainment. Major Corbett Smith is a strong believer in continuity programmes on special occasions, and has backed his faith by producing feature nights on festivals such as Empire Day. These programmes bear the same relation to broadcasting as the old diorama did to other contemporary forms of entertainment. Major Corbett Smith's brain is never resting. He finds recreation in writing books and composing operas”.

(7) For more on this see The BBC and the Child RadioListener in the 1920s by Zara Healy.

(8) The Radio Times featured this programme in its Gossip About Broadcasting page and at the same time offered yet another glimpse into Corbett-Smith’s past: “With the atmosphere of an English country house of fine sporting traditions, a birthday dinner-party, and a dozen or so famous sportsmen round the tables spinning yarns of old days and singing the famous old songs, there is an entertainment which should certainly make a wide appeal. Sir Theodore Cook, Editor of The Field, will be our host. The programme has been arranged by our Artistic Director, who was by the way something of a notable sportsman in his younger days and so may be presumed to know what he is talking about”.

(9) Publicising this book his publishers claimed that Corbett-Smith had 14 occupations, had written 35 books on 12 subjects and nine musical compositions.


(10) Washford transmitting station (above) was notable for its garden which used to attract many summer visitors. The former transmitter hall, control rooms and office block, a Grade II listed building, is now home to the Tropiquaria Zoo. The site still transmits DAB services and on AM talkSPORT and Radio Wales. The Penmon site closed in June 2021.   

You can hear historian John Davies talking about the history of broadcasting in Wales in this 1994 edition of Meet for Lunch with Vincent Kane.

I’ve only scratched the surface about the life of Arthur Corbett-Smith. I know that he wrote his memoirs, written in the third person, but I’ve not had sight of them. A copy exists at The British Library.

There’s also far more to say about 5WA and 5SX. The best source of information is Broadcasting and the BBC in Wales by John Davies (University of Wales Press, 1994).

The story of the early history of 5WA is told in a ‘2-part sitcom-documentary’ written by Gareth Gwynn called The Ministry of Happiness. Part 1 was broadcast last week and Part 2 airs this evening. It will be available for 30 days on BBC Sounds. Last week Gareth spoke to Mishal Husain on the Today programme. 

With thanks to Dr Andrea Smith and Alan Stafford for their help in tracking down photos of the Major and to Al Dupres for taking the Cardiff photos. The photos of the station opening come from Popular Wireless Weekly.  

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