shewhomust: (mamoulian)
shewhomust ([personal profile] shewhomust) wrote2014-10-18 06:51 pm
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Radio Times past

[livejournal.com profile] durham_rambler has been leafing through back copies of the Radio Times - copies further back than seems possible, even in this household. The BBC has put online its complete programme listings 1923 - 2009, and this includes the edition of Woman's Hour broadcast on 14th April 1960.

I remember listening to the broadcast, probably (because this was my place for listening) right next to the wireless, behind the armchair. My father, Tom Rogers, had travelled to the studio to read a story he had written, based on his experiences as a teacher. I would have told you it was called "Fourpence", but the RT says "Threepenny", and who am I to argue with the RT? It was about a small boy who couldn't pay all of his dinner money because, he said, he had swallowed part of it - presumably the three pennies of the title. The teacher narrator comments that he doesn't doubt the boy's claim to have swallowed the monry, but wonders whether he had first converted it into sweets. This is an unjust suspicion, but that's all I can tell you - it was a long time ago.

[identity profile] anef.livejournal.com 2014-10-19 06:30 pm (UTC)(link)
I imagine that three pence would have been a lot easier to swallow than four pence, unless the groat was still in currency at the time.

[identity profile] shewhomust.livejournal.com 2014-10-20 09:24 am (UTC)(link)
That's a good point - and no, it wasn't quite that long ago! But the image in my mind is of separate pennies, and they weren't small coins in those days...