6 March – First BBC broadcast from Glasgow (station 5SC).[2] It broadcasts excerpts from an opera.[3]
19 March – First BBC outside broadcast in Scotland, from the Coliseum Theatre, Glasgow.[2]
26 March – First broadcast of a dance band, by Marius B Winter and his Dance Orchestra.[4]
April
April – First BBC broadcast of an SOS message, for a woman to attend the bedside of her dying brother.[5]
May
2 May – Women's Hour, the first BBC programme for women (and predecessor of the later Woman's Hour), is broadcast.
24 May – The first live broadcast of a dance band, The Carlton Hotel Dance Band, leader Ben Davis.[4]
30 May – BBC Cardiff (station 5WA) broadcasts the first full performance of a new orchestral opera.[3]
31 May – Yorkshire-born Norman Clapham makes his BBC debut as 'John Henry', one of the first comedians to adapt to the medium of radio.[6][7]
June
6 June – Edgar Wallace broadcasts from The Derby for the BBC, becoming the first British radio sports journalist.[8]
July
18 July – First ever known broadcast of a complete Shakespeare play, Twelfth Night, and the first dramatic production from the BBC Manchester station.[9]
September
28 September – Vol. 1 No. 1 of The Radio Times, the world's first broadcast listings magazine, detailing official programmes of the British Broadcasting Company for the week commencing Sunday 30 September, is published.[10][11][12]
September – The BBC delivers its first live non-musical outside broadcast, relaying a speech by Ernest Rutherford from a British Association meeting held at the Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool. The speech is relayed to Manchester and London, and from London to Glasgow, Newcastle, Cardiff and Birmingham, and broadcast from each of those cities.[13]
17 October – Official opening of the BBC's 6BM Bournemouth radio station, the first programme of which, at 8 pm, is the Bournemouth Municipal Military Band conducted by Captain W. Featherston.[b][14][16]
November
16 November – First BBC broadcast from Sheffield (station 2FL).
December
2 December – The first BBC radio broadcast in Gaelic language is broadcast throughout Scotland. It is a 15-minute religious address by Rev. John Bain, recorded in the HighUnited Free Church in Aberdeen. Two weeks later, a recital of Gaelic singing is aired.
^The Daily Mirror Old Codgers Little Black Book Number Two. London: Mirror Group. 1976. pp. 70–1. ISBN0-85939-076-4.
^Purcell, Jennifer J. (July 2018). "'Enthusiasm, Experiment and Gallantry in Action': Developing Light Entertainment on the Fledgling BBC, 1922–1932". Cultural and Social History. 15 (3): 415–32. doi:10.1080/14780038.2018.1492786. S2CID149732018.