This is a list of events from British radio in 1941.
Events
January
14 January – In a BBC radio broadcast from London, Victor de Laveleye asks all Belgians to use the "V sign" as a rallying sign, being the first letter of victoire (victory) in French and of vrijheid (freedom) in Dutch, the beginning of a subversive campaign which spreads across occupied Europe.[1]
February
February – BBC begins construction of an emergency broadcasting facility in the disused tunnel of the Clifton Rocks Railway in Bristol.[2]
March
17 March – The BBC European service moves its London headquarters from a temporary home in Maida Vale Studios to Bush House.[1]
23 May – Gustav Siegfried Eins, a British black propaganda station, begins broadcasting to German troops in Western Europe from a studio at Wavendon in Buckinghamshire through short wave transmitters at Gawcott and Potsgrove, purporting to be an official German military station.[4]
June
28 June – The first of four broadcasts from Berlin to the neutral United States by English-born humorist P. G. Wodehouse, who has been interned in Nazi Germany, is made. The series, entitled How to be an Internee Without Previous Training and comprising anecdotes about Wodehouse's experiences as a civilian internee, including some gentle mocking of his captors,[5][6][7] is in August broadcast to the United Kingdom by the German propaganda ministry.[8] The broadcasts generate a reaction, including, on 15 July, a strongly worded riposte on the BBC by print journalist William Connor.[6][7] A 1944 official British investigation finds Wodehouse's actions to be no worse than "unwise"[7] but he will never return to the UK.
Bandleader Jack Payne returns to the post of Director of Dance Music at the BBC.[11] This year also the BBC appoints Geraldo's as another of its house bands.[12]
^Baade, Christina L. (2012). Victory through Harmony: the BBC and popular music in World War II. Oxford University Press. p. 99. ISBN978-0-19-537201-4.