Keith Dudley Ulysses Rogers

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Keith Rogers
Born
Keith Dudley Ulysses Rogers

(1900-01-27)27 January 1900
Crouch End, England, UK
Died9 February 1974(1974-02-09) (aged 74)
Cuckfield, Sussex
Resting placeCuckfield, Sussex
NationalityBritish
Alma materMill Hill School
OccupationTelevision executive
EmployerBBC Television, ATV
Known forEarly outisde broadcasts including of the Festival of Britain, Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II and many early episodes of Tonight at the London Palladium

Keith Dudley Ulysses Rogers OBE (27 January 1900 – 9 February 1974) was a British radio, radar and television pioneer. He was a senior television production executive for outside broadcasting with the BBC (1946–1955) and subsequently ATV until his retirement in 1970.

Early life and career[]

Born in Crouch End, Greater London, to Daniel Ulysses Rogers (Tennis reporter for the Daily Express) and Minnie Gertrude Thomas, Rogers attended Mill Hill School and Lindisfarne College.

First World War

In December 1917, Rogers was posted to the British Merchant Navy as a radio operator with the Marconi International Marine Communication Company Limited. He served one voyage on MV Silversand, a 2500 gross tonnage Admiralty collier transport, before being transferred to the Lutetian for four transatlantic voyages[unreliable source?]. In early 1918, a week before the Armistice of 11 November 1918, he and several of the crew caught the Spanish flu during their final stopover in New York City[unreliable source?].[1] Following demobilisation, Rogers attended University College London to study Chemistry but left with a diploma after one year.[citation needed]

Popular Wireless

Rogers rose to become Chief of the Research Department of the Popular Wireless and Wireless Review magazines. Rogers worked and reported on advances in radio and, later, television circuitry. In December 1924, he Patented, with George Victor Dowding, the Unidyne (Solodyne) Valve, an early forerunner of the "Hiker Set" that removed the need for "B" batteries.[2][3][4][5] In January 1926, he visited and interviewed John Logie Baird at Frith Street, witnessing a demonstration of the Baird apparatus.[6] In 1935, he became a Fellow of the Royal Television Society,[7] and, in the same year, a contributing author in Dowding's Book of Practical Television.[8] After leaving Popular Wireless in 1935, he became a freelance journalist specializing in scientific and sociological articles.[9][10]

Second World War

At the outbreak of the war, Rogers joined No. 60 Group RAF of the Royal Air Force.[11] Initially trained at No. 1 Radio School in the design, installation and maintenance of the MB2 early warning radar system and posted 30 March 1941 to the West Prawle Chain Home Low station,[12] he was recalled in October 1941 to No. 60 Group headquarters at Oxenden House/The Heath in Leighton Buzzard where he served for the remainder of the war, rising to the rank of Squadron Leader[13] before his demobilisation on 21 September 1945.

Broadcast television career[]

British Broadcasting Corporation

After a year of working with the Marconi Research Department, Rogers joined the BBC in May 1946.[14][15] He was involved in the production, direction, and presentation of at least 132 broadcast programmes for the BBC between February 1947 and April 1955,[16] many with Richard Dimbleby (affectionately nicknamed 'Bumblepuppy'), Peter Dimmock, Raymond Baxter or Sylvia Peters in front of the camera. These included many of the significant early live outside broadcast events: the 1948 London Olympics,[17][18] the first live outside broadcast of an entire opera in May 1948,[19] the first live trans-channel broadcast from Calais in August 1950, the live collaborative relay from Paris in July 1952,[20] and major outside broadcasts from the 1951 Festival of Britain.[21] The following year, after his production role on 2 June 1953, which involved the outside broadcast of the coronation of Elizabeth II, he was advised that in the future, he would be the producer in charge of Royal occasions and the main contact with the Palace for Royal events.[22]

ATV

Headhunted from the BBC by Lew Grade in 1955, Rogers worked alongside Bill Ward, Frank Beale, and Terence MacNamara to help establish outside broadcasting capability for the startup of ATV,[23][24] with Rogers producing the Boxing match segment of the opening night broadcast schedule from Shoreditch Town Hall.[25] He eventually became Head of Presentation at ATV and was awarded the Order of the British Empire in the 1966 New Year Honours List.[26]

References[]

  1. ^ KDUR Personal war diary (Family Collection)
  2. ^ GB Patent 244981A: Improvements in or relating to Thermionic Valve Circuits for Wireless Circuits (patent granted 24 December 1926)
  3. ^ Radio News (New York) August 1924, p154
  4. ^ The Radio Board (accessed 28 November 2020)
  5. ^ Bulletin British Vintage Wireless Society 20(2) April 1995; p 26
  6. ^ Progress with Television: The Baird and Belin Claims in Popular Wireless and Wireless Review, 6 February 1926 p1293 (accessed 28 November 2020)
  7. ^ List of Fellows of the Royal Television Society
  8. ^ Dowding GV et al. Book of Practical Television. Amalgamated Press, Fleetway House, London First Edition August 1935
  9. ^ John K. Newham: Television Behind the Scenes (1948) p102; Convoy Publications Ltd, 6&7 Crosn Passage, Pall Mall, London
  10. ^ Keith Rogers: Good-bye for six months. Pearson's Magazine August 1938, pp170-175
  11. ^ "No. 34945". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 September 1940. p. 5495.
  12. ^ "No. 35273". The London Gazette (Supplement). 12 September 1941. p. 5309.
  13. ^ "No. 40255". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 August 1954. p. 4750.
  14. ^ The History Project – Peter Dimmock (accessed 28 November 2020)
  15. ^ TV Outside Broadcast History (accessed 28 November 2020)
  16. ^ BBC Genome (accessed 28 November 2020)
  17. ^ Broadcasting Handbook, Olympic Games, London 1948 issued by the British Broadcasting Corporation, page 4
  18. ^ Personal communication from Cecil McGivern, 13 August 1948 (Family Collection)
  19. ^ The Sphere 1 May 1948, p27 (153) (accessed 28 November 2020)
  20. ^ The First Franco-British Television Programme Relay (accessed 28 November 2020)
  21. ^ The Television Annual for 1952. Kenneth Bailey (Editor) Oldhams Press Ltd. p151 (accessed 29 November 2020)
  22. ^ Personal communication from John Richardson, 5 November 1954 (Family Collection)
  23. ^ The ITV Story: Keith Rogers
  24. ^ From Alexandra Palace to Elstree via Satellite from Tokyo
  25. ^ TV Times 1(1) 20 September 1955 pages 10 and 19
  26. ^ "No. 43854". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 1965. p. 13.
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