CBC Digital Archives

Broadcasting and the war

On a summer's day in 1927, Canadians coast to coast sat enthralled before their radio sets as Prime Minister Mackenzie King spoke to them from Parliament Hill. Through the 1930s radio kept them entertained, and in wartime radio kept them informed. Then, Canadians were captivated all over again by television. In 1952 a bald puppet named Uncle Chichimus ushered them into the TV age, and in 1966 an animated butterfly made Canadian TV a more colourful pace.

Radio may be an international problem during the Second World War.
Medium: Radio
Program: CBC Radio Special
Broadcast Date: Oct. 24, 1939
Speaker: Augustin Frigon
Duration: 19:43

Last updated: January 3, 2013

Page consulted on January 3, 2013

All Clips from this Topic

Related Content

1941: Churchill's 'chicken' speech

Winston Churchill delivers an electrifying address to the Canadian Parliament during the Secon...

1939: King George VI's Christmas message

The King broadcasts a message of hope to the Empire in the early months of the Second World Wa...

1900: Canadian makes first wireless radio tra...

Quebec-born inventor Reginald Fessenden sang Christmas hymns in an early radio broadcast.

1942: War effort spreads to butter

Government adds butter to the growing list of rationed food.

1941: Japanese attack Canadian troops in Hong...

Outnumbered and outgunned, Canadian soldiers are overwhelmed in their first major battle of th...

The Avro Arrow: Canada's Broken Dream

It's the closest thing Canadian industry has to a love story and a murder mystery. The Avro Ar...