Curated by leading academics from the University of Sussex and partner institutions, in collaboration with the BBC, 100 Voices and Connected Histories of the BBC is an AHRC funded project that shines a light on the hidden stories of broadcasting.
Below are the key people featured in the project, originally divided into eight collections: Entertaining the UK, The BBC and the Cold War, The BBC and World War Two, Pioneering Women, People, Nation, Empire, Radio Reinvented, The Birth of TV, and Elections.
The final 100 Voices, Inventing the Future is now published.

The BBC Oral History Project
Professor David Hendy outlines the unique value of oral history, and its longstanding importance at the University of Sussex. He explains how the 100 Voices collections reveal unique insights about the BBC, as well as uncovering the changing relationship between the broadcaster, the cultural life of the UK, and the wider world. Image: Tim Stubbings Photography / AHRC.

Search the Collections
Search the Collections around key historic themes.
Yvonne Adamson
Yvonne Adamson began her BBC radio career in 1945 as a reporter in North Region, part of the BBC to which she remained committed for the rest of her working life. Originally based in Newcastle she developed a love for the North-East in particular where she believed there wasn’t a "living soul" who didn’t’ have “something original, something interesting to relate".

John Ammonds
John Ammonds always dreamt of working in radio comedy. He approached the BBC in 1941 with a speculative letter offering himself up as a junior engineer. He was asked if he would be interested in becoming a sound effects operator. For the next 13 years he could be found in the BBC's variety department. A move to television in 1968 saw Ammonds become one of the main producer/directors for Morecambe and Wise.































































































































