Francis Collinson

Francis James Montgomery Collinson, 1898–1984

Francis Collinson was born and educated in Edinburgh, where his father was organist at St Mary’s Episcopal Cathedral. After serving in the Army Service Corps during World War I, he studied music at Edinburgh University. Having graduated in 1923, he embarked on a career in musical theatre in London.

When the BBC launched its Country Magazine radio programme in 1942, Collinson became its musical director. He was living at Old Surrenden Manor near Bethersden at this time; the programme’s producer Francis ‘Jack’ Dillon lived nearby at Smarden. George Frampton recounts1

The story goes that, one day, Dillon heard his gardener, who was outside at work,singing The Blackbird.  Collinson was summoned, and the idea of using a singer on Country Magazine was quickly established.

Whether or not this is strictly accurate, or a romanticised version of events, Collinson’s activities as a serious folk song collector do appear to have coincided with the start of Country Magazine (the only songs in his collection which definitely predates this are ‘Come come my pretty maid’, from Tom Batt, and ‘Stormy Winds Do Blow’, from Harry Cox in Norfolk both of which he noted in 1941).

Collinson was the last of the folk song collectors to note down songs on paper, rather than recording his singers, although he did make recordings later in his career, when working for the School of Scottish Studies. He appears to have had a fairly relaxed approach to the type of song he was prepared to collect – there are numerous examples in his Kentish collection that Cecil Sharp, for example, would have rejected as not being a real folk song. He collected from a number of local singers in Bethersden, also noting songs at Smarden, Great Chart, Maidstone, Pembury, Willesborough, and as far afield as St. Nicholas-at-Wade in Thanet. Noel Coward, whom he would have known through their shared involvement in musical theatre, lived at Aldington, and Collinson noted several songs from Coward’s gardeners, John and Ted Lancefield, as well as two other singers in the village. Sometimes he was sent songs – in at least one case by a listener to his radio programmes. He noted songs in other parts of the country as well, including Devon, Dorset, County Durham, Essex, Monmouthshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire, and from the Copper Family at Rottingdean in Sussex.

In 1945, Collinson wrote an article in the Kent County Journal2 ultimately aimed at encouraging readers to contact him if they knew any of the old songs, or who knew of someone who might:

Song-Collecting in Kent

By FRANCIS M. COLIINSON

Among the collectors of English folk-songs, there seems to be a curious and mistaken idea that Kent possesses little of interest. Certainly, of the several thousand folk-songs collected and published by the English Folk-song Society over a period of thirty years, when folk-songs were easy to come by, those from Kent number exactly five. Of these, Cecil Sharp, the most assiduous collector of all, contributes only one, and that one he heard from a Kentish man resident in the west of England.3

Living in Kent myself, I am glad to be able to refute this libel. I am convinced that the explanation is simply that none of the collectors ever took the trouble to look for songs in Kent; for in my searches for songs for the B. B. C. “Country Magazine,” I have collected quite a number of songs in the county, and that mostly within no more than cycling distance from my house. A fair proportion of  these can be classed as true folk-songs; and – of them, whether folk-songs, early music-hall ditties, or even published songs of the Victorian era like “The Mistletoe Bough,” have been learned and passed on by singing, and not by the printed copy. No, Kent is certainly not unmusical!

I have found, too, a number of the old printed broadsheets in Kent. These are sheets of flimsy paper about seven inches by ten, with the words of one, or more often two songs printed on one side, and having a crude wood-cut at the top by way of illustration (often wildly inappropriate to the song in question). Most of these broadsheets come from the once-flourishing ballad-printing houses of Seven Dials, London, but I have several printed at Strood, Kent-a fact which in itself goes a long way towards proving my point.

The Kentish name for a broadsheet, which is still remembered and used, is a ballet (to rhyme with mallet). These ballets were hawked through the streets of towns and villages all over the country at a penny each, and sung or “cried” by their vendors to any old tune that happened to fit. The most extensive collection of them I have come across was in the possession of the brothers John and Ted Lancefield, of Adlington [sic]; and I have to record with gratitude their kindness in making a gift of them to me, for these old broadsheets are treasure to the song collector. One of these is reproduced below. It deals with a common subject of the broadsheet poets —shipwreck, and it is quite probable that the story was a true one, or at least had some basis in local fact. The Lancefields could not remember the tune to which it was sung, but I did get some other songs from them complete with their tunes—including one with the intriguing title of “The Folkstone Murderer.” The ‘shipwreck ballad’ generally appeals to its hearers in the last verse or in the refrain to help the widows and orphans of the disaster (here the appeal is to the Deity), but it is doubtful if any of the proceeds of its sale ever found their way to this charity!

I must come to the purpose of my article however. It is now unfortunately too late to reap the abundant musical harvest which I am convinced once existed in Kent, and which could have been garnered easily say fifty years ago, when the Harvest Home was still to the fore, with its inseparable furnishings of song and country dance-tune; for indigenous folk-song has long been a-dying everywhere: but there may still be time to catch the last echoes; and readers who know any of the old traditional songs, or who know of anyone who can dig up even a fragment of them from the depths of his memory, can help to remove an implied slur on the musical-mindedness of Kent, and perhaps enrich the repertoire of folk-song with fresh discoveries, by writing to me, c/o. the Editor of the “Kent County Journal” about it.

The 1950 publication Country Magazine: Book of the B.B.C. programme4 contained a description of Collinson’s approach to song collecting:

All the songs are got afresh from old folk singers and most of them do not appear in any published collection. Nearly all of the songs are collected and arranged by Francis Collinson, who explains some of his technique and his difficulties in collecting:  

I find that to get hold of the old country songs you have approach the task as a countryman yourself ; for if the country folk get the impression that you are “arty”, they shut up like a knife. The real songs of the countryside are full-blooded and robust. Many people are shy of singing a song to a stranger straight off and I don’t often ask them to do it. What I generally do is to ask them to give me the words. In doing this they are almost certain to come to a line which they can’t quite remember; and then instinctively, they start to hum the tune to help their memory over the difficult bit; and once a man begins to hum a tune of his free will, you will find the ice is broken and he won’t mind singing the rest to you.

When a countryman does start to give you one of his own songs, he will go to any amount of trouble to get it right, for he feels on his mettle to show you, and himself, that he hasn’t forgotten it; and this is no small feat sometimes, for many of these old songs are very long, eight, nine or even ten verses are quite the rule. If a line or a verse does elude him, he will cudgel his brains until it comes back to him ; and if it refuses to come back, he will go or write to some other member of the family for it. Often I have come away with an incomplete song, to receive a message a few days later via the postman or the milkman to say that “old so-and-so has the rest of that song you were talking about.” I got one such message from the wife of a rather frail old man to whom I had been for songs, to say she hoped I wouldn’t be asking for any more as it was keeping him awake at nights trying to remember them!  

It’s lovely to see how the recalling of an old song which has unsung for perhaps half-a-century, carries the thoughts of the old people back. For a few moments the years have slipped away

In 1952 Collinson moved back to Scotland, to take up the post of musical research fellow at the newly established School of Scottish Studies. His work there involved the collection, transcription and study of Scots and Gaelic traditional song. He produced important works on Hebridean folk song, and a history of the bagpipes.

Following his death in 1984, Collinson’s papers passed to the School of Scottish Studies at the University of Edinburgh. In the 1990s Chris White, a member of the Kent-based Seven Champions Molly Dancers who was in Scotland studying for a doctorate, investigated the English songs in Collinson’s collection, and subsequently copies of these were lodged in the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library. They are now available online, through the VWML Archives Catalogue, at https://archives.vwml.org/records/COL.  

Country Magazine

Francis Collinson’s entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography6 states that he was “in charge” of this radio programme – clearly that’s an overstatement, since he was neither the editor now the producer but, as musical director, he played an important part in the series’ success.

Theatre and revue were badly hit by the advent of the Second World War and in 1941 Collinson took charge of the BBC’s Country Magazine programmes, with their famous signature tune, ‘The Painful Plough’, of which he was to make many arrangements, including one for the bagpipe. The programmes, many of them outside broadcasts, involved Collinson in the study, collection, and arrangement of folk-songs (bringing the Copper family to public attention, for example) throughout Britain. He not only published these arrangements in a series with Francis Dillon from 1946 onwards but also issued three unique 78 r.p.m. recordings of folk-songs in the Gramophone Company’s Plum Label series. Now collector’s items, the songs were beautifully delivered by the baritone Robert Irwin, accompanied by an orchestra conducted by Collinson

[ … ]

Highly arranged folk-song, sung by classically trained professional singers to orchestral accompaniment, no matter how beautifully done, was looked at askance by later scholars and performers of traditional song. But in Country Magazine Collinson had been obliged to work to BBC practice, which was against ‘untrained’ singers marring the airwaves, and when such Scottish singers were eventually broadcast in the late 1950s, popular reaction was indeed remarkably hostile, even from fervent Scottish nationalists such as Hugh MacDiarmid.

Actually Francis ‘Jack’ Dillon was the programme’s producer. To quote from his entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography7

In 1942 Dillon began the Sunday radio series Country Magazine which ran for twelve years with the professed intention ‘to create a better team spirit between people working in factories and people working in fields’ [F. Dillon, ed., ‘Country magazine’: book of the BBC programme (1950)]. The idea for the series originated from the Ministry of Agriculture which felt such a programme would be helpful in wartime when travel between town and country was so restricted. On the third anniversary of the series the Sunday Pictorial ran an article on the producer:

Francis Dillon, the man who has gathered the farmers, basket makers, cowherds and glovemakers together is … a homespun type, wears corduroys and a fisherman’s hand knitted guernsey in Portland Place bars, drinks beer, and doesn’t like the idea of getting publicity in the Press.

The first episode of Country Magazine was broadcast on the BBC Home Service at 1:15 p.m. on Sunday 3rd May 1942. The Radio Times8 listing described it as “Fortnightly programme from the countryside. Editor, A. G. Street. Producer, Francis Dillon”. A brief note on the front page of the magazine promoted it as

A new radio magazine about, for, and from the countryside presents its first number on Sunday with A. G. Street as editor. In the first of fortnightly programmes men and women from various English counties will discuss the content of future numbers. On the result of their discussion and suggestions from listeners the series will be planned.

while there was a longer piece on page 5 in the “Introducing” section, written by C. Norman Glover:

Let the Country Speak

Now that the framework of wartime broadcasting has put an end to many of the old Regional activities one misses much that once spoke so agreeably in the many tongues of Britain. ‘In Britain Now’ has helped, and so, too, have voices, from time to time of speakers on matters of the countryside. Such voices as that of Ralph Wightman who will be heard, every so often, in Francis Dillon’s ‘Country Magazine’, new fortnightly series starting on Sunday. I select Wightman from a copious potential of other contributors for the simple reason that I consider him the best broadcaster of his type that I have ever heard. When a man has wit and wisdom, a sense of language and a sense of humour, a profound knowledge of his subject, and  Somerset voice as rich as heather honey —there is a broadcaster on the countryside A. G. Street compères these programmes that should fill the need of countrymen from Land’s End to John o’ Groats for expert opinion on every kind of rural issue from Home Guarding to home gardening.

Soon the format Country Magazine began to take shape. The editor, A.G. Street described it thus in the Radio Times, 26th June 1942:

THEY COME FROM THE COUNTRY
By deliberate design the history to date of the fortnightly Country Magazine has been one of trial and error. The original request was for a country magazine to interest country people ; but the first of these Sunday broadcasts was devoted to a discussion in which ten or a dozen country-folk of all sorts tried to decide the composition and scope of the programmes to follow.

Unanimously they agreed that the address should be to listeners in both town and country, for two main reasons: townsfolk today are genuinely interested in the countryside, and country-folk dislike being treated as beings apart. It was also agreed to give general and country numbers alternately, and Devon came first out of the hat.

After some spirited wrangling the inclusion of a musical item was decided upon. The following layout was then suggested. First a description of the countryside, followed by a short explanation of the seasonal job. Next a personal story from a real country-dweller, then an interesting bit of farming news, and then possibly a musical item, anything of a Hey-nonny-no flavour being barred. Also necessary were a woman’s item and a rural defence item; if possible there should be something out of the ordinary run of country life, and also, perhaps, a short story.

The second number dealt faithfully with this programme on general lines, and then Devon was asked to do its best for number three. And it did. The number began with the march of the Devon regiment, and ended with some verses written for this number by Reginald Arkell. In lovely lush Devonshire voice a Devonshire farmer read them with obvious belief in every word, especially in the last two lines : —

I’ve said it afore, and I sez it agen
There’s nothing like Devon, and Devonshire men.

Whereupon a Devonshire lady picked Kent for the next county number, which you will hear this coming Sunday.

28th June 1942 – Kent

Country Magazine number 5, focusing on Kent, was broadcast at 1:15 on Sunday 28th June 1942. The programme was received warmly, making front page news in the Kent Messenger, 3rd July:

KENT’S PRAISES ARE SUNG BY B.B.C.

A Stirring Radio Story Of “Britain’s Fighting County”

Kent, “Britain’s Fighting County,” was the subject of the broadcast, Country Magazine No 5, on Sunday. Many well-known Kent people took part, including Mrs. N. Stanger, Bilsington; Lieut.-Colonel C. S. F. Witts, Margate; Mr. Alfred Day, Headcorn; Mr. T. Woolley, Warehorne, Mr. E. M. Boulden, Bonnington; Mr. Bates, Dungeness; and Mr. H. Batt, Mr. E. Batt, Mr. D, Batt. and Mr. M. Batt, of Bethersden.

Several interesting problems were discussed, among them was the old question, “Do you know the difference between a Man of Kent and a Kentish Man.”

The only answer given was, “It does not matter, anyway. ” Reference was made to Kent’s motto.

“Kent has never been beaten in battle and never will be,” one man commented. “No, but we Men of Kent don’t want to boast about that,” said a Man of Kent, and a reply immediately came from a Kentish Man, “We Kentish Men don’t need to!”

The article went on to describe the topics covered in the programme: the Book of Remembrance held in Canterbury Cathedral for the 6000 officers and men of The Buffs (the Royal East Kent Regiment) who had died in the First World War; agriculture in the “Garden of England” and on Romney Marsh; the work of a village shop-keeper (Mrs Stanger of Bilsington), a woodman, and fishermen (Mr Bates, Dungeness); the Thanet Home Guard (Lieutenant Colonel Witts); and cider which “if kept for a couple of years can be set alight like brandy”. There was a brief mention that “A fifty years old song was sung” – this was most likely performed by the Batt Brothers.

The article included photographs of several of the contributors: Mr Day, Mrs Stanger, Eyton Boulden, Mr. Woolley, and the Messrs Batt. It concluded “a song completed the Country Magazine of the County of Kent, excellently produced and full of interest”.

We know what song was included, from an article in the same newspaper on 24th July 1942:

Uncle Charlie’s Song

In response to requests from many readers we publish below “Uncle Charlie’s Song”—”At the Foot of Yonder Mountain,” which was so beautifully rendered in the recent Kent Country programme by the B.B.C.

The song, which is at least 150 years old, was sung by Frederick Woodhouse, and the music was arranged by Francis Collinson.

This was a rewritten arrangement of ‘Where the lambs they skip with pleasure’, from Eyton Boulden, a copy of which is in the Collinson MSS.

Country Magazine broadcast from Kent on another three occasions, and Kentish men and women continued to make appearances on the programme – for example, under the headline “He Spoke Of Buzz-Bombs, Cricket and Hop-Pickers” the Kent Messenger for 3rd November 1944 reported that “a Kent garage proprietor, Mr. Fuggle, of Benenden, took part in 64th “Country Magazine” feature by the B.B.C.”

11th August 1946 – The Isle of Sheppey

The next time that Country Magazine properly revisited Kent was for the programme broadcast on 11th August 1946, which came from the Isle of Sheppey. This was a significant milestone for the programme, and for the BBC more generally as, according to the Sheerness Times Guardian, 16th August 1946

It was the first time that a direct outside broadcast had been attempted from the English countryside and it was a complete success. The B.B.C. microphone was installed in the centre of the dart room at the Ferry House Inn and the broadcasters were grouped about three feet away from it. In all its long history the old inn had never before had its doors flung wide open—open to the world—to millions of listeners eager to hear what was taking place within its lonely and secluded surroundings.

The preceding week, 9th August, the same paper had promoted the upcoming event, describing the location of the broadcast, and giving some idea of its content:

A bar of a centuries old inn, situated on the banks of the River Swale in the Isle of Sheppey, is to become a B.B.C. studio next Sunday, for the broadcast of “Country Magazine” programme.

It is the Ferry House Inn, Harty, and apart from the people on the Island and yachtsmen who sail up the Swale, few others know if its existence, as it is on the marshes four miles from the nearest road.

Local legends have it, that the inn was the haunt of smugglers, but Marshall Pollock, who owns it has found nothing to confirm this.

It was originally built to house workers from the farms on the marshes round about, and in the bar where this broadcast takes place you can still see the lodger’s lockers where they kept their food and the stoves on which they cooked it.

The Ferry kept its name from the ferry which runs between Harty, Isle of Sheppey and Faversham (Kent), on the mainland.

Joe Dane has been a ferryman for many years. Listeners will hear stories of “Dirty Crossings” from Joe, who also remembers a former landlady at the inn, waiting at the foot of the stairs at closing time to collect the fourpences from the lodgers before they retired.

Dane will also talk about the bird life on the marshes, where peal, wild duck and other birds abound.

Other speakers will include a farmer from the marshes, Marshall Pollock, a shipbuilder from Faversham, who bought the Ferry House in 1937 to popularise the Swale among yachtsmen, and several other local characters.

These will be brought to the microphone by John Snagge, and the music under the direction of Francis Collinson, will be provided by two fiddles, a concertina and a piano. The folk song in this programme is one which Collinson discovered in the Isle of Sheppey and is called “Tarry Trousers”.

The newspaper’s article on 16th August, following the broadcast, was full of praise for the programme:

All wireless sets in Sheppey were tuned-in for that outstanding radio event for the Island—the broadcast of a “Country Magazine” programme from the Ferry House Inn, Harty—which made good listening on Sunday last.

The dialogue “came over” the air very well indeed and it was evident that those taking part in this broadcast had remembered the “tips” given to them during the rehearsals by that “live-wire” producer, Francis Dillion, who really knows his job. The programme dealt entirely with “life” in the River Swale area, which made extremely good material for a “Country Magazine” broadcast.

The Kent Messenger for 16th August was no less enthusiastic. Under the headline “Queer ‘Goings-On’ At The Ferry House Inn”, the report noted that this had been the first programme to be compared by John Snagge “and he enjoyed it. So did everybody else in the snug bar of the Ferry Inn. So did thousands of listeners on Sunday when it brought a breath of clean sweet Sheppey air, and the tang of the sea, to their dinner tables”.

Sun 13th June 1948 – Isle of Thanet

In June 1948 Country Magazine came from the Bell Inn, St. Nicholas at Wade. The programme was introduced by Dylan Thomas, and, as usual, the music was arranged by Francis Collinson, revisiting ‘Tarry Trousers’, rather than either of the songs he’d collected in the village in 1945.

There was a report on the programme in the Thanet Advertiser, 15th June 1948:

ST. NICHOLAS TELLS THE WORLD

Country Magazine Broadcast

St. Nicholas-at-Wade, with its little community of 600 people, and its Norman church looking out over the pattern-work of dikes and grazing land, made itself known to the world on Sunday.

Scouts of the British Broadcasting Corporation, searching extensively in Southern England for likely spots for the “Country Magazine” feature, which is among the most popular of the Sunday programmes, found just what they wanted at the Bell Inn, St. Nicholas – so  it was to the Bell Inn they came to put Sunday’s edition over the air.

Listeners heard Welsh poet Dylan Thomas describe the scene in these words:

“We’ve rigged up a sort of studio here in The Bell—I might say an ideal studio—with bar billiards, dart boards, push penny (shove-halfpenny’s big uncle), smoky ceiling, oak beams, wickerwork hatrack, piano with yellow teeth, on the wooden walls, a buffalo head askew (probably shot charging round a corner), beer here and there, mostly there… quiet old St. Nicholas at Wade…”

Sandwiched between the interviews was a song lustily sung by Robert Irwin—a bright little ditty suggesting the close association between St. Nicholas and the sea, which beats, above the level of the marsh, against the sea wall to the north. The song was sung to the tune “Tarry Trousers.”

However, as the BBC will be all too aware, you can’t please everyone. The Thanet Advertiser for 13th July 1948 reported that the programme had not gone down well in nearby Minster:

MINSTER ANNOYED WITH B.B.C. BROADCAST

The recent “Country Magazine” broadcast from St. Nicholas, came in for severe criticism at Tuesday’s meeting of Minster Parish Council.

Councillor the Rev. T. A. Keniry stated that a few months previously Minster Council had asked the B.B.C. if it would be possible to include a broadcast dealing with Thanet, from Minster in their “Country Magazine” programme. “If the programme broadcast from St. Nicholas was a reply to our request then I think it was a caricature,” he declared.

From the broadcast it seemed that in Thanet all people did was to breed white turkeys, ride donkeys on Margate sands, and dabble in lavender-growing, he said. The broadcast made no mention of Thanet’s historical and architectural claims.

Councillor C. W. Simmons expressed a similar opinion, and said he thought the St. Nicholas broadcast was the worst “Country Magazine” programme ever heard on the air.

Councillor Simmons made a proposition that the B.B.C. should again be approached on the question of a broadcast from Minster, and his proposition was carried.

Sun 17th Apr 1949 – Romney Marsh

Country Magazine came back to the county one final time in April 1949, in a programme introduced by Ralph Wightman, and with another appearance from Bonnington’s Eyton Boulden. The Kentish Express 22nd April 1949 carried a report of the broadcast, but did not mention where it had been recorded.

SIX DISCUSSED “THE SIXTH CONTINENT”

ROMNEY MARSH GOES ON THE AIR

Shortly before 4.30 p.m. today five men and a woman will leave their work on Romney Marsh and will tune in their radios to hear a re-broadcast of Sunday’s “Country Magazine,” in which they discussed with Ralph Wightman the Marsh and the part they play in its daily life.

People all over the country heard how on a fine evening in June it was almost possible—if one had good enough eyesight and patience—to count all the sheep on the Marsh from one vantage point. They heard also of “Josher” Jones’ modes of transport—of “Bluebird,” his car, and the backstays used to negotiate the Dungeness shingle.

When a Kentish Express reporter called on “Josher,” the shrimper, he was coming home from a morning bird-spotting on the nine square miles of shingle.

“WHO’S THAT?” SAID WIFE

He took off his backstays, commenting that a number of people who heard Sunday’s broadcast did not believe they were still used.

“Why I can walk faster on a pair of backstays than what I can the road.” he said. It wasn’t many years ago, either, that we had to walk to Lydd on them. That was before the road was built.”

Ex-farmer and publican, “Josher” said that shrimping had been extremely bad this past winter, despite its mildness. His chief outdoor interest now is to get rid of some of the magpies and foxes that have been lessening the bird population on the shingle.

Mrs. Fred Apps, whose farmer husband broadcast, did not recognise her husband’s voice when she first heard it on the air.

BEST LOOKER ON THE MARSH

Described as “the best looker on Romney Marsh” (a looker is a shepherd, not a good-looking man), Mr. George Hugett, of Appledore, was another who took part in the programme. Others were Mr. Eyton Boulden, Bonnington farmer; Mrs. John Southenden, of Jury’s Gap; Mr. Reg Cooke, of Pott Level, and Mr. Harold Sims, of Iden, a huntsman with the Romney Marsh hounds since 1909.

The final edition of Country Magazine appears to have been broadcast on Sunday 21st December 1952 a “Christmas General Number from the Midlands”.


  1. Frampton, George, The Millen Family of Bethersden, Kent, Musical Traditions, 2001. https://www.mustrad.org.uk/articles/millens.htm ↩︎
  2. Kent County Journal, 6 (4), July -Sep 1945, p81. ↩︎
  3. As this site demonstrates, Collinson significantly under-estimated the number of songs collected in the early twentieth century by Cecil Sharp and others. The figure of five songs probably represents the number published in the Journal of the Folk-Song Society. The reference to a song collected by Sharp is most probably to ‘The Shooting of his dear’ which was included in an article headed “Folk-Songs noted in Somerset and North Devon”. This had been obtained from Clarence Rook, who was living in Bristol at the time of the 1891 census, but otherwise had no connection to the West Country. ↩︎
  4. Country Magazine. Book of the B.B.C. programme. Compiled and edited by Francis Dillon. London:Odhams Press, 1950. p142. ↩︎
  5. Olson, Ian A. “Collinson, Francis James Montgomery (1898–1984), musical director and musicologist.” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.  September 23, 2004. Oxford University Press. Date of access 2 Oct. 2024, <https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-53950> ↩︎
  6. Whitehead, Kate. “Dillon, Francis Edward Juan [Jack] (1899–1982), radio producer.” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.  September 23, 2004. Oxford University Press. Date of access 11 Oct. 2024, <https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-65821> ↩︎
  7. Radio Times, Friday, 1st May 1942 ↩︎

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