Premium Only Content
Black Museum - ep34 - A Prescription
Opening in 1875, the Crime Museum at Scotland Yard is the oldest museum in the world purely for recording crime. The name "Black Museum" was coined in 1877 by a reporter from "The Observer", a London newspaper, although the museum is still referred to as the Crime Museum. It is this museum that inspired The Black Museum radio series, produced in London by Harry Alan Towers.
From Jay Hickerson's "The Ultimate History of Network Radio Programming and Guide to All Circulating Shows", the earliest US broadcast date was January 1, 1952. Thirty-nine shows, from the full syndication of fifty-two shows, aired over Mutual stations from January 1, 1952 through June 24, 1952 and September 30, 1952 through December 30, 1952.
This may be the earliest broadcast of the series worldwide. It was later broadcast over Radio Luxembourg starting May 7, 1953. Radio Luxembourg broadcast sponsored programs at night to England (the BBC was state-owned and had no commercials). The shows were sponsored by Dreft and Mirro.
The series continued to be offered in syndication and was heard on AFRTS broadcasts and in the US on NPR stations through the 1960's, 70's and 80's. Some shows were broadcast by the BBC in England in 1994.
This murder mystery series was based on true life cases from Scotland Yard's files. Each episode was based on an item or items of evidence in the museum.
Orson Welles hosted and narrated the shows. Mr. Welles opened each show slightly differently but followed a standard format. For example, the show, "The Bathtub", open as follows:
"This is Orson Welles speaking from London." (Big Ben starts humming in the background). "The Black Museum, repository of death... Here, in this grim stone structure on the Thames which houses Scotland Yard, is a warehouse of homicide, where everyday objects, a piece of wire, a chemist's flask, a silver shilling, all are touched by murder."
Following the opening, Mr. Welles would introduce the museum's item or items of evidence that was central to the case, leading into the dramatization. He also provided narration during the show and ended each show with his characteristic closing from the days of his Mercury Theater of the Air, remaining "obediently yours".
Harry Alan Towers produced the series from scripts written by Ira Marion. Music was composed and conducted by Sidney Torch.
The museum was not open to the public. Its purpose was then, and still is, for police training, although it did receive a considerable number of famous people, including Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. It is currently used as a lecture theater for the police and like bodies in various subjects of Criminology. But, thanks to Mr. Towers and Mr. Welles, we can still get a glimpse of what secrets are housed in The Black Museum.
-
LIVE
Badlands Media
1 day agoBadlands Media Special Coverage - The 2024 Election
27,818 watching -
2:58:24
The Charlie Kirk Show
4 hours agoJudgment Day | Maloney, Galaszewski, Dittrich, Bowyer, Joecks, Baris | 11.5.24
332K46 -
49:16
Stephen Gardner
2 hours agoBREAKING: Kamala's election scheme SURGES INTO SPOTLIGHT | Final Polling Data for Trump!
45.3K27 -
57:11
TheMonicaCrowleyPodcast
2 hours agoThe Monica Crowley Podcast: The Final Battle with Guest Steve Bannon!
22.3K -
1:25:59
The New American
2 hours agoElection Day (Finally!) | The New American Daily
47.9K2 -
2:25:13
Robert Gouveia
5 hours ago🚨 HAVE YOU VOTED? 🚨 Trump Unifies Rogan & Kelly; FBI Warnings; AZ; CO; MI
69.1K15 -
3:16:42
Benny Johnson
5 hours agoTrump Prepares for Election Day VICTORY | As GOP DOMINATES in HISTORIC Early Vote as Media PANICS
269K132 -
1:18:37
Russell Brand
4 hours agoLIVE ELECTION DAY SPECIAL – Trump VICTORY, Voting PRE-BUNKING & Last-Minute Dems PSY-OPS? SF485
283K145 -
1:17:34
The Rubin Report
5 hours agoJoe Rogan Reveals If Elon Musk Convinced Him to Vote for Trump
178K87 -
51:38
Grant Stinchfield
4 hours ago $30.50 earnedTop Pollster "Dumps" on his Own Data... Trump Actually Up Bigger than his State Polls Show!
92.2K14