Radio Caroline: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
m extra information added. I don't know about the ' sideband interference', never heard about it.
Corrected the link to Flashes & Flames feature
 
Line 1:
{{short description|UK radio station}}
{{Unreferenced|date=December 2006}}
{{other uses}}
[[Image:Radio_Caroline.jpg|frame]]
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}}
{{Use British English|date=December 2012}}
{{Infobox radio station
| name = Radio Caroline
| logo = Radio Caroline logo.svg
| logo_caption = Radio Caroline Logo
| logo_alt = Radio Caroline as script with first word in red followed by second in blue followed by a blue bell set at an angle
| city =
| area = [[United Kingdom]], [[Republic of Ireland]], parts of [[Continental Europe]] and Internationally via Radio Caroline website
| airdate = {{start date and age|1964|03|27|df=y}}
| frequencies = {{ubl|[[AM broadcasting|AM]]: {{frequency|648|KHz}} ({{frequency|1368|KHz}} for Radio Caroline North broadcasts)|[[Digital Audio Broadcasting|DAB]]}}
| former_frequencies = {{ubl|AM: {{frequency|1520|KHz}} {{small|(Caroline South)}}|{{frequency|1169|KHz}} {{small|(Caroline North)}}|{{hlist|[[AM band|AM]]: {{frequency|963|kHz}}|{{frequency|576|kHz}}}}|{{frequency|558|kHz}}}}
| former_callsigns =
| rds = Radio Caroline
| language = English
| format = Rock/Alternative
 
1970s : Album format
'''Radio Caroline''' is a European [[radio station]] that started transmissions on [[Easter Sunday]] 1964 from a [[radio ship|ship]] anchored in [[international waters]] off the coast of southeast [[England]].<ref>[http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/history2.asp Don't Get Mad, Get Even]</ref> Unlicensed by any government for most of its life, it was labelled as a [[pirate radio]] station.
 
1980s:
Although one of a number of unlicensed radio stations based on ships anchored off Britain, Radio Caroline was the first such station to broadcast all day using the [[English language]]. This, together with the station's tenacity in surviving for some 40 years, has established Radio Caroline as a household name for [[offshore radio]].
(i) 963 kHz : unformatted free-choice album format, with news.
 
(ii) 576 kHz: continuation of above, with slightly more singles played. News service at peak hours.
A legal, onshore version of Radio Caroline continues to broadcast via several methods, predominantly via satellite and over the internet.
 
(iii) 558 kHz: strict pop and oldies mainstream format (no presenter music choice) with strict adherence to format clocks. DJs could choose ordering of oldies – all current pop hits in strict rotation. News at peak hours: 7, 8, 9{{nbsp}}am, 1{{nbsp}}pm; 5, 6, 7{{nbsp}}pm, with headlines at 6:30{{nbsp}}am, 7:30{{nbsp}}am and 8:30{{nbsp}}am.
==History==
The station has seen four distinct stages:
 
''Footnotes'': Caroline 'Overdrive' continued the album format during night-time once the mainstream pop service was re-established on 576, 585 and then 558&nbsp;kHz. Firstly on 963 kHz, then from 1988 – August 1989 on 819kHz.
#1964&ndash;1968: its founding on [[March 28]], [[1964]], through to 1968 when its two ships were impounded by the shipping company
| owner = Radio Caroline Limited
#1972&ndash;1980: the return of Caroline in 1972 and survival until 1980 when the ship sank in a storm
| licensing_authority = [[Ofcom]]
#1983&ndash;1991: the second return of Caroline, using a new ship in 1983 until 1991 when this vessel was shipwrecked and brought into harbour
| sister_stations = Radio Caroline North; Radio Caroline Flashback; Radio Caroline Album Channel
#1991&ndash;present: Caroline's move onto land, operating as a primarily onshore station broadcasting principally via satellite.
| website = {{URL|https://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/|Radio Caroline}}
}}
 
'''Radio Caroline''' is a British radio station founded in 1964 by [[Ronan O'Rahilly]] and Allan Crawford, initially to circumvent the record companies' control of popular music broadcasting in the United Kingdom and the [[BBC]]'s radio broadcasting monopoly.<ref>{{cite book |last = Harris |first = Paul |author-link = Paul Harris (author) |title = Broadcasting From The High Seas |publisher = Paul Harris Publishing Edinburgh |year = 1977 |isbn = 0-904505-07-3}}</ref> Unlicensed by any government for most of its early life, it was a [[Pirate radio in the United Kingdom|pirate radio]] station that never became illegal as such due to operating outside any national jurisdiction, although after the [[Marine, &c., Broadcasting (Offences) Act 1967]] it became illegal for a British subject to associate with it.
== 1964-1968 ==
=== Radio Caroline opens ===
[[Image:Mi Amigo kleine.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Caroline's second ship, ''MV Mi Amigo'', c. 1974]]
Radio Caroline was founded by [[Ireland|Irish]] music industry businessman [[Ronan O'Rahilly]]. Unable to break the Decca and EMI duopoly on [[Radio Luxembourg]] to promote [[Adam Faith]], O'Rahilly decided to start his own radio station.
 
The Radio Caroline name was used to broadcast from international waters, using five different ships with three different owners, from 1964 to 1990, and via satellite from 1998 to 2013. Since August 2000, Radio Caroline has also broadcast 24 hours a day via the internet and by the occasional [[restricted service licence]]. Currently, the station broadcasts on 648 AM across much of England and [[Digital radio in the United Kingdom|DAB radio]] in certain areas of the UK: these services are part of the [[Ofcom]] small-scale [[DAB+]] trials. Caroline can be heard on DAB+ in [[Aldershot]], [[Birmingham]], [[Cambridge]], [[Brighton]], [[Glasgow]], [[Norwich]], [[London]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://radiotoday.co.uk/2018/04/radio-caroline-now-available-on-london-dab/|title=Radio Caroline now available on London DAB|date=3 April 2018|access-date=18 April 2019}}</ref> [[Portsmouth]], [[Poulton-le-Fylde]] and [[Woking]] on digital radio. Caroline can also be listened to over the internet.
The station, Radio Caroline, began broadcasting on [[28 March]] [[1964]] from the ex-passenger ferry MV ''Fredericia'', anchored in international waters three miles off the coast of [[Essex]], southeast England. The station took its name from [[Caroline Kennedy]], daughter of [[U.S. President]] [[John F. Kennedy]]: O'Rahilly has said in interviews that when he flew to [[Dallas, Texas]] to buy the transmitters for the radio station, he was reading a copy of ''[[Look (American magazine)|Look]]'' magazine. That issue contained a now-famous photo essay about the president and his two children John Jr and Caroline, who were playing with him in the [[Oval Office]]. O'Rahilly recalled a picture that showed John Jr crawling through a miniature doorway away from the President's legs. O'Rahilly changed the subject in his retelling of this story from John Jr to Caroline and that is how both his ship and station gained their names.
 
In May 2017, [[Ofcom]] awarded the station an [[AM band]] community licence to broadcast on 648kHz to Suffolk and north Essex;<ref name="Ofcom"/> full-time broadcasting, via a previously redundant [[BBC World Service]] frequency and transmitter mast at [[Orfordness transmitting station|Orford Ness]], commenced on 22 December 2017.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://tx.mb21.co.uk/gallery/orfordness.php|title=mb21 - The Transmission Gallery|website=tx.mb21.co.uk|access-date=18 April 2019|archive-date=14 July 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190714120711/http://tx.mb21.co.uk/gallery/orfordness.php|url-status=dead}}</ref>
Radio Caroline's first theme tune was [[Jimmy McGriff]]'s "Round Midnight" (a [[jazz standard]] composed by [[Thelonious Monk]] which was an LP track on ''I've Got a Woman'', Sue ILP 907 1962 UK; Sue 1012 USA). During March 1964, [[Birmingham]] band [[The Fortunes]] recorded the song "Caroline" (the B-side of "You've Got Your Troubles", which entered the British charts in 1965, on Decca F11809), and this later became the station's theme song, with "Round Midnight" confined to close down after the syndicated religious slot from US evangelist [[Garner Ted Armstrong]].
 
Radio Caroline broadcasts music from the 1960s to contemporary, with an emphasis on [[album-oriented rock]] (AOR) and "new" music from "carefully selected albums". On 1 January 2016, a second channel was launched called Caroline Flashback, playing pop music from the early 1950s to the early 1980s.
Radio Caroline chose a wavelength announced as "199" metres, which rhymed with "Caroline". In reality the station was on 197.3 metres (1520 [[kHz]]) at the high end of the [[medium wave]] band. The [[Netherlands|Dutch]] offshore station [[Radio Veronica]] was on 192 metres (1562 kHz) and Radio Atlanta chose 201 metres (1495 kHz). The original transmitter power of Radio Caroline was almost 20[[kW]], achieved by linking two 10kW [[Continental Electronics]] transmitters together. Broadcasting hours were initially limited from 6am to 6pm daily under the slogan "Your all-day music station", because [[Radio Luxembourg]] came on the air in the English language at 6pm and direct competition was avoided. Later the station decided to return to the airwaves after 8pm and it continued until just after midnight. In this way Caroline saved its fuel by avoiding direct competition with the most popular television programmes. The use of radio sets at work was an uncommon practice and most commuters used public transport. Consequently most of its [[pop music]] programmes were aimed at housewives and later in the day they were targeted towards children arriving home from school. Because of the lack of daytime music radio competition during the first six months of transmission, Radio Caroline soon commanded a daytime audience of several million listeners at a time when all-day pop music broadcast in English was unknown in Europe.
 
==1964–1968: MV ''Caroline''==
Caroline was not the first offshore station; the first ship-based radio station reportedly broadcast in the [[United States|USA]] from the casino ship ''Rex'', moored off [[California]] in the 1930s. Later, offshore radio ships were anchored off the coasts of [[Denmark]] and [[Sweden]] in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and since 1960 [[Radio Veronica]] had been broadcasting successfully to the [[Netherlands]] from a ship off the Dutch coast.
{{Infobox radio station
| format =
| power = Radio Caroline North = 10kW (later 20kW). Radio Caroline South = 10kW (later 50 kW).
Caroline 319 = from 8kW to 25kW
Caroline 558 = approx. 5-6kW
| owner =
| name =
| area =
| airdate =
| frequency =
| city =
| coordinates =
}}
 
===Origins===
=== Creation of Radio Caroline North and South ===
Other offshore radio ships soon followed Caroline's example and began broadcasting off the British coast. A few months after launch, Caroline merged with the new competitor station [[Radio Atlanta]], and until 1968 broadcast from two ships — the original vessel ''Fredericia'', which moved to the Bay of Ramsey, [[Isle of Man]], to become Radio Caroline North — and the [[MV Mi Amigo]], the ex-Radio Atlanta ship, which remained anchored off the Essex coast and took the name Radio Caroline South. Together the two ships were able to cover most of the British Isles and the western-most parts of continental northern Europe.
 
[[File:Kennedy children visit the Oval Office, October 1962.jpg|thumb|[[John F. Kennedy]], [[Caroline Kennedy|Caroline]] and [[JFK Jr.]] in the photograph that is said to have inspired the name of Radio Caroline]]
The first programme heard on Caroline was presented by Chris Moore [http://www.radiolondon.co.uk/caroline/jimmurphy/history.htm]. DJs who went on become nationally famous included [[Tony Blackburn]], [[Roger Day]], [[Simon Dee]], [[Spangles Muldoon]]/[[Chris Cary]], [[Keith Skues]], [[Johnnie Walker]], [[Robbie Dale]], [[Dave Lee Travis]] and [[Andy Archer]]. There were also a number of DJs from the [[United States|USA]] and [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]] countries, such as [[Graham Webb]], [[Tom Lodge]], [[Emperor Rosko]] and [[Norman St John]]. DJ [[Jack Spector]], of the [[WMCA]] "Good Guys" in New York, contributed a show, taped specifically for Radio Caroline on a regular basis. Syndicated shows from the US as well as prerecorded religious programmes were also broadcast.
[[File:Mi Amigo kleine.jpg|thumb|The {{MV|Mi Amigo}}, c. 1974, the home of Radio Caroline South from 1964 to 1967]]
 
Radio Caroline was the brainchild of the Irish musician manager and businessman [[Ronan O'Rahilly]], the idea being formulated following O'Rahilly's failure to obtain airplay for the records of one of his contracted artistes, [[Georgie Fame]], on [[Radio Luxembourg]] or the [[BBC Light Programme]]. At this time it was Radio Luxembourg policy to only promote sponsored programmes funded by major record labels: [[EMI]], [[Decca Records|Decca]], [[Pye Records|Pye]] and [[Philips Records|Philips]].
=== The ''Mi Amigo'' runs aground ===
In January 1966, the Radio Caroline South ship MV ''Mi Amigo'' drifted in a storm and ran aground on the beach at [[Frinton-on-Sea]]. Transmissions ceased as the boat entered British territorial waters, and the crew and broadcasting staff were rescued unharmed, but the ship's hull was damaged and it had to go into dry dock for repair. While the repairs were being carried out, Caroline South broadcast from the vessel ''Cheeta II'', owned by Swedish offshore station [[Radio Syd]] which was off the air at the time due to severe weather in the [[Baltic Sea]]. The ''Cheeta II'' was equpped for FM broadcasting, so to enable Caroline to return on 199 it was fitted with the 10kW transmitter from the ''Mi Amigo'', fed through a makeshift antenna system. The resulting signal was low-powered, but ensured that Caroline South's advertising revenue would not dry up.
 
Undeterred by this failure, and encouraged by Scandinavian and Dutch radio pirates, in February 1964 O'Rahilly obtained the former Danish passenger ferry {{MV|Fredericia||2}}<ref name="Fredericia">{{cite web |last1=Haworth |first1=R.B. |title=Fredericia |url=https://www.miramarshipindex.nz/ship/5120609 |website=Mirimar |access-date=25 June 2021 |quote=693 tons, registered in Kolding, renamed Caroline in 1964}}</ref> which was subsequently taken to the Irish port of [[Greenore]], which was under the ownership of O'Rahilly's father, Aodogán, in order for the vessel to be fitted out as a radio ship.
The repaired and refitted ''Mi Amigo'' attempted a return to the air on [[April 18]], broadcasting on 259 metres (actually 252, but called 259 to rhyme with Caroline and enable use of the same jingles as Radio Caroline North on 1169 kHz), with a redesigned antenna and a new 50kW transmitter. The increased power initially proved too much for the antenna insulators, and it was not until April 27 that the ''Mi Amigo'' was fully operational. The ''Cheeta II'' continued to relay Caroline South programmes until [[May 1]].
 
This was a busy time at Greenore with the work to the ''Fredericia'' being carried out in tandem with Allan Crawford's "Project Atlanta", which saw a similar conversion undertaken on the {{MV|Mi Amigo||2}}.<ref name="Henry/von Joel">{{cite book
The move to 259 metres meant that Caroline's channel was now just a notch away from the highly popular pirate radio station [[Wonderful Radio London]] on 266m (1133KHz), also with 50kW, on the one side of the dial, and the [[BBC Light Programme|BBC's Light Programme]] mainstream music and entertainment service on 247m (1214 kHz) on the other. This gave Caroline a higher profile and helped the station capture new listeners away from these other two channels. Radio Caroline North subsequently moved to 257m (1169kHz) but also called it 259. Caroline would continue to utilise the "259m" (1187 kHz) wavelength until the late 1970s.
|title = Pirate Radio: Then and Now
|author1=Mike von Joel |author2=Stuart Henry
|publisher = Blandford Press
|place = Poole, Dorset
|year = 1984
|isbn = 0-7137-1497-2}}</ref>
 
===Financing===
On [[May 3]] [[1966]] two new rival stations, [[Swinging Radio England]] and [[Britain Radio]], began test transmissions from the ''MV Olga Patricia'' (later renamed ''Laissez Faire''). Both of these stations also used 50kW transmitters, and the British government became increasingly concerned about potential interference to foreign radio stations.
 
Financial backing for the venture came from six investors, including John Sheffield (chairman of Norcross); [[Carl Ross|Carl "Johnny" Ross]] (managing director of [[Ross Group|Ross Foods]]) and [[Jocelyn Stevens]] of [[Queen (magazine)|''Queen'']] magazine, with which Radio Caroline shared its first office.<ref name="Colophon">{{cite web
=== The Radio City death ===
|url = http://www.welovecolophon.com/archive/?mag_id=2394
In June 1966 Radio Caroline embarked on a joint venture with rival pirate [[Radio City (pirate radio station)|Radio City]], which broadcast from a [[Second World War]] [[Maunsell Sea Forts|marine fort]] off the [[Kent]] coast, seven miles from [[Margate]]. One of the directors of Caroline, Major [[Oliver Smedley]], agreed to pay for a new transmitter to relay Caroline's programmes from the fort, while [[Reg Calvert]], the owner of Radio City, would continue to run the operation but this time on behalf of Radio Caroline.
|title = Queen; UK, Fortnightly since 1862
|publisher = Colophon / Maison Moderne
|___location = Luxembourg
}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal
|url = https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2009/mar/08/pirate-radio-johnnie-walker
|title = When pop pirates ruled Britannia's airwaves
|first = Simon
|last = Garfield
|journal = The Observer
|date = 8 March 2009
|access-date = 16 June 2011}}</ref>
 
===Origin of name===
However, Radio Caroline then withdrew from the deal when it was heard that the government intended to prosecute those occupying the forts, which were still [[The Crown|Crown]] property. Smedley, however, had received no payment from Calvert for the transmitter.
 
There are a multiplicity of stories with regard to how the station became known as Radio Caroline.
A raid on the Radio City fort was subsequently launched by Smedley, and the station's transmitter was put out of action. Calvert then visited Smedley's home to demand the departure of the raiders and the return of vital transmitter parts. A violent struggle developed during which Smedley shot Calvert dead. During the subsequent trial, Smedley was acquitted on grounds of self-defence.
 
One of these centres around O'Rahilly choosing the name on a trip to the United States, having seen a picture in ''[[Life (magazine)|Life]]'' of [[Caroline Kennedy]], along with her brother, [[John F. Kennedy Jr.]], innocently playing in the [[Oval Office]] of the [[White House]] whilst their father, [[John F Kennedy]], looks on. It is said that this activity was reportedly interpreted by O'Rahilly as a playful, jovial disruption of government. One particular image conveying unthreatening joy was the cheeky 4½-year-old Caroline hiding at President John F Kennedy's feet beneath the battered [[Resolute desk|''Resolute'' desk]].<ref>{{cite web
=== The 1967 Marine Broadcasting Offences Act ===
|url = https://old.radiojackie.com/pics/view_photo.php?full=1&set_albumName=Pirate-Radio-History-Jackie-Archive&id=a_Caroline_Kennedy_under_President_John_F_Kennedy_s_HMS_Resolute_Desk_Oval_Office_16_May_1962 |title=Caroline Kennedy photographed under the Oval Office desk on 16th May 1962 is on page 19 of the Radio Jackie Archive |year=2005 |access-date=23 February 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/#history_part_2.html|title=Snubbed by the radio and music establishment, O'Rahilly devises the sweet revenge of Radio Caroline|publisher=Radiocaroline.co.uk|access-date=3 August 2014}}</ref><ref>Life Photo Archives, available online</ref>
The British government responded to the presence of Caroline and the other offshore stations in 1967 by passing the [[Marine Broadcasting Offences Act]] which made it an offence to advertise or supply an offshore radio station from the UK. All the offshore stations off the British coast closed, with the exception of Radio Caroline, which moved its supply operation to the [[Netherlands]] where offshore broadcasting had not yet been outlawed. She was the only UK offshore station to do so. However, the expected [[advertising]] revenue from overseas sources was not forthcoming, and less than a year later the station was forced off the air when the Dutch shipping company which tendered the two Caroline ships seized the vessels on grounds of non-payment.
 
Another tenable theory is that the radio station was named after Caroline Maudling, who was known by O'Rahilly at the time, and was the daughter of the British government minister [[Reginald Maudling]].<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.offshoreradiomuseum.co.uk/page329.html | title=Radio Caroline History 2 }}</ref>
Six weeks after the Marine Offences Act was passed, the [[BBC]] introduced its national pop station [[BBC Radio 1|Radio 1]], modelled largely on the successful pirate competitor station to Caroline, Radio London. The old BBC Light, Third and Home channels became Radios 2, 3 and 4 respectively. It was to be another five years until the first on-land commercial radio stations began to appear in the UK. It is interesting to note that because Radio London 're-wrote' BBC news broadcasts, which were mostly broadcast on the hour that Radio London did most of its news casts on the half hour. Also, Radio Caroline used a similar method and called their newscasts 'Caroline Newsbeat'.
 
A further theory is that the name was the choice of [[Jocelyn Stevens]], who had played a prominent role in the planning stages of the offshore station. His editor of ''[[Queen (magazine)|Queen]],'' Beatrix Miller, is understood to have defined the profile of the target reader, being: ''"a twenty something, non intellectual who had left school at 16, and was a ‘good time’ girl called Caroline."'' Stevens believed that the same profile should be the target audience for the new offshore radio station, so the name ''Caroline'' was chosen.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.offshoreradiomuseum.co.uk/page329.html | title=Radio Caroline History 2 }}</ref>
BBC Radio 1 introduced a fifteen minute midday news programme called 'Newsbeat' in the 1970s.
 
===First transmissions===
==1967-1980==
=== Radio Caroline International ===
 
[[File:MV Caroline (crop colour tidy etc).jpg|thumb|[[MV Caroline|MV ''Caroline,'']] the vessel used as Radio Caroline North]]
Upon the Marine &c. Broadcasting Offences Act becoming extant law, Radio Caroline renamed itself Radio Caroline International.
Upon conclusion of her fitting out, the ''MV Fredericia'' was renamed MV ''Caroline'' with her port of registry changed to [[Panama]].
 
The MV ''Caroline'' departed Greenore on March 23, 1964, to a supposed destination in Spain. She passed [[Land's End]] on March 25, at which time she altered course and made passage through the [[English Channel]] and entered the [[North Sea]] where she anchored off [[Felixstowe]], Suffolk.
The original two ship stations of Radio Caroline International eventually ran out of money in early 1968, and a salvage company towed them away for unpaid bills. For a time nothing more was heard of Radio Caroline until a new and powerful offshore radio station aboard the MV ''Mebo II'' anchored off the coast of southeast England in time for the British [[General election]], calling itself [[Radio Northsea International]] or RNI.
 
MV ''Caroline'' began test transmissions on 27 March 1964 at 6:00 pm [[Greenwich Mean Time|GMT]] and 10:00 pm, and on 11:55 pm on 201 metres (1495 kHz). On 28 March, it began regular broadcasting at noon on {{frequency|1520|kHz}} (announced as 199 metres) with the opening conducted by [[Simon Dee]].<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/>
RNI was jammed by the UK Labour government, using its emergency transmitter at [http://tx.mb21.co.uk/gallery/droitwich/index.shtml Droitwich], and responded by campaigning for the Conservative Party in the [[United Kingdom general election 1970]]. At that moment [[Radio Northsea International]] - RNI - suddenly changed its name to Radio Caroline International, by arrangement with Radio Caroline's original owners, and it began to lobby for the introduction of licensed commercial radio in the United Kingdom. After the election this Radio Caroline International renamed itself back to RNI, but the jamming continued under the new Conservative government.
 
The first programme, which was pre-recorded, was hosted by [[Christopher Moore (DJ)|Chris Moore]]. Radio Caroline's first musical theme was [[Jimmy McGriff]]'s "Round Midnight", a [[jazz standard]] co-composed by [[Thelonious Monk]]. In March 1964, [[The Fortunes]] recorded ''Caroline'', which became the station's theme, and ''Round Midnight'' was confined to closedown on Radio Caroline North after [[The World Tomorrow (radio and television)|''The World Tomorrow'']]. The station's slogan was ''Your all-day music station''. The Dutch offshore station [[Radio Veronica]] was on {{frequency|1562|kHz}} and [[Radio Atlanta]] broadcast on {{frequency|1493|kHz}}.
=== Caroline Television ===
There were several major news stories in the European press announcing the start of [[Caroline TV]] from two aircraft using [[Stratovision]] technology. One plane was set to circle over the [[North Sea]] in international air space near the coastline of the [[United Kingdom]], while the other one was kept on standby to take over duties. Although these stories continued for some time and included details of cooperation by a former member of [[the Beatles]] and a sign-on date was given, nothing more was heard of the venture once that date came and went. It has been suggested that the entire event was a publicity stunt in an effort to keep the name of Radio Caroline in the news, but the technology behind this story was both valid and perfected by the [[Westinghouse Electric Corporation|Westinghouse]] company which invented Stratovision.
 
Radio Caroline's transmission output, in the region of 20{{nbsp}}[[kW]], was achieved by linking two 10{{nbsp}}kW [[Continental Electronics]] transmitters. Broadcasting hours were 6{{nbsp}}am to 6{{nbsp}}pm to avoid competition from [[Radio Luxembourg]], which began transmissions at 6{{nbsp}}pm. The station returned at 8{{nbsp}}pm and continued until after midnight to avoid competition with popular television programmes. Most of Radio Caroline's [[pop music]] programmes were targeted at [[housewives]], and some later programming was aimed at children. Without serious competition, Radio Caroline gained a regular daytime audience of some 7 million.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Clark|first=Ray|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9DoTDQAAQBAJ&q=+10+million.&pg=PT123|title=Radio Caroline: The True Story of the Boat that Rocked|date=3 February 2014|publisher=The History Press|isbn=978-0-7509-5473-0}}</ref>
=== 1972: Radio Caroline returns ===
Caroline made a comeback in 1972, this time from the smaller of the two ships, the MV ''Mi Amigo'', anchored off the Dutch coastal resort of [[Scheveningen]] and serviced and operated from [[the Netherlands]]. The ship had restarted broadcasting as Radio 199, but soon became Radio Caroline once again with a Top 40 line up that included DJs Chris Carey (who was also station manager), Roger 'Twiggy' Day, Andy Archer, Paul Alexander (Paul Rusling, who later set up Laser 558), Steve England, Johnny Jason, and Peter Chicago. The ship carried programmes for Radio Veronica for a short time (while the latter's ship was being repaired) and at one stage in summer 1973 broadcast two separate stations (English and Dutch) simultaneously, on 773 and 1187 kHz. Two aerials were deployed at the time, the twin transmitters were on air for about six weeks until the aerial mast partly failed. Two accommodate the second aerial, a second but short mast positioned just in front of the bridge was used.
 
===Merger with Radio Atlanta===
O'Rahilly decided Caroline should adopt an album format similar to that found on "[[progressive rock (radio format)|FM progressive rock]]" stations in the USA, as this radio market segment was uncatered for in Europe. This service was initially broadcast using the name Radio Seagull.
 
On 2 July 1964, Radio Atlanta and Radio Caroline's companies, Project Atlanta and Planet Productions, announced the stations were to merge, with Crawford and O'Rahilly as joint managing directors. Radio Atlanta closed at 8{{nbsp}}p.m. [[British Summer Time|BST]] that day. It was renamed '''Radio Caroline South''' and MV ''Mi Amigo'' remained off [[Frinton-on-Sea]], while MV ''Caroline'' broadcast as '''Radio Caroline North.'''
=== Radio Atlantis and Radio Seagull ===
Radio Caroline could not find substantial advertising revenue and so the station shared its 259 metre frequency (actually 1187 kHz, corresponding to a wavelength of 253 metres) with Dutch language pop stations, the first of which was a Belgian station called Radio Atlantis, which used the frequency during the daytime to broadcast pre-recorded programmes. Radio Seagull broadcast during the night live from the ship's studio.
 
Following the consolidation between the two companies, ''Caroline'' weighed anchor and sailed from [[Felixstowe]] en-route to the [[Isle of Man]], broadcasting as she went. The only broadcast staff on board were [[Tom Lodge]] and Jerry Leighton. ''Caroline'' took up station at her new anchorage on the southern tip of the [[Bahama Bank]], Ramsey Bay, on 6 July 1964,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cameraimages.co.uk/page22.html|title=RADIO AT SEA 1|website=Cameraimages.co.uk|access-date=18 April 2019}}</ref> at a position formerly occupied by the [[Bahama Bank Lightship]]. The two Caroline stations were now able to cover most of the British Isles.
=== Radio Mi Amigo ===
Once the contract with Radio Caroline had come to an end, Radio Atlantis moved to their own ship, the ''MV Janiene''. Daytime programmes were provided by another Belgian station, [[Radio Mi Amigo]] which was officially launched on [[January 1]] [[1974]]. In contrast to Caroline in the 1970s, this station was a commercial success, with a wide listenership in Flemish-speaking Belgium, the [[Netherlands]] and a surprisingly large following in the UK. Radio Seagull then changed its name back to Radio Caroline. Throughout most of the 1970s, Radio Caroline itself could be heard only at night, under the banner "Radio Caroline &mdash; Europe's first and only album station".
 
Whilst the two Caroline stations transmitted separately, some programmes were pre-recorded on land and broadcast simultaneously from both ships. In October 1965, O'Rahilly bought Crawford's interest in the ''Mi Amigo'' and engaged [[Tom Lodge]] from Radio Caroline North to make programme changes and regain the audience from [[Wonderful Radio London|Radio London]]. Lodge hired new [[Disc jockey|DJs]] and introduced free-form programming.
Caroline's daytime partner station Radio Mi Amigo was run by Belgian businessman [[Sylvain Tack]]. The station's offices and studios were based on [[Spain]]'s [[Playa De Aro]] coastal resort, where it produced programmes for Dutch-speaking holidaymakers. Most of the programmes of Radio Mi Amigo were taped and rebroadcast from the Caroline ship by day and were a mixture of [[Top 40]]/MOR together with native [[Dutch language]] popular music, presented by Belgian, Dutch and occasionally English DJs with frequent commercials. Land-based commercial radio was prohibited in Belgium at that time; thus Radio Mi Amigo had little competition and so enjoyed a wide popularity in Belgium and to a lesser extent in the Netherlands. Thus for the first few years there was a big demand for advertising on the station. After the closure of the Netherlands' [[Radio Veronica]], Radio Mi Amigo poached a number of Veronica presenters and shows.
 
When the US-backed Radio London arrived off the coast of England, there was an unsuccessful attempt to merge its sales operation with that of Caroline before Radio London started transmissions.{{Citation needed|date=June 2011}} The new station introduced British audiences to slick American-style top 40 radio with electronic jingles produced by Dallas-based [[PAMS]], and was an immediate success.{{citation needed|date=June 2014}}
=== Loving Awareness ===
Caroline's chosen format of heavy album tracks rather than top 40 now meant that, although the station served a market gap, overall listenership was smaller than in the 1960s. Caroline also promoted O'Rahilly's new concept of "LA" (Loving Awareness), a far-eastern inspired philosophy of love and peace. Some of the station's DJs were embarrassed at the idea of promoting love and peace on air, but some were fascinated by the challenge of promoting an abstract concept in the same way that they might promote a brand of detergent. At least one disc jockey, however, was an enthusiastic supporter of the concept. Tony Allan developed a cult following among listeners as he also combined his promotion of "Loving Awareness" with a professional style, deep knowledge of music and rich radio voice. Allan died in 2004 aged 54 from cancer, and the cult around him has grown.
 
===Broadcasting personnel===
O'Rahilly set up a group called The Loving Awareness Band, which released one album, ''Loving Awareness'' on Morelove Records. It was - and still is - promoted heavily on the station, and was rereleased by the Caroline organisation in 2006 on CD with a replica of the original sleeve. The musicians who played on the album went on to join the Blockheads and work with [[Ian Dury]].
[[File:ERosko.jpg|upright|thumb|alt=Black and white close up of a clean shaven man with long hair wearing a white shirt|[[Emperor Rosko]]]]
[[File:Tom Lodge 1966 - 2004.jpg|thumb|alt= Double image firstly in black and white of a clean shaven man wearing a striped shirt captioned as 1966 next to a colour close up captioned as 2004 of the same man looking older with longer hair wearing a red shirt|[[Tom Lodge]] was a Radio Caroline disc jockey from 1964 until his death in 2012]]
Radio Caroline's first programme, on 28 March 1964, was presented by [[Christopher Moore (DJ)|Chris Moore]].<ref name="Radio Caroline North">{{cite book|url=http://www.radiolondon.co.uk/caroline/jimmurphy/history.htm |title=Radio Caroline North |year=1992 |first=Robert |last=Chapman |isbn=0-415-07817-2 |publisher=Routledge |access-date=3 December 2009}}</ref> Presenters [[Tony Blackburn]], [[Roger Gale]], [[Ray Teret]], [[Simon Dee]], [[Tony Prince]], [[Spangles Muldoon]], [[Keith Skues]], [[Johnnie Walker (DJ)|Johnnie Walker]], [[Robbie Dale]], [[Dave Lee Travis]], [[Tommy Vance]], [[Tom Edwards (broadcaster)|Tom Edwards]], [[Bob Stewart (radio presenter)|Bob Stewart]] and [[Andy Archer (radio presenter)|Andy Archer]] became well known. Some DJs from the United States and [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]] countries, such as [[Graham Webb (broadcaster)|Graham Webb]], [[Emperor Rosko]] and [[Keith Hampshire]] were also heard. DJ [[Jack Spector]], of the [[WMCA (AM)|WMCA]] "Good Guys" in New York, regularly recorded for Radio Caroline. Syndicated shows from the US and recorded religious programmes were also broadcast. [[BBC Light Programme|BBC Radio 2]] newsreader [[Colin Berry]] started his career reading the news on Radio Caroline South.
 
In May 1965 Rick Wild, lead vocalist with [[The Overlanders (band)|The Overlanders]], spent a week on board presenting mainstream pop and country music, and mid-September 1965, the crew and DJs on ''Mi Amigo'' were joined for the weekend by 1960s pop singer Sylvan Whittingham, who visited the ship to promote her single "We Don't Belong". Whittingham was unable to leave on the tender when a storm arose, and so spent the time helping present programmes, make jingles, and close the station at night.<ref>{{cite web
Caroline's constant plugging of "LA", together with the progressive rock album music it played &mdash; bands such as [[Pink Floyd]]; [[Emerson, Lake and Palmer]]; [[Led Zeppelin]]; [[Crosby, Stills & Nash (and Young)|Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young]]; and [[Hawkwind]] - gave the station an unusual and distinctive sound.
|url = http://www.offshoreradio.co.uk/odds52.htm
|title = The Pirate Radio Hall of Fame: Sylvan the Stowaway
|publisher = Offshoreradio.co.uk}}</ref>
 
===''Mi Amigo'' runs aground===
During this time, the theme tune of the station changed to "On My Way Back Home" by [[New Riders of the Purple Sage]], a track from the ''Gypsy Cowboy'' album which included the words "Flying to the sun, sweet Caroline".
 
On 20 January 1966, the ''Mi Amigo'' lost its anchor in a storm, drifted and ran aground on the beach at Frinton-on-Sea. The crew and broadcasting staff were rescued unharmed, but the ship's hull was damaged and repairs were carried out at [[Zaandam]], [[Netherlands]].
=== ''Last of the Pirates'' ===
[[Image:Book cover- bob noakes last of the pirates.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Cover from Bob Noakes' ''Last of the Pirates'' shows the ''Mi Amigo'' c. 1973, with short-lived triangular lattice mast.]]
The book ''Last of the Pirates'' by engineer and occasional DJ Bob Noakes (Edinburgh, Paul Harris Publishing, [[1984]], ISBN 0-86228-092-3) describes this period as one of poverty, makeshift equipment, disorganisation and severe personality clashes amongst the DJs and office staff. It must be borne in mind that we only have his word for this, and some of his claims may be exaggerated for literary effect.
 
Between 31 January and 1 May, Radio Caroline South broadcast from the vessel ''Cheeta II'', owned by [[Britt Wadner]] of Swedish offshore station [[Radio Syd]], which was off the air because of pack ice in the [[Baltic Sea]].<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/> The ''Cheeta II'' was equipped for FM broadcasting, so it was fitted with the 10&nbsp;kW transmitter from the ''Mi Amigo'', feeding a makeshift antenna. Whilst the resulting signal was low-powered, it did ensure that Caroline South's advertising revenue would continue.
According to Noakes, some of the station's equipment was acquired on credit which was never repaid, tenders had to keep changing ports to avoid [[customs]] raids, and there was a high turnover of DJs due to inexperience or personal conflicts. Noakes claims that some of the best Loving Awareness promotions were made at a time when DJs were at each other's throats (sometimes almost literally).
 
On 18 April the ''Mi Amigo'' returned to its Frinton-on-Sea anchorage with a redesigned antenna and a new 50&nbsp;kW transmitter and attempted to resume broadcasting, nominally on 259 metres to enable the same jingles as Radio Caroline North on 1169&nbsp;kHz to be used, but actually 253 metres. Initially the transmitter was found to be too powerful for the antenna insulators, however by 27 April the ''Mi Amigo'' was fully operational.
Noakes struggled to keep the station on the air despite the poor condition of some of the equipment, describing days of back-breaking work in appalling weather, assisted by most of the English-speaking staff but never the Dutch, who apparently considered maintenance work beneath them. When the station managed to get on the air many of the Seagull and Caroline DJs presented programmes while high on [[cannabis|marijuana]].
 
Radio Caroline South's 259 metres signal was now near those of Radio London on 266 m (1133&nbsp;kHz) and the [[BBC Light Programme|BBC's Light Programme]] on 247 m (1214&nbsp;kHz). Radio Caroline North subsequently moved to 257 m (1169&nbsp;kHz) but also called it 259.
Finally in 1974 some of the staff planned a coup, which would have involved taking over the ship, sailing it to the coast of Belgium next to the Radio Atlantis ship ''Janiene'', and continuing to broadcast normal Caroline and Mi Amigo programmes so the public would be unaware that anything was going on. Noakes and his fellow conspirators planned to set up a simultaneous daytime Caroline service on 389 metres (773 kHz) broadcasting a [[Top Forty]] format which could have attracted major advertisers, while retaining Caroline's nighttime album rock format on 259.
 
===Radio City affair===
However, the plot was discovered, Noakes was fired and took a job at RNI, and, as he claims, the backstabbing and disorganisation at Caroline continued.
 
In October 1965 negotiations began for Radio Caroline to take over [[Radio City (pirate radio station)|Radio City]], which broadcast from [[Shivering Sands Army Fort]], a Second World War [[Maunsell Sea Forts|marine fort]] off the [[Kent]]<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/> coast. One of Radio Caroline's directors, [[Major (rank)|Major]] [[Oliver Smedley]], formerly of [[Radio Atlanta]], entered into a partnership with Radio City's owner, pop group manager [[Reginald Calvert]] and installed a more powerful transmitter on the fort. However, according to Gerry Bishop's book ''Offshore Radio'' this transmitter was antiquated and failed to work. Smedley later withdrew from the deal.<ref>{{cite news
=== Dutch Marine Broadcasting Act ===
|url = http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article7053070.ece
In 1974 the Dutch government passed laws to prohibit [[pirate radio]] which came into effect on [[September 1]]. However, Caroline continued broadcasting, this time moving its headquarters and the servicing operation to [[Spain]] and its ship from off the Dutch coast to a position in the Knock Deep Channel, approximately 30 km from the British coast. On September 1 a small motor launch ran into difficulties in rough seas and tied up alongside the ''Mi Amigo'' until help could arrive. Radio Caroline broadcast appeals for help, giving the ship's position as 51° 41' N, 1° 35' E. A [[coastguard]] vessel was sent to escort the boat back to shore, but the authorities were unhappy that Caroline fans had jammed the emergency switchboards.
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100524063428/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article7053070.ece
|url-status = dead
|archive-date = 24 May 2010
|title = Dorothy Calvert: Rock'n'roll entrepreneur and pirate radio pioneer
|date = 8 March 2010
|publisher = Times Newspapers Ltd
|access-date = 17 June 2011}}</ref>
 
On 20 June 1966, Smedley boarded the Shivering Sands Fort with ten workmen to repossess a transmitter that he had supplied, but had not been paid for. The next day, Calvert visited Smedley's home in Saffron Walden, Essex, to demand the departure of the raiders and the return of vital transmitter parts. During a violent struggle, Calvert was shot dead. Smedley's men occupied the fort until 22 June.<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/>
After August 31, pre-recorded shows for Radio Mi Amigo were delivered on cassettes which were much smaller and lighter than reels of tape although the sound quality was greatly inferior.
 
Smedley was charged with Calvert's murder on 18 July, but this was reduced to a charge of manslaughter. Smedley's trial opened on 11 October at Chelmsford Assizes, where the jury acquitted him.<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/>
It was claimed that the stations were tendered from Spain. In practice the ''Mi Amigo'' was tendered clandestinely from ports in Britain, [[France]], [[Belgium]] and the [[Netherlands]]. Tenders and small boat owners were warned and in some cases prosecuted for ferrying staff and provisions out to the ship. Belgium had outlawed offshore radio in 1962 and its authorities took action to prosecute the advertisers. This cut the station's revenues. In addition, Belgian courts sentenced the owner and a number of DJs to fines and jail terms in absentia &mdash; although the prison terms were later cancelled.
 
=== Wavelength changes Legislation===
{{More citations needed section|date=June 2011}}
{{Infobox radio station
| name = Radio Caroline International
| area = Southern England, western Europe, Northern England, Ireland and Scotland
| airdate = 15 August 1967 | frequency = wavelengths announced as "259" metres
| format = popular music and news
| power = 50 kW
| owner = Legal status unclear due to a need to conceal actual legal ownership.
}}
 
In 1967, the UK Government enacted the [[Marine, &c., Broadcasting (Offences) Act 1967]], outlawing advertising on or supplying an unlicensed offshore radio station from the UK. In an earlier [[House of Commons of the United Kingdom|House of Commons]] debate (in June 1966), the government had said that the pirate ships were a danger because of radio frequency interference to emergency shipping channels, and to overseas radio stations and the pirates were paying no royalties to artists, composers or record companies. Furthermore, it was stated that the pirates' use of wavelengths also broke international agreements.<ref>{{hansard|1966/jun/22/wireless-and-television-pirate-stations |access-date=3 August 2014}}</ref>
The two stations experimented with several different broadcast frequencies. After a short test on 773 kHz in late 1975, May 1976 saw Caroline beginning a daytime service on 1562 kHz (192 metres, the old Radio Veronica frequency) usingone of the 10 kW transmitters, while its existing overnight service continued to share the 50 kW tx with Mi Amigo's daytime programming on 1187 kHz (253 metres, announced as 259).
 
The Manx parliament, the [[Tynwald]], attempted to exclude the North ship from the legislation, appealing to the European Court{{which|date=February 2024}} on the legality of the act being applied to the [[Isle of Man]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk/search/archives/b7346bdf-edf0-306e-bd0a-e10cbf80e0d7 |title=Radio Caroline North pirate radio memorabilia |author=Eleanor Williams |website=Archives Hub |date=November 2015 |accessdate=20 March 2025}}</ref> Two ([[Radio 270]] and Radio London) of the remaining four UK-based offshore stations closed, but the two Caroline ships continued with their supply operation moved to Netherlands waters, where unlicensed ship-based broadcasting was not outlawed until 1974.
In December of that year Mi Amigo moved onto 1562 kHz on the 50 kW tx, leaving Caroline on 1187 kHz 24 hours a day on the 10 kW. The reduction in power caused Caroline to experience greater interference at night, and in an attempt to improve the signal it was decided to move Caroline to a new frequency. On [[March 3]] [[1977]] (coincidentally the 9th anniversary of the Caroline ships being towed away in 1968) Caroline closed down, announcing that it would return six days later on an improved wavelength of 319 metres. To allow Radio Mi Amigo to continue broadcasting by day, the engineering work necessary for Caroline's move had to be carried out at night after the 50 kW transmitter was switched off, accounting for the six day closure.
 
When the Marine, &c., Broadcasting (Offences) Act 1967 become law on 14 August 1967, Radio Caroline was renamed Radio Caroline International. Six weeks later, the [[BBC]] introduced its new national pop station [[BBC Radio 1|Radio 1]], modelled largely on the successful offshore station Radio London, and employed many of the ex-pirate DJs. The [[BBC Light Programme|BBC Light]], [[BBC Third Programme|Third]], and [[BBC Home Service|Home]] programmes became [[BBC Radio 2|Radios 2]], [[BBC Radio 3|3]] and [[BBC Radio 4|4]] respectively.<ref>{{cite news | url = https://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/09/27/bvradio127.xml&page=1 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071018203739/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/09/27/bvradio127.xml&page=1 | url-status = dead | archive-date = 18 October 2007 | work = Daily Telegraph | title = The day we woke up to pop music on Radio 1| date = 27 September 2007 | first = Imogen | last = Carter | access-date = 30 September 2007}}</ref>
Caroline returned on schedule on [[March 9]] on a frequency of 953 kHz (actually 315 metres but called 319, again because 319 rhymed with Caroline). This frequency produced very strong [[heterodyne]] interference because the transmitter crystal was off-channel, and Caroline soon moved to the adjacent channel, 962 kHz (312 metres but still called 319). this was a relatively clear channel that had previously been used by [[Radio Atlantis]], and Caroline's reception in England improved.
 
On 3 March 1968, the radio ships ''Mi Amigo'' and ''Caroline'' were boarded and seized before the day's broadcasting began. They were towed to Amsterdam by a salvage company to secure unpaid bills for servicing by the Dutch tender company [[Wijsmuller Transport]].<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/> ''Caroline'' was broken up for scrap in 1972.<ref>{{Cite web|title=MV Fredericia/MV Caroline|url=http://www.bobleroi.co.uk/ScrapBook/MVFredericia/MV_Fred.html|access-date=7 September 2021|website=Bobleroi.co.uk}}</ref>
Meanwhile Radio Mi Amigo experienced interference on 1562 kHz (as had Veronica before it) and announced another frequency change. The 1562 kHz service closed on [[July 23]], [[1977]] and Mi Amigo reopened on 1412 kHz (212 metres) two days later. This channel produced strong sideband interference. {{Fact|to whom ?|date=March 2007}}
 
Because of the rise of land-based pirate stations after the Marine, &c., Broadcasting (Offences) Act 1967 became law (usually stations run from bedrooms or outdoor sheds with small wattage transmitters), at least two stations later broadcast using the Caroline name, one based in Dublin. Those broadcasts took place between 1970 and 1973.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://dxarchive.com/ireland_a_to_z_irish_pirates_radio_caroline_dublin_1970.html|title=Radio Caroline Dublin|website=dxarchive.com|access-date=18 April 2019}}</ref>
Finally it was decided to move Radio Mi Amigo onto 962 kHz (the same frequency as Caroline), this happened on [[December 1]]. Generator trouble meant that no longer two services could be broadcast simultaneously, and so Radio Caroline was once more relegated to a night-time only service. The upside was that both stations were once more sharing the 50 kW tx, which meant that Caroline began to receive mail from all over Europe. At times one of the 10 kW transmitters was used to save on fuel and because the generators give more trouble as time went by. The 10 kW transmitters could be run on the Henshaw generator that was available beside the main two Man units and a Cummings that was positioned on the aft deck behind the wheelhouse.
 
== 1970: Radio North Sea International ==
To the chagrin of fans, Caroline then began broadcasting sponsored evangelical programmes in order to supplement its income. Such programmes had been a staple of the 1960s pirates, but Caroline was broadcasting as many as three hours of them each night after Radio Mi Amigo closed, pushing the start of music programmes back to 9 p.m.
{{Infobox radio station
| name = Radio Caroline International
| area = Broadcasting from various locations offshore to Western Europe
| airdate = Sat 13 June – Fri 19 June 1970
| frequency = 244m MW, 100.0 MHz FM, 6205 kHz SW
| format = popular music and news
| power = 105 kW MW
| erp = 90 kW MW
| owner = Mebo Ltd
| affiliations = A brief name change from Radio North Sea International during the UK General Election campaign, after which the station reverted to its original name.
}}
 
On 24 March 1970, a radio ship named {{MV|Mebo II||2}} anchored off the east coast of England during the [[1970 United Kingdom general election|UK general election]] campaign, broadcasting as [[Radio North Sea International]] (RNI). RNI operated on [[medium wave]], short wave and FM. Its medium wave transmission was [[Radio jamming|jammed]] by the UK authorities and on 13 June, RNI changed its name to Radio Caroline International with co-operation from Ronan O'Rahilly. Radio Caroline lobbied against the [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour Party]], for the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative Party]] and for the introduction of licensed commercial radio in the United Kingdom. Following the election, RNI resumed its original name but jamming continued under the newly elected Conservative government.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/#history_part_4.html|title=Caroline continues alone, is overwhelmed by difficulties but returns to punish the politicians|publisher=Radiocaroline.co.uk|access-date=3 August 2014}}</ref> It was not until RNI returned to its original anchorage off the Netherlands that the jamming ceased.
On [[October 20]], [[1978]] a combination of technical and financial problems put the ''Mi Amigo'' off the air. Unhappy at the loss of advertising revenue, Radio Mi Amigo terminated its contract with Caroline in November and set about equipping its own ship. Caroline finally returned to the air on [[April 15]], [[1979]], broadcasting in Dutch and English under its own name by day. Radio Mi Amigo began broadcasting from the ''MV Magdalena'' later that year, but this was short-lived.
 
== Caroline Television ==
=== The ''Mi Amigo'' sinks ===
News stories appeared in Europe<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.offshoreradio.co.uk/ctv.htm |title=Caroline TV – the press cuttings |publisher=Offshoreradio.co.uk |date=30 June 1970 |access-date=3 August 2014}}</ref> announcing the start of Caroline Television<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cherishedtelevision.co.uk/caroline.html |title=Caroline Television |publisher=Cherishedtelevision.co.uk |date=16 February 1970 |access-date=3 August 2014 |archive-date=23 September 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150923202538/http://www.cherishedtelevision.co.uk/caroline.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> from two [[Lockheed Constellation|Super Constellation]] aircraft using [[Stratovision]] technology. One would circle over the [[North Sea]] in international air space near the United Kingdom, while the other remained on standby. Presentations were made to US advertising agencies. These stories continued and included supposed co-operation by a former member of [[The Beatles]] and a sign-on date of 1 July; the station failed to appear.<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/> The TV operation was later found to be a publicity stunt.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Morrison |first=Colin |date=18 March 2024 |title=How a radio ship and 7 men shook up Britain in 1964 |url=https://flashesandflames.com/2024/03/15/how-a-radio-ship-and-7-men-shook-up-britain-in-1964/ |url-status=live |access-date=1 November 2015 |website=Flashes & Flames}}</ref>
 
==1972–1980: ''Mi Amigo'' rescued==
By the end of the 1970s, conditions on the MV ''Mi Amigo'' had deteriorated. The ship was now 60 years old and had been used to house offshore radio stations for almost 20 years, since its original use as [[Sweden]]'s [[Radio Nord]] in 1961. The ship had drifted and run aground on sandbanks in the [[North Sea]] a number of times.
{{Infobox radio station
| name = Radio Caroline and related stations
| area = Broadcasting from various offshore locations to Western Europe
| airdate = 1972
| frequency = various
| format = album rock
| power = 10 kW, later 50 kW
| erp = 27 KW (highly variable)
| owner = Status unclear and mainly operated by supporters
| sister_stations = Radio Atlantis 1973 and Radio Mi-Amigo 1974–1978
}}
In 1972, MV ''Mi Amigo'' was bought for her scrap value at auction by enthusiast Gerard van Dam, who intended to use her as a free radio museum. O'Rahilly promised financial backing if van Dam could return the ship to broadcasting condition.<ref name="Noakes">{{cite book
|title = Last of the Pirates: A saga of everyday life on board Radio Caroline
|author = Noakes, Bob
|publisher = Paul Harris Publishing
|place = Edinburgh
|year = 1984}}</ref>
 
The ship anchored off the Dutch coastal resort of [[Scheveningen]] and was serviced and operated from the Netherlands. That autumn various tests, consisting of continuous music, were made on 259 metres. The station restarted just before Christmas as Radio 199 but soon became Radio Caroline, with a Top 40 format. DJs Chris Cary, broadcasting as [[Spangles Muldoon]] (who was also station manager), Andy Archer, Paul Alexander, Norman Barrington, [[Steve England]], Johnny Jason and Peter Chicago (real name Peter Murtha)<ref name="Noakes" /> manned the station.
One particularly serious grounding occurred in September 1976 when the ship broke its anchor chain in heavy seas, the studios were flooded, the antenna feed cable broke and the hull was breached below the water line. On that occasion the crew had managed to patch the hull and keep the ship afloat until a tender arrived with welding gear and a new (and according to some reports, stolen) anchor. Six days after the grounding the stations were back on the air almost as if nothing had happened, but it was not to be the last such incident.
 
In late 1972, Radio Caroline had money problems. On 28 December, unpaid crew cut the ''Mi Amigo'''s generator fuel line and departed. Later that day, the Dutch Royal Navy returned the crew and fighting broke out on board. Two days later, ''Mi Amigo'' was towed to [[IJmuiden]] and seized because of unpaid bills.<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/> Because of the Christmas holidays, no solicitors were available to issue a writ and the ship lay in Amsterdam harbour until O'Rahilly arranged for it to be towed back to sea. The ship was further delayed by hull damage, and repaired before writs could be issued.<ref name="Noakes" />
As early as 1972 serious doubts had been voiced as to the ship's seaworthiness, but by the end of the 70s some of the boat crews that visited the ''Mi Amigo'' were describing it as a floating death trap, so badly rusted that it was only being held together by its paint.
 
Between 11 and 20 April 1973, the ship broadcast for Radio Veronica while its ship, the ''[[MV Norderney|Norderney]]'', was aground. Caroline DJ Norman Barrington acted as technician, whilst news readers Freek Simon and Arend Langenberg continued the live news service. Tom Collins and Freek did live programmes on occasions the taped shows were unavailable, whilst Norman played the music. Because of a law that allows pirates in distress to come ashore without arrest, the running aground had no consequences for the crew.<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/> During summer 1973, it broadcast separate stations in English and Dutch simultaneously, on 389 m/773&nbsp;kHz and 253 m (announced as 259)/1187&nbsp;kHz. Two aerials and twin transmitters were used for about six weeks until the aerial mast failed. To accommodate the second aerial, a second short mast, just in front of the bridge, was employed as the other end of the aerial fixed to the main mast.{{Clarify|date=January 2012}}
Finally, in March 1980, the ''Mi Amigo'' foundered in a storm after once again losing its anchor and drifting for several miles, and began taking in water. The crew were rescued by lifeboat. A small generator had been left running to power the pumps, but the generator failed and the ''Mi Amigo'' sank. The ''Mi Amigo'''s 160-foot mast remained erect, pointing skywards out of the sea for a further six years in what some fans called a gesture of defiance.
 
===Radio Atlantis and Radio Seagull===
==1983-1990==
{{main|Radio Atlantis}}
[[Image:Cd cover- the legend lives on (ross revenge).jpg|thumb|right|200px|The ''[[Ross Revenge]]'' at anchor. Cover photo from ''The Legend Lives On'', a 1990 Dutch CD of Caroline recordings.]]
Around this time, O'Rahilly decided Caroline should adopt an album format similar to [[progressive rock (radio format)|FM progressive rock]] stations in the US, an audience not catered for in Europe. This service was Radio Seagull and broadcast live during the evening.
In 1983 Radio Caroline returned to the air for a third time: this time from its biggest and most robust ship yet, the MV ''[[Ross Revenge]]'', a sturdy ex-[[North Sea]] factory [[fishing trawler]]. The name ''Revenge'' was not considered entirely appropriate for a station devoted to Loving Awareness (the ship was originally built during the [[United Kingdom|Anglo]]-[[Iceland]]ic [[Cod War]], hence the name), and it was originally intended to rename the ship ''Imagine'' after the [[John Lennon]] [[Imagine (song)|song]]. However, for legal or financial reasons, this was never done. The station's antenna was 300 ft (90 m) high and was the tallest mast on any ship in the world, and well over 100 ft higher than the mast of the ''Mi Amigo''. Officially Caroline was now run from offices in North America with most of the advertising coming from the US and [[Canada]]. In practice, day-to-day servicing of the station was carried out clandestinely from [[France]] and the UK. From the ship's original anchorage in the Knock deep the ''Mi Amigo's'' mast could be seen on the horizon.
 
Since Radio Caroline could not find enough advertising, it shared its nominal 259-metre wavelength (actually 1187&nbsp;kHz or 253 metres) with Dutch-language pop stations. The first was a Belgian station called [[Radio Atlantis]], owned by Belgian businessman Adriaan van Landschoot. Programmes were recorded on land and broadcast between 6{{nbsp}}a.m. and 7{{nbsp}}p.m. Rough weather sometimes prevented tapes from arriving and old programmes had to be repeated. Later in 1973, when the contract with Radio Caroline ended, the crew of Radio Atlantis moved to their own ship, the {{MV|Jeanine}}.<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/>
O'Rahilly wanted an [[oldies]] station. This met with opposition from some DJs and crew who had previously served on the ''Mi Amigo''. Caroline returned to the air with the former album format as on the old ship.
 
Radio Seagull became Radio Caroline on 23 February 1974, retaining the album format. Throughout most of the 1970s, Radio Caroline could be heard only at night, calling itself "Europe's first and only album station".
The MV ''Ross Revenge'' was more than twice the size of the old vessel and was fitted with more elaborate transmitting equipment than the ''Mi Amigo'' had seen. This enabled her to transmit not only Radio Caroline, now with a format that settled down to a mix of pop and rock oldies and the latest top 40, but also a number of other services. As in the 1970s Caroline tried out several frequencies, among them 963, 576, 585 (briefly), 558 (after [[Laser 558]] closed) and later 819 kHz. (By this time European mediumwave channels had been reallocated to exact multiples of 9.) In the evenings on 963, in addition to the main Radio Caroline service on 576 or 558, some alternative music programmes were tried, including the [[reggae]]-oriented "Jamming 963", and then throughout 1986 and early 1987, a separate programme of progressive and indie rock called [[Caroline Overdrive]].
 
=== Radio MoniqueMi Amigo===
Another Belgian station, '''Radio Mi Amigo International''', launched on 1 January 1974; it was run by Belgian businessman and [[Waffle|Suzy Waffles]] owner [[Sylvain Tack]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.offshoreechos.com/Sylvain%20Tack.htm |title=Tribute to Sylvain Tack |publisher=Offshoreechos.com |access-date=4 November 2011}}</ref> The station's offices and studios were in [[Brakel, Belgium|Brakel]], Belgium, but moved to [[Castell-Platja d'Aro]], Costa Brava, Spain in March 1975 after a raid by Belgian police. Here they produced programmes for Dutch-speaking holidaymakers, mostly [[Europop]], [[Top 40]], [[Middle of the road (music)|MOR]] and Dutch language popular music presented by Belgian, Dutch and occasionally English DJs with frequent commercials. Because commercial radio was prohibited in Belgium, Radio Mi Amigo had little competition from the former BRT State Radio and TV (today VRT Flemisch State radio and TV) and became very popular in Belgium, the Netherlands and the UK. For the first years, advertising on the station was in demand. When [[Radio Veronica]] closed in 1974, some presenters moved to Radio Mi Amigo.
Once again, Caroline had a Dutch operation. From December 1984 the ''Ross Revenge'' broadcast the taped and live programmes of a Dutch music radio production company by day under the name [[Radio Monique]] using the 50 kW transmitter. These programmes featured mainly Pop and Euro-Pop style music, aimed at the mainstream Dutch radio listening audience, which gave Radio Monique wide appeal throughout Benelux.
 
===Loving Awareness===
In addition, Caroline transmitted paid-for programmes of various Dutch and American religious [[evangelist]] broadcasters such as [[Johann Maasbach]] and [[Roy Masters (commentator)|Roy Masters]]. these were broadcast on medium wave (and later on short-wave as well) under the name "Viewpoint 963/819" (or "World Mission Radio" in the case of the SW service).
Caroline's album format meant that, although the station served a gap in the market, its audience was smaller than in the 1960s. Caroline also promoted O'Rahilly's concept of ''Loving Awareness'' (LA), a far-eastern philosophy of love and peace. Some DJs were embarrassed but some were fascinated by the challenge of an abstract concept.
 
In 1974, O'Rahilly set up a pop group called The Loving Awareness Band, comprising [[John Turnbull (musician)|John Turnbull]] (guitar) and [[Mick Gallagher]] (keyboards) both formerly of [[Skip Bifferty]] and two session musicians, [[Norman Watt-Roy]] (bass) and Charlie Charles (drums). In 1976, The Loving Awareness Band released their only album, ''Loving Awareness'' on More Love Records (ML001), a label set up by O'Rahilly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.popgeekheaven.com/music-discovery/lost-treasures-loving-awareness|title=Lost Treasures – Loving Awareness|last=Marston|first=Peter|date=17 June 2014|website=Pop Geek Heaven|access-date=2 August 2017}}</ref> The album was reissued on CD on Ross Records, c.1992, and in a "30th Anniversary Edition" with bonus material on SMC Records in 2005. The band broke up in 1977; Watt-Roy and Charles played on [[Ian Dury]]'s ''[[New Boots and Panties!!]]'' album, and Turnbull and Gallagher joined them on the [[Stiff Records|Stiff]]'s tour, becoming [[The Blockheads]].<ref>{{AllMusic | class = artist | id = p19030 | tab = biography | label = Biography of Loving Awareness | first = Bruce | last = Eder | access-date = 18 February 2009 }}</ref>
In 1985 following the arrival of another station Laser 558, the British government launched a surveillance action lasting several months, anchoring a vessel on board which were officials from the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). The DJs nicknamed the action 'Eurosiege 85'. The action was thought to have been primarily targeted at Laser but Caroline was somewhat affected as well. Vessels and persons attempting to supply the two stations from land were subject to harassment and prosecution.
 
===Dutch legislation===
In November 1985, the competitor offshore station, Laser, dragged its anchor in a storm. Laser broadcast a [[Mayday (distress signal)]] call, which the DTI answered and escorted the ''Communicator'' into harbour, where they impounded the ship. With Laser off the air, Caroline moved from 576 kHz to Laser's 558 kHz frequency, now broadcasting a [[Top 40]] music format similar to Laser's under the name Caroline 558. Thus when Laser briefly returned as Laser Hot Hits, it was in turn forced to use Caroline's former (and somewhat inferior) frequency of 576.
The Dutch government banned unlicensed offshore radio on 1 September 1974. Radio Caroline continued, moving its headquarters and servicing operation to Spain. On 30 August 1974 ''Mi Amigo'' moved from the Dutch coast to the Knock Deep Channel, approximately {{Convert|12|mi|km|0}} from the British coast. After 31 August, shows for Radio Mi Amigo were delivered on [[compact cassette|cassettes]] rather than [[Reel-to-reel audio tape recording|reel-to-reel tapes]]. Beginning in 1975, the cassettes were transported from [[Platja d'Aro|Playa d'Aro]] on the Europa Bus service, which carried people from [[Amsterdam]] to [[Madrid]] at low prices. The tapes were picked up in Belgium at a bus stop, taken to a small aircraft and dropped in the sea close to the radio ship. The "Top 50" tapes were flown over by helicopter to get them on board more quickly.{{cn|date=April 2024}}
 
The ''Mi Amigo'' was tendered clandestinely from Britain, France, Belgium and the Netherlands. Tenders and boat owners were warned, and some were prosecuted for ferrying staff and provisions to the ship. Belgium had outlawed offshore radio in 1962 and prosecuted advertisers, cutting the station's revenue. Belgian courts sentenced Tack and some DJs to fines and jail ''[[Trial in absentia|in absentia]]'', although the prison terms were later cancelled.{{cn|date=April 2024}}
=== The mast collapses ===
In 1987 a [[Great Storm of 1987|massive storm]] hit southern England, causing loss of life and severe damage to buildings and trees. Unable to take shelter inside territorial waters, the MV ''Ross Revenge'' was forced to weather the storm in the North Sea. Unbeknown at the time, the storm had weakened her 300 foot antenna mast, and it collapsed in a further storm some weeks later (a video taken aboard the ship at the time by [[Nigel MacArthur|Nigel Harris]] is widely available). Caroline quickly returned to the airwaves Initially with a makeshift aerial which gave less powerful signal (and as a result, a much reduced audience) For several months only one transmitter could be used leading to the loss of the crucial income-generating Radio Monique although a substitute Dutch daytime service Radio 558 (later Radio 819) was eventually established.
 
===Wavelength changes===
=== 1989 Joint Anglo-Dutch Raid ===
The two stations experimented with different frequencies. After a short test on 773&nbsp;kHz in late 1975, in May 1976, Radio Caroline began a daytime service on 1562&nbsp;kHz (192 m) using a 10&nbsp;kW transmitter, while its overnight service continued to share the 50&nbsp;kW transmitter with Radio Mi Amigo's daytime programming on 1187&nbsp;kHz (253 metres, announced as 259).
On land, the UK [[Margaret Thatcher|Thatcher]] government sharpened the 1967 anti-offshore broadcasting law further, this time to permit the boarding and silencing of stations operating even in international waters, if British nationals were involved. On [[August 19]], [[1989]] (months before the new law had even made it through Parliament) James Murphy, an investigator for the Office of [[Official Solicitor]] acting on behalf of the Department of Trade and Industry, led colleagues and counterparts from the Netherlands Radio Regulatory Authority to carry out a raid on the ''Ross Revenge'' in which vital equipment was wrecked or confiscated. It was claimed that Caroline's use of a short wave frequency 6215 kHz for the transmission of paid-for religious programmes was causing interference to maritime communications (although the shortwave transmissions had stopped on the day prior to the raid). That station was called World Mission Radio and its on air announced address was in [[California]]. Another possible reason for the raid is that the Dutch station Radio 819 ran catchy adverts for a cigarette brand, Texas Cigarettes. The blatant advertising of a product banned from being advertised by European Union law further compounded the authorities' venom for the unregulated broadcasts that were emanating from the ''Ross Revenge''. The main reason according to most people was the Dutch state radio station found out that 1.5 million people were listening each day to Radio Monique, transmitted from the ''Ross Revenge''. The station complained, to do something about that because they did not want less advertising money.
 
In December 1976, Radio Mi Amigo moved to 1562&nbsp;kHz on the 50&nbsp;kW transmitter, leaving Caroline on 1187&nbsp;kHz 24 hours a day on the 10&nbsp;kW. Radio Caroline had greater night-time interference, and it was decided to move Caroline to a new frequency. On 3 March 1977, Caroline closed, announcing that it would return six days later on 319 metres. To allow Radio Mi Amigo to continue broadcasting by day, the engineering work for Caroline's move had to be carried out over six nights, after the 50&nbsp;kW transmitter was switched off.
Part of the raid was broadcast live before officials finally cut off the transmitters. Dutch staff were arrested and taken back to the Netherlands, together with most of the broadcasting equipment that had been used for the Dutch language broadcasts. Although the British staff were not arrested and were left on the ship, Radio Caroline was no longer in a position to broadcast.
 
Caroline returned on 9 March 1977 on 953&nbsp;kHz, actually 315 metres but announced as 319. This gave reasonable reception by day but strong [[heterodyne]] interference at night because the transmitter crystal was off-channel. In July Caroline moved to the adjacent channel, 962&nbsp;kHz (312 metres but still called 319) and reception in the UK improved. Meanwhile, Radio Mi Amigo had interference on 1562&nbsp;kHz and changed to 1412&nbsp;kHz (212 m).
The legality of the raid (as well as accounts of what actually took place on board that day) is still hotly disputed between the Caroline Organisation and the authorities. Caroline claimed that the boarding of the ship and removal/destruction of equipment was an act of [[piracy]] on the high seas under international maritime law (a crime which at the time still carried the [[death penalty]]) . The Dutch claimed that as the ship's Panamanian registration had lapsed in 1987 it was not under legal protection from any country and that its transmissions were a breach of international radio regulations which since 1982 have prohibited broadcasting from outside national territories.
 
Finally, Radio Mi Amigo moved to 962&nbsp;kHz on 1 December. Due to generator trouble, the two services could no longer be broadcast simultaneously and Radio Caroline again broadcast at night with both stations using the 50&nbsp;kW transmitter and Radio Caroline began to receive more mail from the continent. At times, a 10&nbsp;kW transmitter was used to save fuel and relieve the generators. The 10&nbsp;kW transmitters could run on the Henschel generator beside the two main MAN units and also a Cummins unit on the aft deck behind the wheelhouse.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.roundsandsounds.co.uk |title=This site is put together by Johnny Lewis, an engineer and presenter who worked on the station at the time |publisher=Roundsandsounds.co.uk |access-date=4 November 2011}}</ref>
=== 1990-1991: After the raid ===
Six weeks after the police raid, on [[1 October]] [[1989]], Radio Caroline restarted from the ''Ross Revenge'' . Although initially using makeshift equipment and on very low power, Caroline's return was seen by its staff as a necessary gesture of defiance toward the raiders.
 
In late 1977, Radio Caroline began sponsored evangelical programmes, and music programmes began at 9{{nbsp}}p.m. On 20 October 1978, technical and financial problems put the ''Mi Amigo'' off the air. Unhappy at the loss of advertising, Radio Mi Amigo terminated its contract with Caroline in November 1978 and broadcast from its own ship, the [[MV Magdalena|MV ''Magdalena'']] later that year, but this was short-lived. Broadcasting was in Dutch and English by day and in English at night, although for the first few months broadcasting finished at 10{{nbsp}}p.m. On 19 January 1979, the ageing ship took in water and a lifeboat was called to rescue the crew members.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.offshoreradio.co.uk/seventy.htm |title=The Pirate Radio Hall of Fame: the seventies |publisher=Offshoreradio.co.uk |access-date=4 November 2011}}</ref> Radio Caroline returned to the air on 15 April 1979. The first record played was ''[[Fool (If You Think It's Over)]]'', by [[Chris Rea]], dedicated to the British [[Home Office]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.offshoreechos.com/offshorethemes/stations%20a-d.htm |title=STATIONS 1 |publisher=Offshoreechos.com |date=20 April 2011 |access-date=4 November 2011 |archive-date=18 November 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111118005940/http://www.offshoreechos.com/offshorethemes/stations%20a-d.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> During this period each night transmission of Radio Caroline started with ''Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft'' by the progressive Rock Band [[Klaatu (band)|Klaatu]], issued in 1976 on their album [[3:47 EST|3:47 E.S.T]].
Over the following months Caroline's signal quality improved and programming returned to normal. A new challenge occurred in June 1990, when [[Spectrum Radio]], a new muti-ethnic [[community radio]] station for [[London]], was allocated 558 kHz, the same frequency as Caroline. This was seen by many of Caroline's fans as an attempt by the British authorities to jam Caroline.
 
===''Mi Amigo'' sinks===
In the event Caroline's signal caused more interference to Spectrum's than vice versa. Caroline broadcast regular apologies to Spectrum and its listeners but refused to vacate the channel. Spectrum threatened to sue the [[Radio Authority]], which relented and allowed Spectrum to use a second, clear frequency of 990 kHz. Eventually, however, Caroline did leave 558 kHz and moved to 819.
{{main|MV Mi Amigo}}
Just after midnight GMT on 20 March 1980, the ''Mi Amigo'' foundered in a storm after losing its anchor and drifting. It began taking in water and the crew was rescued by lifeboat.<ref name="Henry/von Joel"/> The generator was left running but the pumps could not manage and the vessel sank 10 minutes later. Three British nationals, a Dutchman and their canary (named Wilson after the former Labour Prime Minister [[Harold Wilson]]) were rescued. The last broadcast from the ''Mi Amigo'' was by Stevie Gordon and Tom Anderson:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://images.45cat.com/the-one-shots-caroline-jingles-jumbo.jpg|format=JPG|title=Last broadcast message and photographic image|website=Images.45cat.com|access-date=25 March 2022}}</ref>
 
{{poemquote|('''Gordon'''): Well, we're sorry to tell you that due to the severe weather conditions and the fact that we are shipping quite a lot of water, we are closing down, and the crew are at this stage leaving the ship. Obviously, we hope to be back with you as soon as possible, but just for the moment we would like to say goodbye.
This continued until [[5 November]] [[1990]] when lack of fuel and supplies finally put the station off the air. Most of the previous broadcasting staff had by now left. A skeleton staff of volunteers remained on board for a year as caretakers, whilst fresh funding and equipment was sought on land.
('''Anderson'''): It's not a very good occasion really, we have to hurry this because the lifeboat is standing by. We're not leaving and disappearing, we're going onto the lifeboat hoping that the pumps can take it; if they can, we'll be back, if not, well, we really don't like to say it.
('''Gordon'''): I think we'll be back in one way or another.
('''Anderson'''): Yeah. I think so.
('''Gordon'''): For the moment from all of us, goodbye and God bless.}}
 
The crew of the [[Sheerness]] lifeboat ''Helen Turnbull'' were commended for the rescue of broadcasters Tom Anderson, Stevie Gordon, Nick Richards and Hans Verlaan from ''Mi Amigo'' while it was sinking in the Black Deep near Long Sand Bank. Having to manoeuvre the lifeboat alongside the stricken vessel 13 times in high seas and a north-easterly gale earned Coxswain Charles Bowry an [[RNLI Silver Medal]]. Each of his crew was awarded ''The Thanks of the Institution'' on vellum.<ref name="Sheerness">{{cite web|url = http://www.sheernesslifeboats.org.uk/history.htm|title = Sheerness Lifeboats: Station History and Awards|website = Sheernesslifeboats.org.uk|year = 2004|access-date = 20 March 2010|archive-date = 12 September 2009|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090912141927/http://www.sheernesslifeboats.org.uk/history.htm|url-status = dead}}</ref>
In November 1991 hurricane force storms caused the ship to break anchor and drift onto [[Goodwin Sands]], a notorious "ships' graveyard" in the North Sea. The crew were rescued by [[Royal Air Force|RAF]] helicopter. The ''Ross Revenge'' was later salvaged and brought into harbour in Dover.
 
The ''Mi Amigo{{'}}s'' {{convert|160|ft|m|adj=on}} mast remained erect for six years.
==1991 onwards: Caroline onshore==
A legal, onshore version of Radio Caroline now broadcasts from studios in [[Maidstone]], Kent. The new Caroline began broadcasting via [[SES Astra|Astra]] satellites from 19 and 28 degrees east, covering [[Western Europe]], first with an analogue, and then later with a digital service. Astra transmissions ended in November 2002<ref>[http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/history14.asp Where is Caroline's place in the new millennium?]</ref>. The station has also held several Restricted Service Licences, and now broadcasts via internet [[audio streaming]], [[Sky Digital (UK)|Sky Digital]], and [[WorldSpace]].
 
==1983–1991: MV ''Ross Revenge''==
[[As of 2007]], following numerous moves, the ''Ross Revenge'' is docked at [[Tilbury]] and is undergoing repairs and maintenance by a volunteer crew. The ship still has working radio studios aboard, from which both Caroline and [[BBC Essex]] have occasionally broadcast.
{{main|MV Ross Revenge}}
{{Infobox radio station
| name = Radio Caroline
| area = Geographic areas bordering upon North Sea
| airdate = August 1983
| frequency = 963 kHz (wavelength announced as "319" metres) later moving to 819 kHz with additional transmitter in 531–594 kHz range (principally 558 kHz)
| format = album rock and news
| power = 50 kW (second 10 kW transmitter later added)
| erp = 27 kW (highly variable)
| owner = Ownership was hidden due to illegality of operation
}}
 
[[File:Ross Revenge 1984.jpg|thumb|right|MV ''Ross Revenge'', home of Radio Caroline from 1983]]
=== The RSL broadcasts ===
{{More citations needed section|date=June 2011}}
Following the near shipwrecking of the Ross Revenge and subsequent harbouring off the south east coast of England in 1990, the ship has been maintained by an association of enthusiasts called the Caroline Support Group (originally called the Ross Revenge Support Group - this way they could support the ship without getting into any legal trouble with regards to supporting the station). The radio station itself was off the air for most of the 1990s, with the exception of occasional low-power broadcasts of one month's duration. A number of these licensed 28-day RSL ('''[[Restricted Service Licence]]''') broadcasts took place from the ''Ross Revenge'' during the 1990s, with the ship anchored off Clacton, in London's [[Canary Wharf]] and off the [[Isle of Sheppey]] in [[Kent]]. Meanwhile O'Rahilly was said to be canvassing foreign states in an attempt to be granted a licence to broadcast legally again from the ''Ross Revenge''. The most recent and, reportedly, most successful RSL ran from 7th August until [[3 September]] [[2004]] from the ship moored at the cruise liner terminal jetty at Tilbury in [[Essex]]. On this occasion the medium wave frequency authorised was 235 metres (1278 kHz) and an ISDN link enabled the programmes created on-board to be routed by landline to their Maidstone studio and thus to web streams and the satellite broadcast. The retailer ASDA and English Heritage, guardians of Tilbury Fort, were amongst the backers for this short duration event, intended to mark the 40th anniversary year of Radio Caroline and promote awareness of the continuing legalised digital and satellite programmes.
Radio Caroline restarted in August 1983 from a new radio ship, the {{MV|Ross Revenge}}, an ex-[[North Sea]] factory [[fishing trawler]] used during the Anglo-Icelandic [[Cod War]] by [[Ross Group|Ross Fisheries]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/humberside/hi/people_and_places/newsid_8924000/8924470.stm |title=Appeal for memories of the Grimsby trawler Ross Revenge |publisher=[[BBC Humberside]] |access-date=12 March 2012}}</ref> It had an antenna system radiating from a {{convert|300|ft|m|adj=on}} high mast, the tallest on any ship in the world. It left Spain with an incomplete studio, to avoid legal entanglements. Radio Caroline began to broadcast from the ship on 19 August 1983, with unwanted mechanical sounds on speech. The station was opened by DJ Tom Anderson, who had said "goodbye" from the sinking ''Mi Amigo'' in 1980.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.icce.rug.nl/~soundscapes/DATABASES/CAR/car04.shtml |title=The wet and wild history of Radio Caroline (4) |website=Icce.rug.nl |access-date=4 November 2011 }}{{Dead link|date=July 2025 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
 
The ''Ross Revenge'' was larger than ''Mi Amigo'' and with more elaborate transmitting equipment: in 1983, two 5&nbsp;kW RCA transmitters and a RCA 50&nbsp;kW unit. One 5&nbsp;kW transmitter was initially not serviceable. When Radio Monique hired the main transmitter, spare parts were taken from a fourth transmitter to convert the 5&nbsp;kW into a 10&nbsp;kW unit, the RCA 5 and 10&nbsp;kW transmitters having similar designs.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.eylard.nl/OffShoreRadio/Caroline/index.htm |title=Photos of the transmitters can be found here |publisher=Eylard.nl |access-date=4 November 2011 |archive-date=5 September 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070905134101/http://www.eylard.nl/OffShoreRadio/Caroline/index.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> The remaining 5&nbsp;kW transmitter was later converted for short wave use. The ''Ross Revenge'' also featured powerful generators.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Ross Revenge - Generator Room|url=http://www.rossrevenge.co.uk/genny/genny.htm|access-date=7 September 2021|website=Rossrevenge.co.uk}}</ref>
=== Satellite Caroline ===
In the 21st century, Radio Caroline now broadcasts primarily by satellite and as in the 1990s, still relies principally on listener donations from the Caroline Support Group. The station now uses onshore studios in the southeast English town of [[Maidstone]] in Kent.
 
O'Rahilly wanted Radio Caroline to become an [[oldies]] station. He was opposed by some DJs and crew who had worked on the ''Mi Amigo'' and the album format stayed along with presenters such as [[Andy Archer (radio presenter)|Andy Archer]], [[Samantha Dubois]], Grant Benson, Robin Ross and Simon Barrett. Officially, Radio Caroline was managed from offices in North America, with advertising from the US and Canada. In practice, day-to-day servicing was carried from France and the UK.
A [[website]] and internet [[streaming media|audio stream]] are also available. Caroline began broadcasting via [[SES Astra|Astra]] satellite from 19 degrees east, covering the whole of Western Europe. Original Caroline broadcast on Sunday afternoons on the satellite station [[European Klassik Rock]]. Following the closure of EKR Caroline started a full service on the former EKR channel first with an analogue, and then later digital service. Former offshore broadcasters who continue to broadcast on Caroline from the Maidstone Studios are [[Nigel Harris]], Johnny Lewis, Martin Fisher, Bob Lawrence, Tom Lodge, Roger Matthews and Roger Day.
 
From the anchorage in the Knock Deep the ''Mi Amigo''{{'}}s mast could be seen on the horizon. Four studios were on board, enabling other broadcasting services. Radio Caroline tried several frequencies, among them 963, 576, 585 (only from 25 March 1985 till 28 March 1985), 558 (after [[Laser 558]] closed) and later 819&nbsp;kHz. European medium wave channels had been reallocated to multiples of nine. In the evenings on 963, some alternative music programmes were tried, including the [[reggae]] "Jamming 963", and in 1986 and early 1987, a progressive and indie rock programme called [[Caroline Overdrive]].
On Saturdays, a German-English language service is broadcast in the morning for two hours, under the name German Caroline. Evangelical programmes are also broadcast, together with a number of sponsored specialist music shows.
 
On 9 August 1985, an official vessel anchored 150 yards from the ''Ross Revenge''. The UK [[Department of Trade and Industry (United Kingdom)|Department of Trade and Industry]] (DTI) put a permanent watch on movements around the ''Ross Revenge'' and the MV ''Communicator'', Laser 558{{'}}s ship. On 3 September 1985 at 00:00 hours the {{ship||Dioptric Surveyor}} departed in a storm.
However, the Astra satellite used is positioned at an unsuitable position for reception by satellite dishes in the UK, which tend to be aimed at the more popular 28E position, used by the [[British Sky Broadcasting]] satellite service. This put Caroline at a disadvantage for attracting audiences in Britain. Listenership levels in continental Europe were also disappointing and the service was therefore discontinued in early 2003, with the station moving to a channel on the [[Eurobird 1]] satellite at 28E, which allows for easier reception in the UK.
 
===Radio Monique===
In 2002 Caroline took a channel with the [[WorldSpace]] satellite radio system. This is a subscription-based satellite which carries only radio services and covers a third of the world from [[South Africa]] across to the western tip of India and northern Europe. A special dedicated WorldSpace receiver is required in order to receive WorldSpace stations, together with an annual subscription to descramble the broadcasts. It remains to be seen whether this service will enjoy widespread popularity, but it gives those living outside of the [[Sky Digital (UK)|Sky Digital]] broadcast footprint (principally the British Isles), the chance to hear Caroline on a radio set.
{{main|Radio Monique}}
From December 1984 the ''Ross Revenge'' broadcast ''Radio Monique'', recorded and live Dutch-language programmes of a Dutch music radio production company using the 50&nbsp;kW transmitter during daytime. They were pop and Europop aimed at the mainstream Dutch audience. Radio Monique was popular throughout [[Benelux]].
 
In the evenings, Radio Caroline transmitted Dutch and American religious [[Evangelism|evangelist]] broadcasters such as [[Johan Maasbach]] and [[Roy Masters (commentator)|Roy Masters]] on medium wave, and later on short wave, under the name ''Viewpoint 963/819'', or ''World Mission Radio (WMR)'' on short wave.
In spring 2004, Radio Caroline negotiated a deal with Italy's RTL 102.5 Hit Radio for Caroline to broadcast as part of Italy's national DAB ([[Digital Audio Broadcast]]) system. This means Radio Caroline can now be heard in [[Rome]], [[Milan]], [[Turin]], [[Bologna]], [[Florence]] and [[Naples]]. Programming is a mix of Caroline's UK-produced and locally created material.
 
In November 1985, the competing offshore station, Laser 558, closed after electrical problems and Caroline moved from 576&nbsp;kHz to Laser's 558&nbsp;kHz frequency, with a [[Top 40]] music format similar to Laser's under the name Caroline 558. When Laser returned as Laser Hot Hits, it used Caroline's former and inferior frequency of 576&nbsp;kHz.
Caroline can also be heard on channel 927 on the [[NTL Ireland|NTL]] [[Cable television|Cable TV]] networks in [[Dublin]], [[Galway]] and [[Waterford]]. [[Sky Digital (UK & Ireland)|Sky]] finally allocated Caroline an EPG slot of '''Sky Channel 0199''' during the summer of 2006.
 
===Mast collapse===
=== Dutch Caroline and Caroline South ===
The [[Territorial Sea Act 1987]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.statutelaw.gov.uk/content.aspx?LegType=All+Primary&PageNumber=37&NavFrom=2&parentActiveTextDocId=1323295&activetextdocid=1323297 |title=Territorial Sea Act 1987 |publisher=Statutelaw.gov.uk |access-date=4 November 2011}}</ref> extended the UK maritime limit from {{convert|3|nmi|lk=in}} to {{convert|12|nmi}}. To remain in international waters, the ship moved to a new, less-sheltered anchorage. Initially this was a minor inconvenience as the {{convert|300|ft|m|adj=on}} mast was thought sturdy enough. However, in [[Great Storm of 1987|October 1987 a massive storm]] hit southern England, causing deaths and severe damage. MV ''Ross Revenge'' weathered the storm in the North Sea.
In January 2002, Sietse Brouwer, a DJ with Caroline in the 1980s launched a Netherlands-based Radio Caroline operating from [[Harlingen, Netherlands|Harlingen]] and broadcasting on the Dutch cable network with coverage in the northern Netherlands. This operation is run largely independent of UK Caroline. This was intended to be a prelude to obtaining an AM frequency from the Dutch authorities in 2003, when Dutch medium wave frequencies were reallocated. However, Dutch Caroline failed to obtain a frequency and the cable network service has been discontinued for the interim, due to lack of funds. In the meantime, the Dutch station is broadcasting in the interim solely via internet streaming technology, using the resurrected name of Radio Seagull, presenting a progressive rock format based on that of the original Radio Seagull that broadcast from the MV ''Mi Amigo'' in the early 1970s.
 
The following day, Caroline was one of few stations in the South East still broadcasting. However, the storm had weakened the mast, which collapsed in another storm later.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Conway|first=Steve|year=2004|title=The day of the great hurricane|url=https://www.icce.rug.nl/~soundscapes/DATABASES/CAR/car17.shtml|website=soundscapes|series=volume 7|access-date=12 December 2021|archive-date=28 September 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210928193743/https://www.icce.rug.nl/~soundscapes/DATABASES/CAR/car17.shtml|url-status=dead}}</ref> Caroline returned to the air using a makeshift aerial with a less powerful signal. This was replaced by a twin-mast T-antenna. For several months only one transmitter could be used, leading to the loss of the income-generating Radio Monique, although a substitute Dutch daytime service, Radio 558 (later Radio 819), was eventually established.
Caroline also now has a broadcasting partner based on the French and Italian Mediterranean Rivieras. Presented under the name Caroline South, this operation provides weekend evening programmes for Radio Caroline which are also broadcast on local FM radio stations on the Riviera. Veteran Caroline DJs Grant Benson and [[Tom Anderson (radio presenter)|Tom Anderson]] are among the presenters.
 
===1989 Anglo-Dutch raid===
==Footnotes==
{{sources|section|date=April 2024}}
*'''Frequency/wavelength conversions''': To convert [[mediumwave|medium wave]] frequencies to wavelengths, divide 300,000 (the approximate value of the [[speed of light]] in kilometres per second) by the frequency (in kilohertz) and then round off to the nearest whole number. The result is the wavelength in metres, as used by almost all European mediumwave stations until the 1980s, when frequencies in [[kilohertz]] began to be given instead.
During mid-August 1989, authorities in several European countries carried out coordinated raids on houses, recording studios and offices believed to be used by Caroline. On 18 August, a British government chartered ship pulled up alongside the ''Ross Revenge'' and asked to board to "discuss the future" of the ''Ross Revenge'' and the stations operating from it. This request, and one to stop transmissions on 819 kHz (Radio 819), was refused. A request to stop broadcasting on short wave 6214 kHz (World Mission Radio) which disturbs the emergency frequency 6215 kHz. was complied with, and then from 59:00. After several hours the government ship returned to port.
 
On 19 August 1989, James Murphy, an investigator for the UK Office of the [[Official Solicitor]], acting for the [[Department of Trade and Industry (United Kingdom)|Department of Trade and Industry]], joined colleagues and counterparts from the [[Netherlands Radio Regulatory Authority]] to execute an armed raid on the ''Ross Revenge'' in which equipment was damaged or confiscated.
==Pop culture references==
*[[Godley & Creme]] recorded a song about Radio Caroline called "Get Well Soon" from their 1980 album ''[[Freeze Frame (album)|Freeze Frame]]''. The song describes the unwell protagonist listening to Radio Caroline in order to get better, and then when he does the station disappears altogether.
* On his album ''The Golden Age of Wireless'', British musician [[Thomas Dolby]] recorded a song entitled "Radio Silence", where he makes cryptic references to a woman named "Caroline" and lamenting a lost love like an empty radio frequency. It is presumed that this is a "love song" of sorts for Radio Caroline.
* In [[The Goodies (TV series)|The Goodies]] the Goodies created an offshore pirate radio station and offshore pirate post service.
 
Part of the raid was broadcast live<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://dxradio.co.uk/audio/Caroline_558_19aug1989.mp3|title = Dxradio|format=MP3|website=Dxradio.co.uk}}</ref> before officials disabled the transmitters. Dutch nationals were arrested and returned to the Netherlands, together with most of the broadcasting equipment. Non-Dutch staff were given the option of staying on the ship or returning to the Netherlands, and most chose to stay on board. Caroline claimed boarding the ship and removal or destruction of equipment was [[piracy]]. The Dutch claimed the ship's Panamanian registration had lapsed in 1987, was not under legal protection from any country and that its transmissions breached international regulations which since 1982 had prohibited broadcasting from outside national territories. Several years later some of the seized items were returned to the station.
==See also==
*[[Pirate radio in Europe]]
*[[Ronan O'Rahilly]] - Brief biography about the person who founded the original Radio Caroline in 1964.
*[[Alan Crawford]] - Brief biography about the person who founded Radio Atlanta, which became Radio Caroline South in 1964.
*[[Marine Broadcasting Offences Act]] - The law which ended the hey-day and commercial viability of offshore radio between March 1964 and August 1967.
*[[Tony Benn]] - As Postmaster-General, he led for the government on the Marine Broadcasting Offences Bill in 1967, and was responsible for enforcing it once it was enacted on [[August 14]].
 
In 1990 the UK government amended the 1967 anti-offshore law to allow the boarding and silencing of stations in international waters if their signals could be received in the UK, even if their vessels were foreign-registered and operated. [[Lord Annan]], author of the 1977 [[Annan Committee|Report of the Committee on the Future of Broadcasting]], spoke in defence of Radio Caroline in the House of Lords at report stage on the [[Broadcasting Act 1990]], saying "Why break a butterfly upon the wheel?"<ref>{{hansard|1990/jun/05/broadcasting-bill#column_1257 |house=lords |access-date=4 November 2011}}</ref> In a 1995 article for the pressure group [[Charter88]], Steve McGann commented: <blockquote> "Whether Caroline was right to maintain her defiance for so many years is irrelevant. Her story illustrates how uniquely dangerous government regards an independent voice transmitted over unrestricted airwaves and to what ends it will go to silence it."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.unlockdemocracy.org.uk/charter88archive/pubs/other/mcgann.html |title=The Real story of Radio Caroline |access-date=3 August 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716163420/http://www.unlockdemocracy.org.uk/charter88archive/pubs/other/mcgann.html |archive-date=16 July 2011 }}</ref> </blockquote> This legislation remains in force.
==External links==
 
*[http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/ www.radiocaroline.co.uk - Official web site]
===1990–1991: After the raid===
*[http://www.rossrevenge.co.uk ''Ross Revenge'' radio ship official website]
On 1 October 1989, Radio Caroline resumed broadcasting from the ''Ross Revenge'' using makeshift equipment and low power, to retain the 558&nbsp;kHz frequency. Engineer Peter Chicago had hidden transmitter parts during the raid and retuned one 5&nbsp;kW transmitter, previously used on short-wave, to 558&nbsp;kHz. Over the following months, Caroline's signal quality improved as transmitting [[Vacuum tube|valves]] were donated and programming returned to normal.
*[http://www.horizonmagazine.co.uk ''Horizon'' magazine website]
 
*[http://www.myspace.com/pirateradiocaroline Multi Media Radio Caroline website]
In June 1990, [[Spectrum Radio]], a new multi-ethnic [[community radio]] station in London, was officially allocated 558&nbsp;kHz. Caroline caused more interference to Spectrum than vice versa. Caroline broadcast regular apologies to Spectrum listeners but refused to vacate the channel. Spectrum threatened to sue the [[Radio Authority]], which then allowed Spectrum to temporarily broadcast on 990&nbsp;kHz alongside 558&nbsp;kHz. Eventually, Caroline left 558&nbsp;kHz and moved to 819&nbsp;kHz. On 5 November 1990, lack of fuel and supplies forced the station to stop transmitting. The final song was ''[[Pilot of the Airwaves]]'' by [[Charlie Dore]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.offshoreechos.com/offshorethemes/1st%20&%20Last%20A-L.htm |title=First & last |publisher=Offshoreechos.com |access-date=4 November 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070206115136/http://www.offshoreechos.com/offshorethemes/1st%20%26%20Last%20A-L.htm |archive-date=6 February 2007 }}</ref>
*[http://www.azanorak.com Lots of offshore memories]
 
Although most broadcasting staff left at that time, some remained for a year as caretakers while funding and equipment were sought. The station tried to obtain a licence from a developing country,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sasradiogroup.org/caroline-movement |title=Caroline Movement |publisher=sasradiogroup |access-date=3 August 2014 |archive-date=14 April 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140414004427/http://www.sasradiogroup.org/caroline-movement |url-status=dead }}</ref> hoping it might offer protection from the new provisions in the [[Broadcasting Act 1990]] which came into force on 31 December that year.
 
In November 1991, the ship lost its anchor in a storm and drifted onto the [[Goodwin Sands]] in the Channel. The crew (Caroline Martin, Rico and one other) was rescued by an [[Royal Air Force]] helicopter.<ref name="Caroline Martin">{{cite web |date=31 October 2022 |title=Crunch & Roll podcast S01 Ep07: Caroline Martin |url=https://open.spotify.com/episode/6j2JkVpJED9MN6ONL7JIKO |access-date=1 November 2022 |at=from 25:19 |via=Spotify}}</ref> The ''Ross Revenge'' was salvaged and brought into harbour in Dover, ending 27 years of Radio Caroline's unlicensed offshore career.
 
{{Infobox radio station
| name = Radio Caroline
| area = UK<br />Worldwide (Internet);<br />Europe (up to September 2013) ([[Eutelsat 28A]])
| airdate = 1999
| frequency = Various Internet streams<ref name="Radio Caroline Streams Guide">{{cite web|url=http://carolinestreams.weebly.com/|title=Radio Caroline Streams Guide|publisher=Carolinestreams.weekly.com|access-date=3 August 2014}}</ref><br />[[UPC Ireland]]: Channel 927<br />[[Smallworld Cable]]: Channel 855<br /><br />[[Eutelsat 28A]] (to 30 September 2013):<br />Freq. 11.426 GHz <br />Polarisation: Horizontal<br />Symbol Rate: 27.5<br />FEC: 2/3
| format = AOR (Album/adult oriented)
| owner = Radio Caroline Ltd. and Caroline Support Group (originally called the Ross Revenge Support Group)
| website ={{URL|http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk}}
}}
 
==Since 1991: Licensed Support Group era==
Since 1991, the ''Ross Revenge'' has been maintained by enthusiasts called the ''Radio Caroline Support Group'', originally the ''Ross Revenge Support Group''. From 2007, the ship was docked at [[Port of Tilbury|Tilbury]], where a volunteer crew repaired and maintained it. The ship has working radio studios, from which both Caroline and [[BBC Essex]] have broadcast. On 31 July 2014 the ship was moved to the [[Blackwater Estuary]] in [[Essex]].<ref>{{cite web|author=Radio Caroline |url=http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/#ross_move_pics.html |title=The Ross Revenge Move Gallery |publisher=Radiocaroline.co.uk |access-date=6 January 2015}}</ref>
 
Former offshore broadcasters who continue on the station are: Roger Mathews, [[Nigel MacArthur|Nigel Harris]], Martin Fisher, Marc Jacobs, Johnny Lewis, Doug Wood, Dave Foster, Cliff Osbourne, Chris Pearson, Bob Lawrence, Jeremy Chartham and Ad Roberts.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.offshoreradio.co.uk/djs8p.htm|title=Offshore disc-jockeys of the 80s, P|website=Offshoreradio.co.uk|access-date=18 April 2019}}</ref> Evangelical programmes and sponsored specialist music are broadcast. During Easter 2008, the station broadcast live for three days from the Ross Revenge, featuring presenters who had worked on the Mi Amigo in the late 1970s: Roger Mathews, Mike Stevens, Bob Lawrence, Brian Martin, Martin Fisher, Cliff Osbourne, Jeremy Chartham, Marc Jacobs, Ad Roberts, Dick Verheul and Kees Borrell.
 
===Restricted service licences===
Radio Caroline was off the air for most of the 1990s, except for occasional low-power broadcasts of one month. Some of these 28-day [[Restricted Service Licence]] (RSL) broadcasts took place from the ''Ross Revenge'' during the 1990s, with the ship anchored in Dover after her recovery from the Goodwin Sands in 1992, and then off Clacton, in London's [[Canary Wharf]], [[Southend Pier]] and off the [[Isle of Sheppey]] in [[Kent]].
 
At one minute past midnight on 1 October 2001, Caroline returned on 1503&nbsp;kHz from the LV (Light Vessel) 18 in Harwich harbour. This two-day broadcast featured Phil Mitchell, Paul Dennis, Colin Lamb, John Patrick, Barry James, Steve Cisco and Clive Boutell.<ref>{{cite web|author=Dr. Martin van der Ven |url=http://www.radiocaroline.de/platt2.htm |title=Radio Caroline: Into the new millennium |publisher=Radiocaroline.de |access-date=3 August 2014}}</ref> The LV 18 was later used by the BBC for Pirate BBC Essex broadcasts.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/essex/pirate/exhibition.shtml |title=Pirate BBC Essex |publisher=BBC |access-date=3 August 2014}}</ref>
 
Another RSL broadcast ran from 7 August until 3 September 2004, with the ship moored at the cruise liner terminal jetty at Tilbury in Essex. It commemorated the 40th anniversary of Radio Caroline and promoted the station's legal internet and satellite programmes. The medium wave frequency was 235 metres (1278&nbsp;kHz) and programmes were sent through [[ISDN]] landline to [[Maidstone]] and via the internet and broadcast on satellite. The supermarket chain [[Asda]] and [[English Heritage]] were among the backers.
 
The station has subsequently broadcast on 531&nbsp;kHz AM from the ''Ross Revenge'' during some [[bank holiday]] weekends, beginning on 28–31 August 2009 and also within a few days of the 50th anniversary of the ship's first voyage.
 
===Satellite and Internet broadcasting===
Using land-based studios leased in Kent<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.maidstonestudios.com/ |title=Home &#124; The Maidstone Television Studios |publisher=Maidstonestudios.com |access-date=3 August 2014}}</ref> in the late 1990s, the station began broadcasting via satellites [[Astra 19.2°E]] and [[Eutelsat 28A]], covering [[western Europe]]. These analogue transmissions ended and a full digital service from [[Astra 28.2°E]] started in February 2003.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/#history_part_14.html|title=Bringing Caroline into the new millennium|publisher=Radiocaroline.co.uk|access-date=3 August 2014}}</ref>
 
In 2002, Caroline began on [[WorldSpace]] satellite radio, continuing until Worldspace went bankrupt and re-organised its operations in 2008. On 12 June 2006, the station bought an [[EPG]] slot on [[Sky (UK & Ireland)|Sky]] channel 0199.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.rnw.nl/medianetwork/radio-caroline-finally-appears-on-sky-epg|title=Radio Caroline finally appears on Sky EPG|publisher=Media Network|date=12 June 2006|access-date=24 July 2011|archive-date=29 September 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110929090428/http://blogs.rnw.nl/medianetwork/radio-caroline-finally-appears-on-sky-epg|url-status=dead}}</ref> This ended on 1 July 2011 after a failure to renegotiate costs with Sky and deciding not to pursue a [[Freesat]] EPG slot.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.rnw.nl/medianetwork/radio-caroline-decides-to-get-rid-of-its-epg-slot|title=Radio Caroline decides to get rid of its EPG slot|publisher=Media Network|date=18 May 2011|access-date=19 May 2011|archive-date=26 May 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110526022414/http://blogs.rnw.nl/medianetwork/radio-caroline-decides-to-get-rid-of-its-epg-slot|url-status=dead}}</ref> Surveys in 2008 and 2010 showed a small percentage listened via Sky, and that satellite listening had dropped by 9% since 2008, while online listening had increased by around 40%. Radio Caroline continued on satellite but required manual tuning.
 
During 2013, a survey showed a continued move from satellite reception and growth in internet listening. Following negotiations with the service provider, satellite transmissions ended at midnight on 30 September 2013. Programmes were still heard on satellite until the provider replaced the signal with a 1&nbsp;kHz tone on the morning of 1 October 2013. Internet streaming of Radio Caroline programmes continued.
 
The Radio Caroline "album" station has been streamed on the internet for many years, accessible via the station's website, with more streams on various devices.<ref name="Radio Caroline Streams Guide"/> Dedicated apps for listening via Apple IOS<ref>{{cite web|url=https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/caroline/id396905232|title=Radio Caroline App for iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch on iTunes Store|website=[[iTunes]]}}</ref> and Android<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/#android_app.html|title=Radio Caroline Android App|publisher=Radiocaroline.co.uk|access-date=3 August 2014}}</ref> devices are also available. In 2011 Radio Caroline joined Radioplayer UK, an internet service formed by the BBC, [[Global Radio]] and the [[Guardian Media Group]] that supplies a live feed of UK radio stations to across the world.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.radioplayer.co.uk/index.php/about/ |title=Radioplayer UK – About |publisher=Radioplayer.co.uk |access-date=4 November 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110724053148/http://www.radioplayer.co.uk/index.php/about/ |archive-date=24 July 2011 }}</ref>
 
On 4 May 2015, Radio Caroline started a 24-hour "Flashback" webstream<ref>{{Cite web|title = Radio Caroline|url = http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/#home.html|website = www.radiocaroline.co.uk|access-date = 1 November 2015}}</ref> carrying "oldies" music and jingles.
 
===Via Manx Radio===
Since September 2015, Radio Caroline has been broadcasting 'live' for one weekend each month<ref>[http://www.rayradio.co.uk/home/456277308] {{dead link|date=March 2022}}</ref> as "Radio Caroline North" (with original DJs and a mixed 1960s, 1970s and 1980s music content and jingles) from its former home the [[MV Ross Revenge|MV ''Ross Revenge'']] on the [[Blackwater Estuary]] in Essex, via [[Manx Radio]]'s 1368&nbsp;kHz 20&nbsp;kW transmitter on the Isle of Man.<ref>{{cite web|title=Radio Caroline North and Manx Radio|url=http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/manx_info.html|website=Radio Caroline|access-date=30 September 2017}}</ref>
 
===Radio Caroline at 50 years (1964–2014)===
From 31 March to 27 April 2014, a ''Caroline North'' tribute station, based on the Planet Lightship berthed in the Albert Dock complex on Liverpool's waterfront, broadcast locally on 87.7FM and on the internet. Programmes were presented by current and former DJs from the BBC, ILR, Ireland, Luxembourg, offshore and land-based pirate stations, and other international and freelance backgrounds, including Tony Prince and Emperor Rosko. Original 1960s Caroline North jingles were interspersed with generic Radio Caroline ones.
[[File:Radio Caroline Bell.jpg|thumb|The Radio Caroline Bell. [[Disc Jockey|DJ]] Chris Pearson pictured with the original [[ship's bell]] from the MV ''Fredericia'' (MV ''Caroline'') displayed as part of the station's 60th anniversary lecture, August 2024.]]
 
===Radio Caroline at 60 years (1964–2024)===
A special weekend was organised on the [[Isle of Man]] to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the station which was held during August 2024. The events centred around [[Ramsey, Isle of Man|Ramsey]] with several former (and present) Caroline disc jockeys in attendance. In addition, Radio Caroline presenter Chris Pearson made the journey to the pirate radio ship's former anchorage on the [[Bahama Bank]], where he recorded a short video, declaring it was the first time that a transmission had been made from that spot since the cessation of Radio Caroline North broadcasts in 1968.<ref>Fredericia</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3gwgn44z47o | title=Isle of Man's link to pirate radio ship celebrated 60 years on | date=3 August 2024 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | title=Video | url=https://www.facebook.com/radiocarolineofficial/videos/778492784363663 | access-date=2025-02-15 | website=www.facebook.com}}</ref>
 
The commemorations included a two-part talk concerning the origins of Radio Caroline and the development of off-shore radio broadcasts which was held at Ramsey's Mitre Hotel, hosted by Chris Pearson, with guest speakers Andy Wint and Ray Clark.<ref>Fredericia</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3gwgn44z47o | title=Isle of Man's link to pirate radio ship celebrated 60 years on | date=3 August 2024 }}</ref>
 
===Medium wave campaign===
In December 2010, Chatham and Aylesford MP [[Tracey Crouch]] presented an [[Early Day Motion]] to the [[House of Commons of the United Kingdom|House of Commons]] calling for the government regulator [[Ofcom]] to allow Radio Caroline to broadcast as a licensed medium wave station to its "traditional heartland of the south east".
 
The full text of the EDM is:<blockquote> That this House expresses its disappointment that, having pioneered commercial radio in the UK and for the past decade being a fully licensed broadcaster, Radio Caroline, a cornerstone of British radio history, has been denied by OFCOM the opportunity to secure a medium wave frequency from which to broadcast; regrets that as a result its devoted listeners are confined to listening to Radio Caroline via the internet and unable to enjoy its musical offerings in transit; and calls on OFCOM to exhaust all avenues in making the provisions available for Radio Caroline to celebrate its 50th birthday in 2014 by broadcasting on a medium wave frequency which, it appears, is unwanted by both BBC and commercial operators as a broadcast platform."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://edm.parliament.uk/early-day-motion/42175|title=RADIO CAROLINE - Early Day Motions|website=edm.parliament.uk|access-date=18 April 2019}}</ref></blockquote>
[[File:MV Ross Revenge 2018 - Radio Caroline ship (geograph 5865313).jpg|thumb|''Ross Revenge'' in the [[Blackwater Estuary]], 2018]]
On 22 May 2017, Ofcom awarded the station a community licence to broadcast to [[Suffolk]] and north [[Essex]] on 648&nbsp;kHz with a power of 1&nbsp;kW.<ref name="Ofcom">{{Cite web|title=Ofcom awards five new AM community radio licences|url=https://www.ofcom.org.uk/about-ofcom/latest/media/media-releases/2017/ofcom-awards-five-new-am-community-radio-licences|access-date=19 May 2017|website=Ofcom|language=en|archive-date=22 December 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171222034210/https://www.ofcom.org.uk/about-ofcom/latest/media/media-releases/2017/ofcom-awards-five-new-am-community-radio-licences|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=AM Plans|url=http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/#am_plans.html|website=Radio Caroline|access-date=30 September 2017|archive-date=2 April 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130402183617/http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/#am_plans.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>
 
On 11 November 2017, test transmissions commenced from an omni-directional mast (formerly used by the [[BBC World Service]]) at [[Orfordness transmitting station|Orford Ness]], Suffolk.
 
On 9 September 2017 a stone was unveiled in [[Felixstowe]] to commemorate Radio Caroline.<ref>{{cite web|last=Cornwell|first=Richard|date=25 July 2017|title=Radio Caroline DJs return to Felixstowe to mark pirate's start off resort's coast|url=https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/radio-caroline-djs-return-to-felixstowe-to-mark-pirate-s-2365516|access-date=16 November 2021|website=East Anglian Daily Times}}</ref>
 
Commercial programming commenced at noon on Friday 22 December 2017, with a signal that could be heard as far afield as Southampton, Birmingham, Glasgow and in large parts of The Netherlands and Belgium.
 
On 3 August 2021, Ofcom announced that it had granted a power increase to combat human-made noise and interference, and to extend the coverage area to include Suffolk, northern parts of Essex, and parts of Kent and East Sussex.<ref>{{cite web | title=Radio broadcast update July 2021 | website=Ofcom | date=3 August 2021 | url=https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20220212162811/https://www.ofcom.org.uk/manage-your-licence/radio-broadcast-licensing/monthly-updates/radio-broadcast-update-july-2021 | access-date=3 August 2021}}</ref> On 24 November 2021 a new transmitter was installed with an effective radiated power of 4&nbsp;kW.<ref>{{Cite web|date=17 December 2021|title=Radio Caroline confirms power increase on 648 AM medium wave|url=https://radiotoday.co.uk/2021/12/radio-caroline-confirms-power-increase-on-648-am-medium-wave/|access-date=7 February 2022|website=RadioToday|language=en-GB}}</ref> In March 2023 a [[solar PV]] array was installed at the Orford Ness transmitter site, providing all of the power required for the transmitter in sunny conditions.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Radio Caroline solar project|url=https://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/solar_guage/meter.html?v=2 |access-date=10 June 2023 |website=www.radiocaroline.co.uk |language=en}}</ref> In April 2023 an application was submitted to Ofcom to increase the effective radiated power to 16 kW<ref>{{Cite web |title=We've applied for more power |url=https://twitter.com/TheRadCaroline/status/1657070841492848640 |access-date=7 June 2023 |website=Twitter |language=en}}</ref> but this has apparently been rejected at present.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Hallett |first=Lawrie |date=26 October 2023 |title=Radio Caroline looks to the future |url=https://www.redtech.pro/radio-caroline-looks-to-the-future/ |access-date=11 November 2023 |website=RedTech |language=en-US}}</ref>
 
===Death of founder===
Radio Caroline's founder, Ronan O'Rahilly, was diagnosed with [[vascular dementia]] in 2013; his death aged 79 on 20 April 2020 was announced by Radio Caroline.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2020/apr/21/ronan-orahilly-radio-caroline-founder-uk-pop-pirate-radio-dies-aged-79-james-bond-george-lazenby |title=Ronan O'Rahilly, Radio Caroline founder who inspired UK pop and pirate radio, dies aged 79 |newspaper=[[The Guardian]] |first=Ben|last=Beaumont-Thomas|date= 21 April 2020}}</ref>
 
==Caroline Community Radio / Caroline Coastal==
In October 2020, a new station using the Caroline name and logo launched in Burnham-on-Crouch, broadcasting to the Maldon District of Essex on 94.7 MHz FM.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://static.ofcom.org.uk/static/radiolicensing/html/radio-stations/community/cr102143ba1carolinecommunityradio.htm|title = Ofcom &#124; Community Radio Stations|website=Static.ofcom.org.uk}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000p79h|title = BBC Radio 4 - the Media Show, John Whittingdale's media agenda|website=Bbc.co.uk}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.maldonandburnhamstandard.co.uk/news/18748047.new-station-launches-help-legendary-radio-caroline/|title=New station to launch with help from legendary Radio Caroline|newspaper=Maldon and Burnham Standard|access-date=25 March 2022}}</ref> The station, owned by St Peters Studio and Community Radio Limited, has not only licensed the name from Radio Caroline, but has also got technical support and programming from the station, who have their own community radio licences in the south, south east and in East Anglia on 648AM (with Radio Caroline also found on DAB in a number of British cities, plus DAB+ in Cambridge).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://radiotoday.co.uk/2020/10/caroline-community-radio-launches-in-essex/|title = Caroline Community Radio launches in Essex|website=Radiotoday.co.uk|date = 19 October 2020}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://radiotoday.co.uk/2017/06/radio-caroline-allowed-1kw-tx-on-648-am/|title = Radio Caroline allowed 1kW TX on 648 AM|website=Radiotoday.co.uk|date = 2 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://radiotoday.co.uk/2020/03/radio-caroline-is-now-on-dab-in-cambridge/|title=Radio Caroline is now on DAB+ in Cambridge|website=Radiotoday.co.uk|date=5 March 2020}}</ref> Caroline Community Radio was relaunched as Caroline Coastal on 20 April 2024 with an additional FM frequency of 104.7 MHz. <ref>{{Cite web |title=ABOUT US |url=https://www.carolinecoastal.co.uk/about-us |access-date=2024-08-11 |website=Caroline Coastal |language=en}}</ref>
 
==International operations==
{{More citations needed section|date=June 2011}}
 
===The Netherlands===
In January 2002, a Dutch Caroline fan called Sietse Brouwer launched a Netherlands-based '''Dutch Radio Caroline''' in [[Harlingen, Netherlands|Harlingen]], broadcasting on the northern Netherlands cable networks and largely independent of UK Caroline. Brouwer intended to obtain an AM frequency from the Netherlands authorities in 2003 when its medium wave frequencies were reallocated. However, Dutch Caroline failed to secure a high power AM frequency and the cable network service was discontinued because of lack of funds. The Dutch Radio Caroline then changed its name to '''Radio Waddenzee''' [[:nl:Radio Waddenzee|(nl)]] for daytime Dutch and German language, and Radio Seagull for nighttime English language broadcasts, and now broadcasts on 1602&nbsp;kHz every day and on the internet, presenting a progressive rock format. Since November 2009 Radio Seagull can be heard periodically on 558&nbsp;kHz in London.{{citation needed|date=June 2011}}
 
===Spain===
In Spain, a station broadcast during the summer 2009 on 102.7&nbsp;MHz in the Costa Blanca from studios in Benidorm.
 
===Ireland===
Radio Caroline used to broadcast in the Republic of Ireland on channel 927 on the [[UPC Ireland]] [[Cable television|cable]] service in the main cities of [[Dublin]], [[Cork (city)|Cork]], [[Limerick]], [[Galway]], [[Waterford]] and Cappoquin, and the County Waterford towns of Lismore and Tallow.
 
===New Zealand===
{{see also|Radio Caroline (New Zealand)}}
In [[Timaru]], an [[NZBC]] station, originally 3XC, later 3ZC, broadcast as Radio Caroline until 1995. The name was taken from [[Caroline Bay]], a popular recreation area nearby.<ref name="Tiramu">{{cite web|url=http://www.theradiovault.net/timaru.htm |title=Timaru |publisher=Theradiovault.net |access-date=4 November 2011}}</ref>
 
In [[Palmerston, New Zealand|Palmerston]], Radio Caroline International, based in Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain, acquired an AM commercial broadcasting licence in 2008, and was seeking wavelengths in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch. Daytime programming was leased to a community radio service called Puketapu Radio on 756&nbsp;kHz.<ref name="Puketapu">{{cite news|url = http://www.odt.co.nz/the-regions/east-otago/16017/radio-puketapu-stakeholder-has-pirate-past|title = Radio Puketapu stakeholder has pirate past |date = 2 August 2008 |access-date = 30 June 2011 |first = Bill |last = Campbell |publisher = Allied Press Limited |work= Otago Daily Times}}</ref>
 
==References in popular culture==
{{In popular culture|date=March 2022}}
*A "D" and an "I" from the phrase RADIO CAROLINE (painted as a [[billboard|hoarding]] in 1974) can still be read in lichen growth on the inside wall of one of the stone [[sarsen|sarsens]] at [[Stonehenge]].<ref name=Stonehenge>{{cite book|title=Avebury and Stonehenge: The Greatest Stone Circles in the World|last=Pitts|first=Mike|date=2001|publisher=Digging Deeper Press|edition=Second}}</ref>
*''The Golden Age of Wireless'' album by [[Thomas Dolby]], track: "Radio Silence" – reference to a woman named "Caroline" and lamenting a lost love like an empty radio frequency.
*''[[Freeze Frame (Godley & Creme album)|Freeze Frame]]'' album by [[Godley & Creme]], 1979, track: "Get Well Soon" – reference to Radio Caroline.
*"[[Rock 'n' Roll (Status Quo song)|Rock 'n' Roll]]", a song by [[Status Quo (band)|Status Quo]], has the lyrics "Waiting all the time to find radio plays on Caroline".
*The rock band [[Green (band)|Green]] paid tribute in the song "Radio Caroline"<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ku8J1NYjOLI |title=Green - Radio Caroline (1987) - YouTube |website=[[YouTube]] |access-date=30 November 2016 |archive-date=16 February 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170216002045/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ku8J1NYjOLI |url-status=dead }}</ref> on their album ''[[Elaine MacKenzie]]''.
*Ska band [[The Toasters]]' song ''Pirate Radio'' has the lyrics "Tuning in at the 999, they used to call her Caroline".
 
==See also==
{{Portal|Radio}}
*[[Pirate radio in the United Kingdom]]
*[[Marine, &c., Broadcasting (Offences) Act 1967]] – The UK legislation aimed at offshore radio, enacted August 1967.
*[https://mediumwave.info/2023/05/08/united-kingdom-282/ Radio Caroline now on YouTube.]
*[https://www.woodleynet.co.uk/caroline/podcasts.htm Relisten Radio Caroline]
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
 
==Further reading==
{{reflist}}
*''Radio Caroline''. Venmore Rowland. John. Landmark Press. UK. 1967 – The original book about Radio Caroline.
*''When Pirates Ruled The Waves''. [[Paul Harris (author)|Harris, Paul]]. Impulse Publications, UK, 1968. 6th Edition Kennedy & Boyd, UK 2001 {{ISBN|978-1-904999-37-9}}
*''History of Radio Nord''. Kotschack, Jack. Forlags AB. Sweden (Swedish). English version published in 1970 by Impulse Publications, UK.
*''From International Waters''. Leonard, Mike – Forest Press. Heswall, UK. 1996 {{ISBN|0-9527684-0-2}} – An encyclopedia about the history of offshore broadcasting until 1996.
*''The Beat Fleet: The story behind the 60s 'pirate' radio stations''. Leonard, Mike. Forest Press. Heswall, UK. 2004 {{ISBN|0-9527684-1-0}}.
*''Last of the Pirates''. Noakes, Bob. Paul Harris Publishing, Edinburgh. 1984. {{ISBN|0-86228-092-3}} – This book is written by an engineer and DJ who worked on the MV Mi Amigo during the last phase of life prior to sinking.
* ''Butterfly upon the Wheel''. Moore, Peter. Offshore Echo's. London, UK. 1992, {{ISSN|0150-2794}} – Written by the station manager, this book recounts the adventures and struggles to keep Radio Caroline on the air.
* ''Records at Sea – The Story of the Ross Revenge''. Weston, Mike. [http://rcsocietysales.co.uk/read.html Radio Caroline Sales]. UK, 2002 – A detailed history of the [[MV Ross Revenge]].
* ''The Autobiography''. Walker, Johnnie. Penguin Books. London, 2007. {{ISBN|978-0-14-102428-8}}.
* ''Manx Giant from the Wonderful Isle of Man: The Story of Radio Caroline North 1964 – 1968''. Wint, Andy. Chesterfield Publications. 2008. {{ISBN|978-0-956013-90-3}}.
* ''Ships in Troubled Waters''. [[Nigel MacArthur|Nigel Harris]]. MyWayPublishing. UK, 2009. {{ISBN|978-0-9563996-0-1}}. Revised edition (with additional photos) 2014. {{ISBN|978-0-956399-62-5}} – This book details the author's long history with Radio Caroline.
* ''Shiprocked – Life on the Waves With Radio Caroline''. Conway, Steve. Liberties Press. Dublin, 2009 {{ISBN|978-1-905483-62-4}} – This book tells the story of [[Steve Conway (writer)|Steve Conway]]'s career with Radio Caroline in the late 1980s.
* ''The Ship That Rocked the World: How Radio Caroline Defied the Establishment, Launched the British Invasion, & Made the Planet Safe for Rock & Roll''. [[Tom Lodge]]. Bartleby Press. Austin, Texas 2010 {{ISBN|978-0-910155-82-3}} – The story of Radio Caroline in the 1960s by one of its foremost DJs.
* ''Radio Caroline: The True Story of the Boat that Rocked''. Clark, Ray. The History Press. Stroud, UK 2014 {{ISBN|978-0-752498-87-4}} – A history of Radio Caroline by a former DJ.
 
==External links==
*''Radio Caroline'', by Venmore Rowland, John. - Landmark Press, UK. 1967. - The original book about Radio Caroline. Contains interesting information about the stations.
{{Commons category}}
*''When Pirates Ruled The Waves'', by Harris, Paul. - Impulse Publications, UK. 1968. - The first book published in the wake of the Marine Offences Act of 1967 at a time of uncertainty. There are factual errors in the book which is mainly based upon press cuttings.
*{{Official website|http://www.radiocaroline.co.uk}}
*''History of Radio Nord'', by Kotschack, Jack. - Forlags AB, Sweden. (Swedish) English version published in 1970 by Impulse Publications, UK. - Radio Nord used the MV ''Mi Amigo'' which was later used by Radio Atlanta which merged with the Caroline Organization to become Radio Caroline South. This ship sank in 1980.
* {{Discogs release|3667427}} 'The Radio Caroline Story 1964-1984'
*''From International Waters'', by Leonard, Mike. - Forest Press, Heswall, UK. 1996. ISBN 0-9527684-0-2 - An encyclopedia about the history of offshore broadcasting until 1996. Contains extensive coverage about the history of Radio Caroline.
*''Mass Media Moments in the United Kingdom, the USSR and the USA'', by Gilder PhD., Eric. - "Lucian Blaga" University of Sibiu Press, Romania. 2003. ISBN 973-651-596-6 - Contains academic studies of government reaction to the advent of ''pirate radio'' in Europe and details of how Radio Caroline influenced Texans to start Wonderful Radio London.
*''The Beat Fleet: The story behind the 60's 'pirate' radio stations'', by Leonard, Mike. - Forest Press, Heswall, UK. 2004 ISBN 0 9527684 1 0 - A look at the business operations behind Britain's offshore stations.
 
{{Offshore radio}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Caroline}}
[[Category:Offshore radio]]
[[Category:1964 establishments]]
[[Category:Radio stations in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Rock radio stations]]
 
{{Authority control}}
[[bs:Radio Caroline]]
 
[[de:Radio Caroline]]
[[Category:Classic rock radio stations in the United Kingdom]]
[[fr:Radio Caroline]]
[[Category:History of the North Sea]]
[[nl:Radio Caroline]]
[[Category:Internet radio stations in the United Kingdom]]
[[ja:Radio Caroline]]
[[Category:Offshore radio]]
[[Category:Pirate radio stations in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Radio stations established in 1964]]
[[Category:Radio stations disestablished in 1990]]
[[Category:Rock radio stations in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Satellite radio stations]]
[[Category:Defunct radio stations in the United Kingdom]]