Northeast series: Boyneside Radio North at Easter

Northeast series: Boyneside Radio North at Easter
The Boyneside Radio North transmitter right on the border (courtesy Eddie Caffrey).

Boyneside Radio North was one of several satellite services of the main Drogheda station, aimed at listeners north of the border as far as Belfast. This was the most successful of the offshoot stations, broadcasting continuously from late summer 1982 to 31st December 1988. The studios of Boyneside Radio North were located at Killeen, just south of the border, and AM and FM transmitters were situated on the border itself. There were local programmes from Killeen for long parts of the day, with the remainder of material relayed from Drogheda.

This recording of Boyneside Radio North was made on Easter Sunday 1988 and features an unidentified DJ with a mixture  of pop and oldies. Requests are mostly from the Northern counties of Down and Armagh. Adverts feature businesses around the Newry area and an advertising promo contains Northern phone numbers. News at 1500 is read by Gerry Malone from Drogheda.

The tape is from the Anoraks Ireland Collection and was made from 1419-1508 on 3rd April 1988 from the 106.1 FM transmitter located at Edentubber, just on the border. Boyneside Radio North also broadcast on 1233 kHz (244 metres) to Newry.

Northeast series: Boyneside Radio North (1982)

Northeast series: Boyneside Radio North (1982)
Eugene Markey on Boyneside Radio North (photo courtesy of Eddie Caffrey).

Over the years Boyneside Radio operated services in Dundalk, Kells and Navan with local programming at certain times of the day. These had varying levels of success, but the most successful ‘satellite’ station must have been Boyneside Radio North. The station opened to serve the North of Ireland in the late summer of 1982, capitalising on the growing listenership to the Irish pirates north of the border.

Northeast series: Boyneside Radio North (1982)
Boyneside North’s AM mast at the border (photo courtesy of Eddie Caffrey).

Transmissions were on 1233 kHz AM, announced as 244 metres, from a studio located at Killeen, Co. Louth, just south of the border. Boyneside North had live programmes from 0800-1400, after which there was a relay of the Heady Eddie programme from Drogheda, more local output from 5pm and then a Drogheda relay in the evening and overnight.

Northeast series: Boyneside Radio North (1982)
Boyneside North’s rig at Carrickcarnon (photo courtesy of Eddie Caffrey).

The station employed several DJs from Northern Radio, which had closed earlier in the year. In 1986 a new mast was erected at Edentubber from which a high power FM signal was broadcast. At one point the power output was estimated at 20 Kw which reached Belfast, although there were reports of patchy reception around the city centre. Ironically, this mast remained in use by pirate radio until 2020, when it was illegally and dangerously felled by the Department of Communications following a raid.

Northeast series: Boyneside Radio North (1982)
The FM mast at Edentubber (photo courtesy of Eddie Caffrey).

Despite strong competition from other stations around the border, Boyneside North operated successfully until the final closedown on Saturday December 31st 1988 when it closed at 3pm.

Northeast series: Boyneside Radio North (1982)
Boyneside North rates card (courtesy of Eddie Caffrey).

This recording is of Marty Donnan on Boyneside North from 1000-1100 on 6th December 1982. Marty later worked for Downtown Radio and BBC Radio Ulster. We thank Ian Biggar for the text and recording.