Rugby Radio - Rugby Art Gallery & Museum
100 years of Rugby Radio



15 April - 3 October 2026
100 Years of Rugby Radio celebrates the centenary of the station and featuring a treasure trove of items from the museum's social history collection.
Rugby Radio Station became operational on 1 January 1926, with its GBR transmitter - then the most powerful radio transmitter in the world - sending news broadcasts and telegrams across the globe.
A year later, the station started transmitting the iconic time signal 'pips' from the Royal Greenwich Observatory and launched the world's first transatlantic telephone service - with calls costing £15 for the first three minutes (the equivalent of more than £600 today).
During the Second World War, Rugby Radio Station operatives supported the RAF during bombing missions in Germany before the post-war telecommunications boom saw the radio station expand in the 1950s, with its total of 57 transmitters making it the biggest station in the world.
Technological advances led to the station's GBR transmitter being decommissioned in 2003 and four years later all transmissions from the station came to an end.
Now home to Houlton - named after the town in Maine, USA, which received the first transatlantic telephone call - the developers incorporated Rugby Radio Station's grade II listed 'C' building into Houlton School.
100 Years of Rugby Radio opens at Rugby Art Gallery and Museum's local history gallery on Wednesday 15 April, featuring apparatus, models and images from the station dating back to 1926.




RD2025 photograph of masts taken from Lilbourne Road 1950s by Rodney H Huntingford
2007.30.6 mast alarm panel
2007.30.2 activity board 1920s
2004.211 morse code hole punch 1920s