Director-General of the BBC
From Free net encyclopedia
(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 11:06, 4 April 2006
Redvers (Talk | contribs)
Editor-in-Chief role added to D-G's job when Haley took over in 1944
Next diff →
Redvers (Talk | contribs)
Editor-in-Chief role added to D-G's job when Haley took over in 1944
Next diff →
Current revision
The Director-General is chief executive and (from 1944) editor-in-chief of the BBC. The position is appointed by Board of Governors of the BBC.
- Sir John Reith (1927-1938)
- Sir Frederick Ogilvie (1938-1942)
- Sir Cecil Graves and Robert W. Foot (joint Director-Generals, 1942-1943)
- Robert W. Foot (1942-1944)
- Sir William Haley (1944-1952)
- Sir Ian Jacob (1952-1959)
- Sir Hugh Greene (1960-1969)
- Sir Charles Curran (1969-1977)
- Sir Ian Trethowan (1977-1982)
- Alasdair Milne (1982-1987)
- Sir Michael Checkland (1987-1992)
- Sir John Birt (1992-2000)
- Greg Dyke (2000 - January 29 2004)
- Mark Byford (Acting Director-General, January 29 2004 - June 21 2004)
- Mark Thompson (June 22 2004 - )
[edit]