FW Ogilvie
Director-General 1938-1942
Sir Frederick Wolff Ogilvie (1893-1949) was an economics academic and former Vice-Chancellor at Queen’s University, Belfast.
He was appointed Director-General after John Reith left the post in 1938. He took on the role at a difficult time, during the early years of World War II, when the press and Government questioned the BBC's existence. He defended BBC independence but is thought to have shown lack of leadership.
Programme services, especially Overseas broadcasting increased in his time. However, delays and overspending meant he was replaced in 1942 by a joint team of RW Foot and Cecil Graves. Reith wrote in his autobiography "I was quite sure he was not the man for the BBC".
Ogilvie later became Principal of Jesus College, Oxford and was a vocal critic of the post-war BBC.
Directors-General
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John Reith
First Director-General, 1922-1938 -
FW Ogilvie
Second Director-General 1938-1942 -
Cecil Graves
Joint Director-General 1942-1943 -
RW Foot
Joint Director-General 1942-1943, Fourth Director-General 1943-1944 -
William Haley
Fifth Director-General 1944-1952 -
Ian Jacob
Sixth Director-General 1952-1959 -
Hugh Carleton-Greene
Seventh Director-General 1960-1969 -
Charles Curran
Eighth Director-General 1969-1977 -
Ian Trethowan
Ninth Director-General 1977-1982 -
Alasdair Milne
Tenth Director-General 1982-1987 -
Michael Checkland
Eleventh Director-General 1987-1992 -
John Birt
Twelfth Director-General 1992-2000 -
Greg Dyke
Thirteenth Director-General 2000-2004 -
Mark Thompson
Fourteenth Director-General 2004-2012 -
George Entwistle
Fifteenth Director-General 2012 -
Tony Hall
Sixteenth Director-General 2013-2020 -
Tim Davie
Seventeenth Director-General 2020-2026 -
Matt Brittin
Eighteenth Director-General 2026-