Episodes
Giles Job lived in the Derby Castle Hotel as a child in the late 1940s. At the time the building was divided into two apartments and he and his family lived in one of them.
On a recent visit to the Isle of Man he took the opportunity to talk to Charles Guard about his memories of the living there, including anecdotes about the Derby Castle theatre, the dance hall and the underground maze of cellars and passages that he explored as a young boy.
A new Lieutenant Governor is sworn in to start his term of office on the Isle of Man. He can expect to be patron of over 100 Manx charities and societies, undertake receptions and host visits and fulfil some constitutional duties. But at a cost to the Manx taxpayer of two and a half million pounds for the five years, Charles Guard asks the question: Why do we need a Governor?
More than 40 years on, Charles Guard and Robert Quayle recall some of the highlights of the 1979 Millennium of Tynwald.
A programme broadcast from the Tynwald Chamber during the Isle of Architecture.
Charles Guard recalls amusing anecdotes and tells the story of the Tynwald buildings, with music from Caarjyn Cooidjagh.
Another chance to hear the tribute to one of Manx Radio's most popular broadcasters, David Callister, who died last year. The programme is presented by his friend and colleague, Charles Guard.
This version of the Legend of St Maughold is written and performed by Charles Guard. It was originally staged with the Isle of Man Symphony Orchestra in the Villa Marina, but in this recording the orchestral sounds are recreated using the digital samples on Charles' computer. What would St Maughold have thought of that?
On the night of 3rd December 1909, the Isle of Man Steam Packet's vessel Ellan Vannin sank in a terrible storm as she approached the entrance to the River Mersey. All 35 passengers and crew were drowned. In this programme, first broadcast in December 2019, Charles Guard examines the causes of the tragedy and some of the mysteries surrounding it.
In July 1947 the Isle of Man received a surprise visit from the President of Ireland, Eamonn De Valera. His tour of the Island included a visit to Cregneash where he spoke to native speaker Ned Maddrell. The conversation led to De Valera offering to facilitate tape recordings of the Island's last surviving native speakers, tapes which are now a priceless record of spoken Manx. In this programme, which was first broadcast in July 2017, Charles Guard discovers how it all came about.
Charles Guard picks up the courage to return to King William's College where, sixty years ago as a nine-year-old he started as a boarder. The canings, the food, the rugby - such awful memories. How has his Alma Mater changed over the past sixty years?