When Westminster Complained About Neon Signs
When Neon Crashed the Airwaves
On paper it reads like satire: in June 1939, just months before Britain plunged into war, MPs in Westminster were arguing about neon signs.
Labour firebrand custom neon signs London Gallacher, stood up and asked the Postmaster-General a peculiar but pressing question. Was Britain’s brand-new glow tech ruining the nation’s favourite pastime – radio?
The reply turned heads: around a thousand complaints in 1938 alone.
Imagine it: the soundtrack of Britain in 1938, interrupted not by enemy bombers but by shopfront glow.
Major Tryon confessed the problem was real. The difficulty?: the government had no legal power to force neon owners to fix it.
He spoke of a possible new Wireless Telegraphy Bill, but warned the issue touched too many interests.
Translation? Parliament was stalling.
Gallacher pressed harder. He pushed for urgency: speed it up, Minister, people want results.
Another MP raised the stakes. If neon was a culprit, weren’t cables buzzing across the land just as guilty?
Tryon deflected, admitting it made the matter "difficult" but offering no real solution.
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Seen through modern eyes, it’s heritage comedy with a lesson. Back then, neon was the tech menace keeping people up at night.
Eighty years on, the irony bites: neon is the endangered craft fighting for survival, while plastic LED fakes flood the market.
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What does it tell us?
First: neon has always rattled cages. It’s always forced society to decide what kind of light it wants.
Second: every era misjudges bespoke neon signs in London.
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Our take at Smithers. We see proof that neon was powerful enough to shake Britain.
That old debate shows neon has always mattered. And it always will.
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Ignore the buzzwords of "LED neon". Authentic glow has history on its side.
If neon got MPs shouting in 1939, it deserves a place in your space today.
Choose glow.
You need it.
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