First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
Retired MD of Belfast publisher Blackstaff Press, Anne Tannahill, with vivid memories of childhood joy as the family gathered around the wireless at home in north Belfast.
First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
Effervescent comic actress, writer and Ulster Queen of Comedy, Nuala McKeever recalls her childhood years in Belfast when the radio was for her a doorway to dreams.
First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
Radio memories with John Morrow, a Belfast man who left school at 14 to work in the shipbuilding and linen industries before he began writing and broadcasting in the 1970s.
First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
Radio memories with Portadown-born Gloria Hunniford, one of the first voices on the newly-launched Radio Ulster in the 1970s, and now a household name across the UK.
First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
Belfast investigative journalist, writer and Northern Editor of The Sunday World, Jim McDowell, remembers the wireless in the butcher's shop of his Da, Big Sausage McDowell.
First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
The series of radio memories concludes with Radio Ulster's first Dublin reporter back in 1975, now a best-selling novelist based in the United States, Frank Delaney.
First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
Retired BBC National Governor and former head of the NI Civil Service, Sir Kenneth Bloomfield, recalls the wartime radio voices of the nation's leaders when he was eight years old.
First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
Fond memories of radio listening - starting with Children's Hour and Auntie Cicely - from Co Antrim actress Olivia Nash, who plays Ma in Give My Head Peace.
First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
Poet, songwriter and university professor Paul Muldoon remembers the radio that sat in a cupboard beside the mantlepiece in his Co Armagh childhood home.
First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
Anna Lo, Alliance Party MLA for South Belfast, recalls how listening to the radio helped to improve her English after moving to Ulster from Hong Kong in 1974.
First broadcast: on BBC Radio UlsterLatest broadcast: on BBC Radio Foyle
Co Down singer-songwriter and broadcaster Tommy Sands, who has been taking his music all over the world for almost five decades, shares his fondest radio memories.