On May 23, 2026, the Caribbean media landscape lost one of its most towering figures: Jeff Charles, a pioneering broadcaster whose voice shaped generations of listeners across Dominica and the wider region. For countless Dominicans who came of age alongside his career, Charles was far more than a familiar voice on the airwaves — he was a formative influence, who turned early broadcasting from a simple communication tool into a cornerstone of public trust and civic education at a time when the industry carried profound social responsibility.
My first in-person encounter with Charles dates back to 1968, when I peered into the cramped radio studio tucked behind Roseau Public Library on Victoria Street. That unassuming building hosted Dominica’s branch of the Windward Islands Broadcasting Service (WIBS), a trailblazing regional network launched in 1955 that connected Dominica, Grenada, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent via shortwave transmission. Records from dbcradio.net show WIBS operated under the West Indies Broadcasting Council until the early 1970s, when the regional network was gradually replaced by emerging national broadcasters including Radio Dominica and later DBS Radio. To a wide-eyed young boy standing outside that modest studio, radio felt like pure magic — and the voices that entered our homes were larger than life. None loomed larger than Jeff Charles.
Before he claimed his place as a broadcasting legend, Charles built a reputation as a respected educator at Dominica Grammar School. He was part of a generation of Caribbean teachers who understood that rhetorical skill, lifelong learning, and public service were inextricably linked. His command of English was flawless: polished but never stilted, authoritative but always approachable. Listeners tuned in not only to get news and updates, but to learn how to use language with intention and care. Rarely, if ever, did a grammatical mistake, awkward phrasing, or embarrassing verbal blunder slip into his broadcasts. For Charles, broadcasting demanded precision, discipline, and deep respect for every person listening.
Today, that commitment to linguistic excellence is a far too rare standard across modern airwaves. Careless, redundant phrasing has become commonplace: broadcasters say “reversing back at a fast rate of speed” when reverse already implies backward movement, or “rain was falling heavily” when rain naturally falls. More precise alternatives are simple: “reversing” or “backing up” for the first, and “raining heavily,” “pouring,” or “coming down in sheets” for the second. Charles embodied an older broadcasting ethos where language mattered deeply, where a broadcaster’s job was to elevate public discourse rather than dilute it.
The ripple effect of Charles’ masterful oratory and uncompromising professional standards still shapes Caribbean media today. Through direct mentorship and the quiet influence of his example, he nurtured generations of leading Dominican broadcasters and media personalities, from Dennis Joseph and Irving Knight to Ferdinand Frampton, Michael Peters, Tim Durand, Shermaine Green-Brown, Ted Daley, Ken Richards, and Felix Henderson. Many who followed in his footsteps inherited, consciously or not, his measured cadence, unflinching seriousness, rigorous discipline, and reverence for language. His influence stretched far beyond his own time on the air, embedding itself into the very culture of Caribbean radio journalism.
Charles also helped put Dominica on the regional map during the landmark 1975 Cricket World Cup, where he joined legendary commentators Tony Cozier and Joseph ‘Reds’ Perreira to deliver live ball-by-ball coverage to millions of listeners across the Caribbean. During West Indies’ dramatic, comeback victory over Pakistan, his stirring commentary lifted audiences through moments of near despair, reminding the Caribbean crowd that “hope springs eternal in the human breast.” In that moment, Charles proved that great broadcasters do more than describe events — they name shared emotion, sustain collective morale, and give voice to the aspirations of an entire people.
A telling anecdote from Charles’ teaching years, shared by the late Dr. Clayton Shillingford of the Dominica Academy of Arts and Sciences, offers a window into his character. According to Shillingford, he and Charles clashed with then Education Minister W.S. Stevens over a perceived etiquette slight: the pair, alongside fellow teacher Simon Richards, walked out mid-speech that Stevens was delivering at the school, in what the minister saw as disrespect. The three, dubbed “the three rebels,” were formally disciplined. As recent graduates of the University of the West Indies, it has been speculated that these bright young educators viewed Stevens as falling short of their academic standards, though this has never been confirmed. Regardless of the details, the incident revealed the unapologetic confidence, assertiveness, and intellectual energy that defined the post-colonial generation of young Caribbean professionals, who were determined to challenge outdated hierarchies and reimagine Caribbean public life on their own terms.
Yet reflecting on Charles’ legacy is not without sadness. After leaving Dominica to pursue advanced academic studies — reportedly completing a PhD in communications from Stanford University — he grew increasingly disconnected from Dominican public life and diaspora networks. It is possible he felt his decades of contributions to the nation were never fully appreciated. I personally extended an invitation for him to join the Dominica Academy of Arts and Sciences, so that young Dominicans could learn from his decades of experience in academia and broadcasting, but he declined the offer. In hindsight, this stands as a missed opportunity not just for Charles, but for the entire nation.
My final glimpse of Charles came in 2024, during the remote funeral services for his close friend Dr. Clayton Shillingford. Through our mutual acquaintance Julius Corbette, I obtained his contact information and attempted to arrange an interview either last year or earlier this year. Though he answered the phone twice, he was unable to speak. There is something almost poetic, and deeply haunting, about that final silence from a man whose voice once captured the admiration of an entire region.
Even so, history will hold Jeff Charles in high esteem. He helped lay the foundational framework for Dominican broadcasting during the pivotal era of national awakening and Caribbean self-definition. He brought dignity to the microphone and uncompromising excellence to public communication. His voice educated, inspired, comforted, and lifted up countless listeners across multiple generations.
A great voice has fallen silent, but its echoes will never fade. Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife Susan and all his family during this time of grief. May God welcome his soul into eternal glory, and may Dominica never forget the immeasurable contributions of Jeff Charles — teacher, scholar, gentleman, and one of the finest voices to ever grace Caribbean radio.
