or for those who couldnt afford a TV, probably still listening to the radio.Scott Fybush said:Madmansam said:KTVU-36 In Stockton, California (1953-55)
Indeed - and even if you argue Stockton as a separate market from Sacramento at the time, KCCC-40 in Sacramento (Sept. 1953) also beat the Vs up there to air.
One imagines there were a lot of tall towers on homes in Sacramento and Stockton prior to that, with big antennas aimed over the hills to San Francisco...
Which station was on the air first? KTVU-36 or KCCC-40?Scott Fybush said:Madmansam said:KTVU-36 In Stockton, California (1953-55)
Indeed - and even if you argue Stockton as a separate market from Sacramento at the time, KCCC-40 in Sacramento (Sept. 1953) also beat the Vs up there to air.
One imagines there were a lot of tall towers on homes in Sacramento and Stockton prior to that, with big antennas aimed over the hills to San Francisco...
Scott Fybush said:This thread is going on in parallel here and at the Classic TV board, where KPTV was mentioned early on.
Madmansam said:Which station was on the air first? KTVU-36 or KCCC-40?Scott Fybush said:Madmansam said:KTVU-36 In Stockton, California (1953-55)
Indeed - and even if you argue Stockton as a separate market from Sacramento at the time, KCCC-40 in Sacramento (Sept. 1953) also beat the Vs up there to air.
One imagines there were a lot of tall towers on homes in Sacramento and Stockton prior to that, with big antennas aimed over the hills to San Francisco...
Bluenoser said:Madmansam said:Which station was on the air first? KTVU-36 or KCCC-40?Scott Fybush said:Madmansam said:KTVU-36 In Stockton, California (1953-55)
Indeed - and even if you argue Stockton as a separate market from Sacramento at the time, KCCC-40 in Sacramento (Sept. 1953) also beat the Vs up there to air.
One imagines there were a lot of tall towers on homes in Sacramento and Stockton prior to that, with big antennas aimed over the hills to San Francisco...
KCCC launched in September '53, KTVU sometime in the mid-50s (couldn't find an exact date).
kenrayc said:In Fresno CA, the first station was KMJ-TV 24 that went on the air on June 1, 1953 and carried all 3 networks, later that Fall KJEO 47 went on the air as a CBS affiliate, on May 10 1956 KFRE ch12 went on the air taking the CBS Affiation from KJEO 47, which became ABC leaving KMJ 24 the NBC affiliate, in 1961 KFRE 12 switched to channel 30 making Fresno a all UHF Market, Channel 12 moved to Santa Maria as KCOY, I remember My Grandmother's TV a 1953 Admiral that had to have UHF strips added to the VHF Tuner, which KMJ 24 was on channel 2 and KJEO 47 was on channel 5, when KFRE switched from 12 to 30 she have to add on a UHF converter, seems like history repeats itself with the digital transition, and now KAIL 53 went to channel 7 bringing VHF back to Fresno 50 years later, which doesn't help the fact we use all UHF antennas.
I still remember having a TV with no UHF. I forget what the box on top was. It either moved the antenna or allowed UHF channels to be watched. I forget which.KML-224 said:UHF wasn't required on all TVs until 1964.
Ultimajock said:...in the Green Bay-Fox Cities market, although WBAY-TV/2 (CBS primary/ was by far the first station on the air, in 1953, the first stations licenced to any of the Fox Cities were WNAM-TV/42 (ABC) Neenah-Menasha and WOSH-TV/48 (NBC) Oshkosh, both later in 1953. WOSH was so poorly constructed that you actually could see the beacon atop the transmitting tower at a greater distance than you could get a city-grade signal; after a year of operation, WOSH-TV went dark and the physical assets were sent up to Marinette to start up WMBV/11 (NBC) in 1954. Several online sources falsely claim WNAM took to the air in 1955; when I lived in Oshkosh I was able to find program listings and ads for WNAM-TV in microfilms of the Oshkosh Northwestern newspaper dated as early as 1953. Around 1958, in order to take advantage of a new VHF allocation for Green Bay, WNAM-TV reorganised itself and changed call sign and channel to WFRV/5...
KeithE4 said:In some cases, like Reading and Allentown PA, their UHF network affiliates died when the three big VHFs in Philly built the Roxborough antenna farm in 1957. IIRC, Reading and Allentown had two UHF network affiliates each. They didn't last long.
PTBoardOp94 said:Evansville, IN had WFIE-14 and WEHT-50 sign on in 1953. WEHT later moved to channel 25. The market's first VHF, WTVW-7 signed on in 1956. Another V signed on in the early 80s with WNIN-9.
Even post-digital, there are two full power Vs in the market: WEHT on RF 7 and WNIN on RF 9.
Greg Branch said:Victoria, TX is another market that started out as UHF, KXIX-19 (now KVCT) and remains an all UHF market today. Victoria was far enough away from Houston, San Antonio, and Corpus Christi that KXIX was able to survive went it went on the air in 1969.