What are some of the longest time frames in which an operating OTA broadcast station has gone off the air, only to return? And what was the reason for the hiatus? (Financial, legal, license dispute, tower collapse, fire or natural disaster, etc.)
Two examples from here in the South:
(1)In 1968, the facilities of WAKA-8 in Selma AL (at the time a very low-powered CBS affiliate not allowed to expand its signal into the Montgomery market) were destroyed in a fire, and they did not return to the air until 1973 after new owners rebuilt the station. It returned as a CBS affiliate (and was finally allowed more powerful facilities in 1984, extending their coverage to Montgomery.)
(2)In 1976, independent WSWB-35 Orlando FL left the air after only two years of operation when their owners went bankrupt. (The plug was actually pulled on the station in the middle of a program when U.S. Marshals arrived to seize the equipment for creditors!!) After a lot of legal hassles, and attempts by both Ted Turner and Pat Robertson to purchase the station, it returned in 1979 as WOFL-35 (also independent, but later becoming the Fox affiliate for Orlando).
Two examples from here in the South:
(1)In 1968, the facilities of WAKA-8 in Selma AL (at the time a very low-powered CBS affiliate not allowed to expand its signal into the Montgomery market) were destroyed in a fire, and they did not return to the air until 1973 after new owners rebuilt the station. It returned as a CBS affiliate (and was finally allowed more powerful facilities in 1984, extending their coverage to Montgomery.)
(2)In 1976, independent WSWB-35 Orlando FL left the air after only two years of operation when their owners went bankrupt. (The plug was actually pulled on the station in the middle of a program when U.S. Marshals arrived to seize the equipment for creditors!!) After a lot of legal hassles, and attempts by both Ted Turner and Pat Robertson to purchase the station, it returned in 1979 as WOFL-35 (also independent, but later becoming the Fox affiliate for Orlando).