> Real easy (or not?)...Is it known when your city or town
> first got cable TV?
Tupelo, Miss. began cable TV service along about 1955. The city didn't get its first (and only) local station until '57, so all channels came out of Memphis (100 miles to the NW). We lived there 1971-78, and here was the lineup back then:
2 = WKNO-10/Memphis (PBS)
3 = WREG-3/Memphis (CBS)
4 = WHBQ-13/Memphis (ABC)
5 = WMC-5/Memphis (NBC) ... went to blank screen when programming duplicated WTWV
6 = WTWV-9/Tupelo (NBC, ABC) -- changed calls to the present WTVA in 1979
7 = WCBI-4/Columbus, Miss. (CBS)
8 = blank
9 = blank
10 = weather (camera back and forth, panning weather gauges) WELO-FM audio (B/EZ)
11 = blank
12 = WMAE-12/Booneville, Miss. (PBS) -- signed on in 1974
13 = blank
It must be noted that Tupelo Community Antenna, as it was then called, began growing and acquiring other systems. It would change its name to COMCAST.
***********************
Troy, Alabama ..... began cable TV service in 1974 as Troy Cablevision, founded by the owner of a local furniture store. Grandmother lived here, and had cable installed the minute it became available (she got tired of rotating the antenna, and only being able to get ABC programs from Columbus, Ga., ~90 miles away!!)
Here was the lineup, circa 1975:
2 = WDIQ-2/Dozier, Ala. (PBS)
3 = WRBL-3/Columbus, Ga. (CBS)
4 = WTVY-4/Dothan, Ala. (CBS)
5 = Troy State University TV (Originally called "TV-5", now "TrojanVision")
6 = Local access / Automated weather
(had one of the first CG weather displays I'd ever seen)
7 = WDHN-18/Dothan, Ala. (ABC)
8 = WYEA-38/Columbus, Ga. (NBC) -- now known as WLTZ
9 = WTVM-9/Columbus, Ga. (ABC)
10 = WCOV-20/Montgomery (CBS) -- now a FOX affil
11 = News ticker
12 = WSFA-12/Montgomery (NBC)
13 = WKAB-32/Montgomery (ABC) -- now known as WNCF
In 1977, WSFA built a 2,000' stick about 20 miles north of Troy, which meant it had to change channels on the system. Also that year, then-WTCG 17 in Atlanta became a 'superstation.' Troy added them the minute that happened. HBO was also added around the same time.
Lineup, late '70s:
2 = WDIQ-2/Dozier (PBS)
3 = WRBL-3/Columbus (CBS)
4 = WTVY-4/Dothan (CBS)
5 = "TV-5" (Troy State University)
6 = Local Weather, access
7 = WTCG-17/Atlanta (Independent)
8 = HBO
9 = WTVM-9/Columbus (ABC)
10 = WCOV-20/Montgomery (CBS)
11 = WSFA-12/Montgomery (NBC)
12 = blank
13 = WKAB-32/Montgomery (ABC)
1980: Board of Troy Cablevision agrees, over the objection of the CEO/founder, to sell to Storer. Rates go up, quality of service goes down.
1985: Cablevision founder Harold Freeman discovered that Troy, Ala. had NO FRANCHISE AGREEMENT with Storer. With the unsaid blessing of city elders (who also were disappointed with their cable service), he and some friends began running cable ALL OVER TOWN, right underneath the old infrastructure he helped build over a decade ago. Did this all under the cover of darkness, too.
1986: Storer is caught with its pants down. People begin defecting back to Mr. Freeman. Troy now has competing cable systems. It wasn't unusual to see Harold himself up on a telephone pole making repairs at 2 AM to restore service!!
2005: Troy residents STILL have a choice of cable providers. Storer sold out to TCI who sold out to AT&T who sold out to Charter. Troy Cablevision is now Troy Cable (Freeman died in the late '90s; his sons now own it). For what otherwise is IMO a cliquish, two-bit small town of little value, that city is blessed with two sources of excellent and CHEAP cable service.
Oh, and by the way: satellite dishes are rare on homes in the Troy area.
Montgomery, Ala. also has competing cable providers: Charter vs. Knology. Same, I believe, also goes for Columbus, Ga.
Nice viewing if you can get it.
-RW