Wow. Very thought-provoking question. Early 1950s in south-central Arkansas, 870 WWL and 650 WSM were pretty much regulars. But once in a while, I'd meander across the dial and find 720 WGN, 780 WBBM, 890 WLS and even occasionally (but with a lot of interference) 1000 WCFL, all from Chi-town...760 WJR/Detroit...700 WLW/Cinci...and that crazy thing with the 570/820 trade-outs between WBAP/Fort Worth and WFAA/Dallas. All this was done on a little 4-tube Arvin table model radio with NO outside antenna. radioman 148, you blew me away with your paean to your Zenith Trans-Oceanic. I upgraded to that from the Arvin when I was about 13, then almost broke my neck crawling across our steeply slanting second-story roof to string a 150-foot longwire. After that, I realized that those 50kw blowtorches pretty much commanded the skies ... but that getting 950 KIMN/Denver or 560 WQAM/Miami was really DXing. And once I got hooked up with the National Radio Club and found out about the middle-nacht specials arranged by their incredible Courtesy Programs Committee, I even got stuff like 1340 WALL/Middleburg NY and other low-power high-distance jewels. Alas, just as I was (I thought) starting to really get the hang of DXing, my hometown station, 1240 KWAK/Stuttgart AR put me to work full time (in my 9th grade year) and the next 53 years were spent on the sending side. Either way, a helluva ride!!!