Sunday, 1 March 2026

Television For Buffalo

When it came to television, the Buffalo Courier-Express couldn’t have been more wrong.

The paper published a story on Nov. 23, 1945 reading:

Washington, Nov. 22—One of the four commercial television channels assigned the Buffalo-Niagara Falls area likely will be allocated to The Courier-Express Station WEBR, it was believed here tonight. WEBR made the first bid for a Buffalo television channel months ago. The only other application from Buffalo was recently filed by WBEN.

“Believed?” Believed by whom?

WEBR’s application had been sitting in a file since at least June 1944, when it asked the FCC to award it Channel 1. Then came the re-allocation mentioned above. The Courier-Express noted on Nov. 15, 1945:

Television OK Asked
Washington, Nov. 15—The Federal Communications Commission said today it had received an application from Radio Station WBEN, Buffalo, to operate a commercial television station on “channel three—60 to 66 megacycles.”


When a hearing finally took place, the Courier-Journal was out of luck. It doesn’t look like the company ever got a TV station, even after its application changed to Channel 7 when 1 disappeared. But we learn from the Evening News of August 16, 1946:

TELEVISION PERMIT GRANTED TO WBEN
WASHINGTON, Aug. 16.—The Federal Communications Commission Thursday [15] granted WBEN, Buffalo, a construction permit for a new television station to be located in Buffalo. The commission ruled that the station could operate on 66 to 72 megacycle, assigned to Channel 4, with 14.4 kilowatts visual power and 7.2 kilowatts aural power. The permit also allows for erection of a 378-foot antenna.


The station was nowhere near ready to go on the air. A year later, in its Sept.8, 1947 issue, Broadcasting magazine gave a progress report.

WORK IS COMPLETED ON WBEN-TV ANTENNA
CONSTRUCTION was completed last week on the television antenna for WBEN-TV Buffalo, which expects to take the air early this winter.
The 122-foot RCA three-bay super-turnstile antenna will be located atop Hotel Statler, 385 feet above street level. The station's transmitter will also be placed in the Statler, which now houses WBEN studios and the WBEN-FM transmitter. Work on the video studios is now underway and installation of the transmitter will begin in the fall.
WBEN-TV is owned by the Buffalo Evening News and will operate on Channel 4 or 66-72 mc. with power of 5 kw video and 2.5 kw audio.


A staple of late 1940s television was the first thing brought to viewers in Buffalo: professional wrestling. The telecast was Feb. 13, 1948. The next day’s News:

WBEN-TV BROADCAST OF WRESTLING MATCHES OPENS NEW RADIO ERA
By ED KELLY
Radio entertainment in the Buffalo area entered a new and exciting era Friday night [13] when 400 fascinated spectators in Hotel Lafayette "watched" wrestling matches from Memorial Auditorium as WBEN-TV broadcast the first television program in the city's history.
Viewed from the screens of 13 receiver sets, the 75-minute show brought ringside thrills to radio dealers and press and radio representatives at a "television introduction" meeting sponsored by Bickford Brothers Company, distributor for RCA Victor. President Paul Wolk conducted the historic meeting.
As the slam-bang action of the Sexton-Managoff and Von Schacht-Thesz bouts was mirrored on the RCA Victor sets in the hotel's ball-room and Orchard Room, here's what was happening:
Picture Images Converted
1—WBEN-TV Technicians Philo Stevens and Jack Elliott, manning two electronic television cameras in the auditorium stands, were photographing the ring action and views of the 5125 spectators cheering the event.
2—These cameras were picking up the scenes on a camera tube and converting the picture images into electronic impulses.
3—The impulses, in turn, were sent by a TV relay—which functions as a miniature transmitter—through the night air to the WBEN-TV station atop Hotel Statler. They were captured there by a pickup mechanism, resembling a large dish balanced on its edge.
4—At the station, these electronic impulses—which, remember, were really the photographs taken at the ringside and converted — were amplified, then sent out again through the air. This time, an antenna atop Hotel Lafayette picked them up.
Field Equipment Used
5—From the antenna, the impulses traveled downward through the hotel and into the television sets. Here the kinescope, or picture tube, reconverted the electrical impulses into the same pictures seen by the television camera tube in the auditorium seven blocks away. The picture was then flashed to the screen of the receiving set.
Although the process sounds lengthy, actually the wrestling scenes traveled from the auditorium to the television receivers at the incredible speed of 166,000 miles a second!
The cameras wed in the broadcast were field equipment of RCA and similar to cameras to be used by WBEN-TV when it begins its regular programs.
As 9:30 o'clock approached—time for the beginning of the telecast—the spectators at the Lafayette pulled their chairs into semicircles around the receiving sets and awaited, with keen anticipation, what was for most of them their first glimpse of the new entertainment wonder.
Applause Spontaneous
Punctually, the screens came to life, images leaped to focus and the audience was not only hearing Ed Reimers, WBEN-TV production staff member, announce the match between Frederick Otto von Schacht and Lou Thesz—it was seeing him (as the television camera photographed him). A spontaneous wave of applause swept the audience as the telecast began.
The scene changed. Now there was a "long shot" of the ring, the two wrestlers and Referee Teddy Thomas moving nimbly about as the bout progressed from feinting to grappling to contortions on the canvas.
The scenes, changing frequently from long shots to closeups as the cameraman pressed a button, unfolded to the sound accompaniment of the cheers, boos and applause that swept the auditorium.
Eyes Riveted on Screen
Spectators in the hotel leaned forward tensely as the action grew more violent. Involuntarily, many moved to the edge of their chairs. All eyes were riveted to the animated screens.
The bout was over. With the intermission preceding the main event, the “eye” of the electronic camera swung slowly over the throng with panoramic effect. Members of the auditorium crowd were seen rising. Stretching, smoking. White-coated refreshment vendors crossed the screen, hawking their wares.
Again the camera picked up Mr. Reimers, this time with Ed Don George, wrestling immortal, at his side. The interview ended as Frank Sexton and Bobby Managoff climbed into the ring, with the cameras picking up the introduction of the principals as Mr. Reimers resumed the narration.
Sound Relayed Accurately
New wrestling fans were made at the telecast. Several youngsters leaped impatiently from their chairs to shout encouragement to their favorites as the tempo of the action became more violent. The pictures of the opponents hurling each other to the canvas with audible thumps drew "oohs and aahs" from the hotel spectators as well as those at the ringside.
With the bout ended, again the camera traveled over the crowd showing spectators rising, donning their hats and coats and filing to the exits. Another shot showed the rows of empty seats and the after-the-event litter cluttering the auditorium floors.
During the meeting preceding the telecast, Vice President Joseph B. Elliott of Radio Corporation of America, in charge of the Home Instrument Division, predicted that the industry, which produced and sold nearly 180,000 television sets in 1947, will produce about 750,000 this year.
Sets Will Be Available
The RCA sets installed for the test broadcast ranged from the $325 table model to the $1195 de luxe floor model. The screen on the former is 52 square inches; on the latter, 300 square inches. The de luxe model screen, 15 by 20 inches, is approximately the size of a newspaper page.
Mr. Elliott told the dealers that sets will be available for consumer purchase on "T Day"—when WBEN-TV officially goes on the air with commercial programs.
Television Director J. Woodrow Magnuson of the station said that WBEN-TV expects to begin commercial operation in the Spring.
Other speakers of RCA Victor were Dan D. Halpin, television receivers sales manager; Henry G. Baker, general sales manager, and, Jack Williams, advertising and sales promotion manager of the Home Instrument Division.


The next test show was the following Tuesday the 17th, a 10-act variety show for Philco dealers; the station was using Philco field equipment.

A sight familiar to those of us of a certain generation appeared on Buffalo’s televisions on Feb. 27—the Indian Head Test Pattern. The News told readers more than they probably wanted to know about it.

WBEN-TV Pattern-Testing Transmissions Are Underway
Fixed Picture Will Be Used as Guide for Radio Servicemen
By JOE HAEFFNER
This morning at 10 o'clock WBEN-TV started telecasting a fixed test pattern to guide radio servicemen in the installation of television sets in the Buffalo area.
The start of the test telecast climaxed a week of intensive, inch-by-inch inspection of the intricate mechanism and replacement of a defective link in the coaxial cable running from the transmitter to the antenna atop Hotel Statler.
The pattern hereafter will be on the air regularly Monday through Friday from 10 A. M. to noon and from 3 to 5 P. M. It also will aid radio dealers in demonstrating a "picture" on sets for prospective customers in their stores.
The pattern will be broadcast for a period of from 60 to 90 days, along with frequent announcements so that both audio (sound) and video (picture) portions of WBEN-TV may be effectively tested. At the conclusion of this test period, when studio equipment is expected to arrive, The Buffalo Evening News television station will begin a regular schedule of commercial programming. Broadcasting of the test pattern then will continue for aid in installation and proper tuning of receivers.
Station operates on Channel 4
The pattern is a fixed "picture" on a tube at the WBEN-TV transmitter on the 18th floor of the Statler, where the station's studios are being completed. The station is on Channel 4 (66-72 megacycles).
First, let's understand that all television pictures are based on a ratio of 4 to 3, so the width of the pattern is 1.33 times the height. This ratio long ago was established as more pleasing to the eye than a square picture. Before the "picture" on the receiver is properly adjusted, the object may be distorted in width or height, something like the reflections of persons looking into trick carnival mirrors.
The circle in the pattern may come in like a large capital "O" or it may be flattened to a short-and-stout Mr. Five-by-Five appearance. Adjustments can be made by radio servicemen to get the true perspective.
Circle Shows Uniformity
The large circle in the center indicates linearity or straightness of the cathode ray scanning beam used in transmission, and shows that the picture is being transmitted with true uniformity. That is, the proper height to the proper width.
The diameter of the large circle is three-fourths the pattern height. When the deflection is adjusted to give a true or undistorted form to this circle, the standard aspect ratio of 4 to 3 is established.
The cathode-ray scanning beam "scans" the picture from side to side at the rate of 525 times in one-thirtieth of a second. Much like newspaper halftone pictures are broken up into tiny dots (The News uses 75-line screen), so the television picture is a series of "lines," individually invisible to the naked eye.
"Wedges" Guide Adjuster
The sets of horizontal and vertical "wedges" in the center circle are calibrated in what engineers call number of "lines resolution," that is, the numbers indicate the total number of alternate black-and-white lines of equal width which can be contained in the height of the picture.
The figures in the wedged circle are to be multiplied by ten. At the point where "35" is indicated, it means that it would take 350 lines of that width to make the entire picture, top to bottom. Naturally, the higher the number of lines that can be "picked out" by the eye, the finer the adjustment of the receiver.
The principal set of wedges in the central part of the pattern and those in each of the four corners provide an indication of the quality of focus. This applies particularly to the corner wedges where defocussing is most likely to prevail.
Who Let the Indian In
The diagonal wedges simulate a density range extending from black towards white. With the brightness adjusted so that the innermost portion is black, or 100%, the remaining three sections of each wedge are respectively 75, 50 and 25% of black. Transmission of these sections will indicate how much picture detail is being transmitted.
The thin-line grids extending over the pattern provide an additional check on the horizontal and vertical "deflection" linearity, for instance, from the solid black of a gown down to the highlights in a person's eyes.
The flat heavy lines at the bottom indicate how the "low frequencies" or picture images with very little detail are received.
The Indian? Nobody—including Robert G. Beerbower, RCA Service Co. engineer from Camden. N. J., who has supervised the WBEN-TV testing—knows exactly how he got into the picture, but somebody suggested it might be Chief Red Jacket, also a pioneer in these parts.


Since the Buffalo News owned the station, there was an almost-daily parade of little stories about it as the time approached for full programming. Here is a sampling.

March 13th:
WBEN TV Applies For Relay Station
WASHINGTON, March 13.—The Buffalo Evening News' television station, WBEN-TV, has applied formally to the Federal Communications Commission for permission to operate an experimental television relay broadcast station. This is the unit that will permit WBEN-TV to pick up "on-the-scene" television shows around Buffalo, such as at Civic Stadium and Memorial Auditorium, and then relay them to the station's main transmitter atop Hotel Statler.
According to the application reported Friday [12] by the FFC, the re-lay station would operate within the 6950-6975 megacycle band with power of one-tenth watt.


March 24th:
WBEN-TV Televises Broadcast Cartoon
WBEN-TV continued its experimental tests early this afternoon, telecasting buildings and traffic in downtown Buffalo. The cameras were trained from windows in Hotel Statler, where the station's studios are located. A studio-to-receiver story of the course of a television show was cartooned and a sample of pictorial newscasts was telecast Tuesday afternoon [23]. Also, questions often asked about WBEN-TV and its programs were answered, and members of the administrative, technical and production staffs of the station were tele-viewed briefly.
The cartoons showed the path of a telecast, starting with an artist in the studio and proceeding with the director in charge, the control room with a busy producer in command, the transmitter, the coaxial cable leading to the station antenna, the tele-viewer's home with dipole antenna and the picture on the home receiver.
Photos of Secretary of State Marshall and other news figures and ballplayers in Spring-training action were televiewed, with oral descriptions.


March 26th:
'Live' Telecasts Due On WBEN-TV Monday
WBEN-TV today finished a week of varied test telecasts, including circus folk, a lion, shots of down-town and outlying buildings, cartoons, a marionette act and interviews with station personnel. Next week the station will continue or a schedule of tests, with "live" telecasts scheduled sometime between 2 and 4 P. M.
Television cameras were taken to the roof of Hotel Statler Thursday afternoon [25] and close-ups were shot of the WBEN-TV antenna. Then telephoto lenses brought the Central Terminal, St. Michael's Church, the Masten Avenue Armory, the Buffalo General Hospital and Masten Park High School and other buildings into focus.
WBEN-TV is on the air Monday through Friday from 9:30 A. M. to noon and from 2 to 5 P. M., with a test program occupying the morning schedule and some of the afternoon period.


March 30th:
BULOVA FIRST TO BUY TIME ON WBEN-TV
The Bulova Watch Company, the first sponsor when the standard broadcast station started in 1930, is the first advertiser to contract for time on WBEN-TV, station officials said today.
Bulova will make nightly time announcements over The Buffalo Evening News television station when it begins regular commercial programming in the late Spring.
WBEN-TV already has issued a television rate card and a list of local programs available for sponsorship.


March 31st:
WBEN-TV Plans Expanded Schedule
WBEN-TV today [31] announced a new schedule of experimental programs to be included in the station's 9:30-to-noon and 2-to-5 P. M, test periods, Monday through Fridays.
Scenes in downtown Buffalo and in outlying sections will be televised afternoons from 2:30 to 3 P. M. The station's cameras will be pointed from various windows of Hotel Statler, with telephoto lenses bringing buildings and traffic several miles away into focus.
Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoon at 3:30 there will be studio shows. Available talent will perform and there will be pictures of events in the news and explanations of television techniques. Performers from the Shrine Circus and the Midwest Sports & Boat Show, current in Buffalo, have entertained during the last few days.
WBEN'S sports director, Ralph Hubbell, was scheduled to give his predictions on current sports late this afternoon, with emphasis on hockey and baseball. Action photographs were to intersperse his interview with Announcer Ed Reimers.
The test pattern, which radio servicemen use as a guide when installing television receivers, will comprise the morning period and those portions of the afternoon schedule when street traffic and studio shows are not being televised.
WBEN-TV expects to begin regular commercial programming in the late Spring.


April 8th:
WBEN-TV Audience Sees Vaughn Monroe
Vaughn Monroe appeared in person on television Wednesday afternoon [7], but his singing voice didn't—that was recorded.
The singing bandleader, in Buffalo for a concert at Kleinhans Music Hall Wednesday evening, appeared on a WBEN-TV test telecast from the station's studios in Hotel Statler. He was interviewed by Ed Reimers.
When Ed called for a song, a technician started an RCA-Victor recording of Vaughn's late release of "Matinee," with brilliant orchestra accompaniment, and Mr. Monroe went through the lip motions. He also did a few bars of his theme song, "Racing With the Moon." The illusion was nigh-perfect.
From Michigan to Buffalo to Rhode Island in overnight hops is suite a tour of one-night stands, but Vaughn explained to Ed that his orchestra travels on his own plane, a Lockheed Lodestar.
The WBEN-TV schedule Wednesday afternoon also included a brief newscast illustrated with photographs, including shots of the Stassen-MacArthur-Dewey preferential primary in Wisconsin.


April 10th:
Mazurki ‘Pins’ Hubbell For WBEN-TV Mat Fans
Mike Mazurki, 240-pound wrestler from Hollywood, demonstrated various holds for the benefit of WBEN-TV audiences Friday [9] afternoon. The 240-pound Mazurki’s “opponent” was Ralph Hubbell, WBEN’s 140-pound sports director. Hubbell also interviewed Ed Don George, former world mat champion and present matchmaker for Upstate A.C.


April 24th:
WBEN Plans Same Program Tonight on TV, FM and AM
For the first time in Buffalo radio history, a program will be broadcast on television, frequency-modulation and standard-broadcast this evening. The University of Buffalo Round Table will be on WBEN, WBEN-FM and WBEN-TV at 7:30.
The topic. "The Movies and Social Problems," will cover polities, anti-discrimination, housing and other social aspects which recent motion pictures have featured.
Participants will be Dr. Nathaniel Cantor, head of the department of sociology and anthropology at U. B.; Dr. Willard H. Bonner, professor of English at the university, and Michael Simon, Western New York sales manager for Paramount Pictures. Dean Claude E Puffer will be moderator.
The television portion was first planned as an in-the-studio test, with the picture only on studio monitors and receivers. However, WBEN-TV officials explained that while the telecast may be rough in spots, the television audience will understand that the program is merely of an experimental nature.
It is another in the series of tests being conducted before the station begins regular programming in the late Spring. The television operations this evening will in no way interfere with the regular program on WBEN.


April 26th:
WBEN-TV TO START EVENING TELECASTS
Starting tonight, WBEN-TV will be on the air with a test pattern from 7 to 9 o'clock, Monday through Thursday, as an additional service for radio technicians and dealers. The evening service is being added, with music and announcements, so the effectiveness of sets may be demonstrated in homes and stores.
The local television station will continue its daytime schedule of test patterns Monday through Friday, with a pictorial newscast and other test shows starting at 2:30 in the afternoon.
The WBEN-TV crews of producers, announcers and technicians have been getting varied experience in the handling of cameras and mikes during the past several days, with a variety of test telecasts.
Saturday evening, the University of Buffalo Round Table was televised on WBEN-TV as well as broadcast over WBEN and WBEN FM.
The first weekend telecasts included a conservation talk, and Eskimos from the Buffalo Sportsmen's & Boat Show Saturday, and archers and Indians Sunday.
Other telecasts of the past several days featured pictorial newscasts, Model Candy Jones and other acts from the Sportsmen's & Boat Show, including a slingshot artist, animal hunters, lariat and whip experts, a ventriloquist, bird imitator and comic tumblers.


April 29th:
WBEN TO TELEVISE MAY DAY CEREMONY
WBEN-TV will televise a Diocesan Catholic function for the first time Saturday noon—the second annual May Day ceremony in Lafayette Square. The Most Rev. John F. O'Hara, CSC, bishop of the Buffalo Diocese will speak. The program, sponsored by the Holy Name Societies, will feature prayers for Russia and Soviet-dominated countries. Bishop O'Hara and other Holy Name leaders—the Rt. Rev. Joseph E. Maguire, spiritual director, and Stanley C. Collins, president—emphasized that non-Catholics are welcome.
Mr. Collins will be marshal of a parade that will leave the City Hall at 11:30 A. M. The general chairman is Austin J. Roche, with the Rev. Francis A. Growney special spiritual director.


There was also a Buffalo-Cleveland hockey game and a performance by Jimmy O’Neil, later of Shindig fame.

Finally, Friday, May 14, 1948 arrived, the official first day of regular programming. The News was filled with next-day coverage, including the text of every speech made on camera. We’ll skip all that and give you the long front-page story.

Excited Thousands See WBEN-TV Inaugurate Television for Buffalo
Sets Throughout City and Surrounding Communi-ties Attract Viewers; 3-Hour Entertainment Follows Brief Dedicatory Program
By ED KELLY
Television came to Buffalo Friday night [14] and—in excited thousands—Buffalo came to television.
Throughout the city and in surrounding communities, marveling throngs gathered before TV receiving sets to witness the dawn of a new entertainment era as WBEN-TV formally inaugurated a regular-program schedule.
There were excited spectator-audiences everywhere.
They gathered at "television parties" in the homes of set owners; they packed the showrooms of nearly every radio dealer in the downtown area and neighborhoods who held "open house' for T-day; they clustered expectantly about viewing screens in scores of public places; they lingered by the hundreds on sidewalks outside of display windows featuring television sets.
Electric Expectancy in Air
Throughout the station's 15-minute dedication program and the three hours of variety acts, films and wrestling exhibits that followed, scores of persons sat on chain in front of a music-shop window in the Elmwood-Utica section. In the Broadway-Fillmore area an audience stood curb-deep outside of a department store to view the proceedings on four large screens. Passing autos snailed by as their occupants craned for a glimpse of the telecast. In the veranda of Hotel Statler scores of onlookers were riveted to the screens of two receivers.
In WBEN-TVs blue-and-silver-draped temporary studio at Memorial Auditorium, there was an air of electric expectancy as the moment of television's official debut drew near.
Powerful banks of floodlights bathed the scene of the dedication ceremony, cameramen made final adjustments to the two electronic field cameras.
3 Years in Preparation Producer
John L. Hutchinson signaled all in readiness and promptly at 7:30 o'clock, the show went on —culminating three years of preparation and three months of experimental telecasting.
Viewing screens everywhere glowed to life. Watchers saw an envelope appear, saw its flap lifted and an invitation card slowly withdrawn until its message was visible:
“The Buffalo Evening News cordially invites you to the dedication ceremony of WBEN-TV.”
The scene shifted to Announcer Ed Reimers who introduced Edward H. Butler, editor and publisher of The Buffalo Evening News and president of WBEN whose remarks formally launched the new enterprise.
“We are making history tonight," Mr. Butler told the television audience. "I hope all who hear, and for the first time also see, this program share the elation that we in the studio feel.
“We are inaugurating regularly-scheduled television programs. In addition, we are dedicating Buffalo’s pioneer television station to serve you and the thousands of others who will become television [remainder of quote missing].
"Finest" Service Assured
A few minutes later, Vice President Sidney N. Stroll of the National Broadcasting Company declared: "Tonight it is my pleasant duty to welcome WBEN-TV as the newest affiliate of the rapidly-growing NBC television network. We look forward with pleasure to this association ... We salute them (officials of The News and WBEN) for their enterprise in bringing television to Buffalo.
“Under their guidance, we are confident that you, who are and will be the television audience of WBEN-TV, are assured of the finest possible service that this new medium can bring to you."
Other speakers on the dedicatory program, representing federal, state, county and city governments, were Federal Judge John Knight, Supreme Court Justice R. Foster Piper, dean of the judges in the Eighth Judicial District; Chairman Roy R. Crockett of the Board of Supervisors. Mayor Dowd and Council President Peter J. Crotty.
All in Front-Row Seats
Mr. Reimers read congratulatory telegrams from Chairman Wayne Coy of the Federal Communications Commission, President Niles Trammell of NBC, Frank M. Folsom, executive vice president of the RCA Victor Division of the Radio Corporation of America and others.
WBEN-TVs first public service program—three brief messages from YMCA officials in behalf of their organization's fund-raising campaign—followed. The telecast was then returned to the station's projection room in Hotel Statler where a film explaining television was shown.
Ten minutes later TV audiences were back in their front-row "seats" as the curtain went up on a glittering variety show, originating in the auditorium studio.
With pert Mary Jane Dodd, network singing star from Chicago, effervescing through the proceedings as mistress of ceremonies, TV viewers were treated to the nimble stepping of the "Adorables," the Town Casino's chorus line. Interested watcher, on sets at the Casino, were the co-owners, Harry Altman and Harry Wallens, through whose efforts the entertainers were obtained.
Action Followed Closely
From the station's mobile unit—a complete control-room-on-wheels—parked at the south end of the auditorium. Producer Ed Wegman watched the monitoring screens which recorded what each of the cameras was "seeing" upstairs in the studio. From group shots of the dancing line, he switched to close-up views for solo routines and ordered the cameras, in close for shots of a chorine's fast-stepping feet.
The three De Castro Sisters—one of them more telegenic than the next, as the sighs from the men in the TV audiences indicated—provided a gay Latin number. The "eyes" of the TV camera turned evenly back and forth to follow the gyrations and acrobatics of Dancer Dorothy Deering. Younger TV watchers were gleeful over the antics of Danny O'Day, the wooden upstart who behaved incorrigibly for his manipulator. Jimmy Nelson, youthful ventriloquist.
Newscast Is Included
The picture signals, meanwhile, were flowing by coaxial cable to the WBEN-TV microwave transmitter on the auditorium roof. From the transmitter they went through the air to the receiver atop Hotel Statler. They then were radiated by the transmitting antenna to TV sets throughout the area.
The variety show concluded, WBEN-TV crews swiftly moved their equipment from the studio rooms to the "blue seats" in the arena, preparatory to televising the wrestling an hour later.
Meanwhile, the program was returned to the projection room in the hotel studios and viewers saw an INS newsreel, a sports film, a melodious Stephen Foster musical presentation, a newscast in which still photographs were accompanied by an up-to-the-minute commentary, and several short educational and commercial films.
Climax Is Thrilling
Television audiences were whisked back to ringside in Memorial Auditorium in time to watch Wrestler Lou Thesz vanquish Tommy O'Toole with an airplane spin and body slam, the TV camera faithfully recording every grimace and framing the participants in an exciting dissents for the slam-bang finish WBEN's Ralph Rtthholl announced the telecast. A picture of Ed Don George, Upstate A.C. matchmaker, flashed on the screen. A few minutes later, after the cameras swept slowly over the auditorium to show TV audiences the jam-packed arena during intermission, the telecast —thanks to Wrestler Gorgeous George, a "natural" for television if ever there was one—reached its thrilling and hilarious climax.
Into view on the TV screens stalked the valet of Gorgeous, the marceled mauler who faced Jack Page in the finale. The arena audience howled—and so did the TV watchers—as the slender valet, dead-pan and stiffly formal in a frock coat, put on the famous act that has caused sensations in wrestling rings. Out came the squirt gun and the valet proceeded to spray the ring with disinfectant —for Gorgeous, though fearing no fellow grappler—quakes at the thought of germs.
Every Move Recorded
Suddenly the ringside audience stood, craning for its first peck at the goldenlooks [sic] of George. The TV camera turned too, and picked up the perfumed, manicured mauler as he marched aloofly toward the ring, resplendent in his silk-and-sequin robe.
Oblivious to the hoots, cat-calls, hisses and boos, he posed in the ring, primping his golden locks daintily and displaying haughtily his Grecian profile as the TV cameramen recorded his every gesture.
For the madcap antics that climaxed the show—Gorgeous having his hand disinfected after the referee touched it. Gorgeous giving a final look in the mirror at his new marcel before squaring off. Gorgeous patting his curls back into place after sis opponent mussed his hair in the first grapple—TV watchers were in the “front row,” as they had been all evening.


The News had been publishing WBEN-TV listings in the test stage. Here is the first week’s programming:

FRIDAY, MAY 14
7:30—Dedication Ceremonies from Memorial Auditorium—radio and public officials. 7:45—YMCA Public Service Program. 7:50Magic in the Air", film. 8:00—Town Casino Variety Show—dancers, singers, ventriloquist. 8:30—INS Newsreel. 8:38—Stephen Foster Melodies, film. 8:49—Sports Around the World, film. 9:00—The News in Pictures. 9:10—Special Edition. Film; Soundies. 9:30—Wrestling Matches, Auditorium. 11:00—Sign off.

SATURDAY, MAY 15
5:00-6:00—Poochie’s Party—Magic, comedy and movies for girls and boys. 7:30—U. B. Round Table—“Buffalo Looks to the Future.” 8:00—Today’s News Pictures; Playbill. 8:15—Barbershop Quartet. 8:30—INS Newsreel. 8:37-9:50—Western Theater—Moonlight on the Range.

SUNDAY, MAY 16
3:30-4:30—Midget Auto Races from Civic Stadium. 8:00—News in Pictures; Soundies. 8:15—Here Comes the Circus. 8:30—INS Newsreel. 8:37—Let’s Look at Sports, with Ralph Hubbell. 9:00-10:15—“It Happened Tomorrow,” with Dick Powell

MONDAY, MAY 17 and TUESDAY, MAY 18
11:00-noon—Test Pattern. 1:00-5:00—Test Pattern. 7:00-9:00—Test Pattern.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 19
11:00-noon—Test Pattern. 1:00-5:00—Test Pattern. 8:00—News in Pictures; Playbill. 8:15—“On Two Wheels,” film. 8:30—INS Newsreel, Industrial Exposition. 9:00-10:00—Four Film Featurettes.

THURSDAY, MAY 20
11:00-noon—Test Pattern. 1:00-5:00—Test Pattern. 8:00—News in Pictures; Playbill. 8:15—“Land of the Skylarks,” film. 8:26—Soundies, film. 8:30—INS Newsreel, Tune Topics, cartoon. 8:45—“It’s Wanton Murder,” film. 9:00—Variety Show with Clint Buehlman. 9:30—Weather.

FRIDAY, MAY 21
11:00-noon—Test Pattern. 1:00-5:00—Test Pattern. 8:00—News in Pictures; Playbill. 8:15—Baseball film. 8:26—Soundies, film. 8:30—INS Newsreel. 9:30-11:00—Wrestling.

There was no connection to NBC between Buffalo and Schenectady, so no network programmes aired. It was a matter of time. The News reported on May 15:

WBEN-TV Signs Contract for NBC Network Service
WBEN-TV will be part of the NBC television network. Contracts to make this a part of television development in Buffalo were signed this week by the station and the National Broadcasting Company. Thus WBEN-TV becomes one of the first independent stations to join the NBC network.
Initial network service will be delivered by film. By the end of this year the coaxial cable network, connecting this area with the East Coast, will be in operation and will transmit programs regularly to WBEN-TV. Network service, making program material in many cities available to the inter-connected television stations, is a reality now. Microwave radio-relay systems link Boston, Schenectady and New York. Philadelphia, and the other cities are connected by coaxial cable.
A television network via coaxial cable will be in operation this Fall between St. Louis, Chicago, Toledo, Cleveland and Buffalo. This will carry some Midwest football telecasts. This service will be inter-connected with New York by way of Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, and Philadelphia.


The station connected with NBC on Sept. 20, but not with New York. Using cable and relay stations, an NBC Mid-West Network was cobbled together with stations in St. Louis, Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, Detroit and Cleveland. ABC had its own counterpart in Cleveland, Milwaukee and Chicago, and WBEN-TV took advantage of both of them on the 20th.

WBEN-TV TELECASTS HALF-HOUR SALUTE AS MID-WEST NET OPENS
At 11:22 Monday night the figure of Broadway's ageless Willie Howard reluctantly faded from the television screen, triumphantly climaxing four entertainment-packed hours that launched WBEN-TV and Buffalo into network television.
Stars of Buffalo and ballet, radio and rodeo, sports and Shakespeare and of other entertainment media passed clearly before our home receiver and before thousands of other screens as far apart as Tennessee and Ontario.
Those twin miracles of modern communication, television and the coaxial cable, combined for the inaugural of the NBC Mid-West Television Network—a one-time, star-studded showcase that gave television a mighty push forward. There was no perceptible difference in clarity between Buffalo-originated programs and shows that first had to travel hundreds of miles underground by cable.
Football Telecast Saturday
Preceding the NBC-TV opening gunnery was a Admiral Radio's mountain-music melee, in which WBEN-TV joined three American Broadcasting Company stations. An Admiral spokesman said the company, soon to turn out 5000 sets a week, was showing its faith in network television by sponsoring the Notre Dame football telecasts, which start on WBEN-TV with Saturday's Purdue game.
The first half-hour and the last 82 minutes of the three-hour-plus NBC salute came from St. Louis' Opera House, where the comely Jinx Falkenburg guided the precedent-packed proceedings. At the start she asked Willie Howard whether television would bring back vaudeville. "Vaudeville will bring back television," said Willie, who later tried to prove it with a mighty one-man boost.
Film Story of Cable Shown
NBC President Niles Trammell, predicting the linking of East and West networks "around Christmas time," said: "To bring American people closer together, for a fuller enjoyment of life . . . for the better education of our children. NBC tonight dedicates its Midwest network."
Following the filmed story of the tremendous task of "sewing" the coaxial cable 30 feet underground came the NBC television-recorded parade of past achievements, heralding network fare to come: Ballet dancers, the Dewey and Truman convention speeces [sic], Ben Grauer's high school quiz, Buffalo's Bob Smith and his Howdy Doody puppet, "Television Screen Magazine." a scene from "Henry V" and a telecast from the carrier Leyte.
In an artfully-contrived night-club setting, WBEN-TV presented its local salute, with Clint Buehlman as roving emcee and with Max Miller's music.
Crotty Speaks
Seen-and-heard performers were the Arthur Murray dance team of Ryan and Williams, Vocalist Marian Sanders, Cartoonist Stu Hample and Accordionist Oakley Yale.
Council President Peter J. Crotty, who spoke informally from his table, lauded the planners of the “network linking Buffalo with its sister cities of the lakes and with St. Louis” and called it "a tribute to engineering skill." Around the tables were such old radio hands as Ralph Hubbell, Sally Work, Jim Trantcr and Ironic Joe Wesp who, always in character, claimed that the boiling Kleig lights were causing him to see Buehly through fog-covered glasses. WBEN's Ed Wegman read a telegram from Edward H. Butler, editor and Publisher of The Buffalo Evening News and president of WBEN.
French in Three Languages
From St. Louis came a smoothly-paced show—roller-skaters, the Van Damme swing quintet, the ludicrous Jerry Bergen, Andre and his stiff-jointed human mannequins, Buck and Bubbles of Broadway dance-and-comedy fame, Vocalist Jane Pickens and—Willie Howard.
Prof. Howard, who claimed he taught French in three languages, admitted an affliction in his diction. He gave priceless imitations of Chevalier and Jolson and was ably abetted by double-talking Harold Gary. At one point Jinx said that nearly every city but Toledo and Buffalo had phoned. Immediately WBEN's switchboard was swamped with requests for Jinx's address. Later she rmearked [sic] that calls had come in from Buffalo, East Aurora, Auburn and “Ontario, Canada,” all in the WBEN-TV orbit. Mr. Howard also announced that a group of "500 were listening in Buffalo."
Although a definite network schedule has not been announced, a portent of good things to come was that welcome sound at station-break:
“This is NBC in Buffalo—WBEN-TV.”
Regular Schedule by Christmas
The opening of television network service to Buffalo "means new programs, bigger programs and more programs," Mr. Butler said in the telegram.
"From here on an increasing number of network programs will augment the local shows on WBEN-TV," he wired from out of town. "By Christmas-time, dependent upon final completion of coaxial cable facilities, we expect to telecast a regular schedule of network programs in addition to continual programs in locally-originated programs.
"Since WBEN-TV was dedicated . . . we have developed many program sources. Alert advertisers have made the acquaintance of this new medium. WBEN-TV is proud to be associated with the pioneer NBC television network. To take advantage of all the network and local programs which will be offered. I again want to suggest that this is the time to get your television receiver . . . There will be too many fine programs of all kinds to miss."


The first New York-based NBC shows to appear on WBEN-TV were recordings of Stop Me If You’ve Hard This One, followed by Philco Television Playhouse, starting Sunday, Oct. 31, 1948. Election results on November 3 originated from the NBC affiliate in Cleveland. WBEN-TV also picked up football games from the ABC Midwest network.

Finally, NBC joined its two regional networks for a first combined broadcast on January 11, 1949. We have omitted comments from political and network talking heads contained in the News story the following day:

WBEN-TV OPENS VISTA TO NEW WORLD WITH NETWORK TELEVISION
WBEN-TV opened new windows to the world for the Buffalo area Tuesday [11] on television's biggest technical night—a night that turned out to be a milestone in entertainment, too.
Network television, hailed as the most important entertainment development since the invention of the talkies—began as topnotch artists performed and officials of government and industry hailed the linking of the East and Mid-west networks of the Bell System, connecting 32 stations in 14 cities.
The 2100-mile cable and radio-relay network covers an area in which one-fourth of the nation's population lives. Speakers foresaw an Atlantic-to-Pacific hookup by 1950.
It was a night that glorified that magic thread—the coaxial cable —and the A T & T film that deftly explained its marvels was as fascinating as the parade of diversified entertainers who used it.
Whole Program Traced
The progress of a program was traced from studio via camera and electric impulses to Bell System wire to underground cable to telephone buildings to each of the 14 cities via cable and radio relay towers — all the way from New York City to a home receiver in Walkershaw, Wis. And all in less than 1/200th part of a second. Actual TV pictures of ballet dancers were traced through all the devious routes.
Each network using the system furnished a quarter-hour of entertainment. Arthur Godfrey, in as plain a setting as his old-shoe patter, started off for CBS, with orchestra, vocalists and a really amazing marionette-puppet act called the Lucky Pup Show. Godfrey's parting news flash: “Gov. Warren of California has given the weather 24 hours to get out.”
Dumont Network builts [sic] its show in a more decorative setting around Maestro-Singer Ted Steele, a clever, unnamed girl dancer and a literally long-haired violinist, with the orchestra featuring "Warsaw Concerto."
Berle & Richman
NBC's was a two-man show—but what a duo! Milton Berle, proving by his ad-libbing why he is television's No. 1 star, shared billing with Harry Richman. Harry, with inevitable top hat and cane, sang the inevitable "Putting on the Ritz" and—also inevitably—donned blackface before your eyes and impersonated Al Jolson in "April Showers "
Berle, speaking in behalf of NBC (“and HOW I'd like to be half of NBC”), twitted audience and musicians alike. Of his unseen band-leader, Allen Roth, he remarked: "If he's a conductor, I want a transfer." The finale was a blackface, straw-hat vaudeville throwback with Richman.
ABC gave the best sample of TV technique-to-come, with a whodunit involving four theatrical people implicated in a compatriot's murder. An inquiring inspector, was out of sight most of the time, in the approximate position of the home viewer, with characters handing him varied murder exhibits. . . .
Preceding the inaugural, Announcer Ward Fenton, spokesman for WBEN-TV, traced outstanding local shows since the station's inception in May, pointing out that the more-than-10,000 receivers purchased since then bespoke the Buffalo area's faith in the station and television.
WBEN-TV begins regular network service this afternoon at 5:45 with Buffalo Bob Smith's Howdy Doody Show from New York, with the Kukla-Fran-and-Ollie puppet program, Camel Newsreel and Kraft Television Theater on the evening's NBC fare.


Toronto Radio Executives See WBEN-TV's Hookup
TORONTO, Jan. 12.—More than 100 members and guests of the Toronto Radio Executives Club saw the East-Midwest network inaugural show over WBEN-TV Wednesday night on receivers installed in the King Edward Hotel. The TV sets were placed by Harry Dawson, director of the special projects department of Canadian General Electric. Sidney Lancaster is president of the executives' club.


Burglar Alarm Set Off By Television Fans
An ADT burglar alarm sounded at 9:54 o'clock Tuesday evening at the S. W. Miner Motor Corporation, 1563 Main St., bringing four police cars to the scene. The report: "Nothing to it—just employes returning to the store to see the television show."


The day’s programming:

6:30—Test Pattern. 6:45—Musical Interlude. 6:55—The Playbill, preview. 7:00—Kukla, Fran and Ollie, RCA Show (NBC Midwest Network). 7:30—Telenews Daily, Martino Reel. 7:40—Musical Interlude. 8:00—The Day’s News in Pictures. 8:07—Harry Miller, the Piano Man. 8:20—“Who’s Who,” with Joel Warren Spiegelman, 16-year-old piano prodigy. 8:30—The New Thrill, film—Oldsmobile program. 8:59—Bulova Tie, correct to second. 9:00Behind Your Radio Dial, film. 9:30-11:00—Network Dedicatory Program—Addresses by FCC Chairman, Wayne Coy; President Leroy A. Wilson of AT&T; and presidents of NBC, ABC, CBS and Dumont; NBC Variety Show, starring Milton Berle; CBS program with Arthur Godfrey; Dumont Salute with Ted Steele; ABC Mystery Program, “Stand By for Crime” (East and Midwest linking).

Meanwhile, that sure bet, the bid for a station by the Buffalo Courier-Journal, wasn’t going anywhere.

Sunday, 15 February 2026

Commercial TV in Cincinnati

The first new commercial television station to sign on in 1948 wasn’t really that new at all.

People in the Cincinnati area with a TV set had been watching W8XCT on Channel 4 for some months, tuning in play-by-play sports, a few in-studio offerings and reels and reels of Van Beuren cartoons and other short films.

It couldn’t have been an easy task selling potential new viewers on a change in status by saying “Hey, we’ll have commercials now!”

The Bloomington Daily Herald of Jan. 6, 1948 promoted the station’s new transmitter.

New High-Gain Antenna To Multiply WLWT Power
When WLWT, the Crosely [sic] Broadcasting Corporation's Cincinnati television station, begins broadcasting on a commercial basis in February, the station will have an effective power of 50,000 watts, the maximum allowed by the FCC.
The powerful signal will emanate from a tower-plus antenna assembly which attains a height of 571 feet above average terrain. Actual power of the transmitter unit is 5,000 watts, but the transmitter will be used in conjunction with an antenna built for Crosley by RCA. This antenna, plus its high elevation above average terrain, will give the WLWT signal an effective power of 50,000 watts, according to R. J. Rockwell, vice-president in charge of engineering for the Crosley Broadcasting Corporation.
The antenna assembly is 85 feet in length and comprised of five turnstile bays. The unit weighs 5,500 pounds, and will be mounted atop a 500-foot steel tower.
WLWT will be 200 times as powerful as W8XCT, the present Crosley video outlet which is a purely experimental station. W8XCT, with a 500-watt transmitter and a one-gain antenna, emits at a height of 1,109 feet above sea level a signal only 1-200th as powerful as that of WLWT. WLWT will employ a 5,000-watt transmitter with a 6-gain antenna, at a 1,400-foot elevation above sea level.


The station was supposed to go commercial on February 1, but the Cincinnati Post’s Mary Wood broke the news in the Jan. 29 edition:

Crosley’s television station won’t go commercial until Feb. 9. On Feb. 15, WLWT will officially open with a four-hour dedicatory program. Incidentally, the station’s first sponsor will be Bulova Watches with televised time signals.

The local papers didn’t make a fuss on the 9th, but the Post published an interview on the 14th with the station’s make-up woman, Dorothea Yaeger. On the 15th, the Enquirer announced:

SPECIAL PROGRAM TODAY
WLWT officials launches [sic] its commercial career with a special two and one-half-hour program starting at 2:30 p. m. today. Peter Grant, WLW newsman, will narrate the entire program. Owners of television receivers will get a sneak preview of what they can expect on the Crosley video station in the future during the program.


The Enquirer also ran this feature story:

EXPERIENCE Counts In Video, WLWT Manager Says, in Going Commercial
Cincinnati Station's Move To Seven-Day Program Points Future Path.
By JOHN CALDWELL.
“Experience was the main thing,” contends R. Duncan, Acting Director of Television Operations for the Crosley Broadcasting Division of the Aviation Corporation. He is manager of WLWT, the television station which has set aside today as "T-Day" in an effort to let the world know that hereafter it is a commercial station, ready, willing and able to accept commercial accounts.
Duncan knows whereof he speaks. During the last six months when the station was operating experimentally, he was generally behind the television cameras as much as he was in front of them. He appeared so often that the small three-year-old son of one of the WLW engineers who owned a television set remarked, on seeing his first movie “Wehers’s Mr. Duncan?”
From a Thursday-night-only video station, WLWT has grown in six months until now it broadcasts 20 hours weekly on a seven-day basis. This last week the first of commercial operation, the station was on the air 28 ½ hours. Although the hours are about the same as in other cities, but the number at days isn’t. An NBC-owned station in New York and a television station in St. Louis broadcast until recently on only five days, taking Sunday and one week day off.
• • •
THE TYPES of programs started during the months of experimental operation will continue, but now a more definite schedule has been set up. Programs, made up of both film and “live productions, can be catalogued under variety, athletics and remote news pickups. The "variety" term is anything from cooking programs to a very few dramatic films.
Sporting events so far have led the most popular list. A regular week schedule of the wrestling matches from Music Hall, started some months ago, will continue under sponsorship of Wiedeman Brewing Co. The station broadcast the last two baseball games from Crosley Field, and has done a number of broadcasts of football and basketball games. All of these will probably continue. It is hoped that the home baseball games will be carried this season. Only 40 per cent of all programs are film, although it seems more when you consult the schedules, and do not time the programs. The films are usually 15-minute affairs, with travelogues, cartoons and newsreels being seen more often than other types.
"A good taste criterion is the most important consideration in selecting programs for television audiences,” Duncan believes. "Although most of the audience at present sees television programs from barrooms or taverns, the number of home sets is constantly growing.”
• • •
AN UNUSUAL method of judgment is used in selecting programs for the air. The judgment is, Duncan says "if a program is satisfactory on radio, it is no good on television. Good radio programs use only sound for reception. For television the action is more important.
"Action appeals most to audiences," Duncan says, pointing out possibly why sports events are so well received.
On the good-taste question, WLWT will "better the Will Hays Hollywood code 100 per cent,” Duncan added.
Duncan, who holds patents in 13 countries on the invention of the blocking tube oscullator [sic], has been working in television engineering since 1931. Shortly after graduation from Oklahoma A. and M. College he was employed by the Radio Corporation of America, and later worked for Philco and the Midland Television Co. of Kansas City, Mo.
He joined Crosby in 1939 to build an experimental television station, and has been there ever since except during the war when he left to work on radar.
• • •
UNTIL RECENTLY most of the WLW television studio originated programs came from the 48th floor of the Carew Tower. Now more and more studio programs are originated in the new television studios in Clifton. An item of note at the moment is that all of the films are aired from the Carew Tower, but the narrator works in Clifton studios, seeing the film as soon as the rest of the audience does.
“The first network television as such will come to Cincinnati by WLW’s own television network," Duncan says. The company is building video stations in Columbus and Dayton, Ohio, and Indianapolis. Cincinnati will have network television from the coasts in about two years, he says.
The best national news received of late, Duncan believes, is the word that Fox Movietone will furnish daily newsreels to television stations. Some of the eastern titles already are receiving this service
.

Eventually, WLWT received kinescopes from NBC (its radio station was an NBC affiliate) but, as mentioned above, the schedule didn’t look a lot different at the outset as W8XCT. Here’s what aired in the first week, as per the Enquirer:

Monday, Feb. 16
WLWT, Channel 4

1:30—Enchanted Valley (film)
1:45—Paris (film)
2:00—Feature Film
3:00—Kitchen Klub, sponsored by Avco Mfg. Corp. (Crosley)
Half hour format featuring food preparation and care.
3:30—Off the air
7:30—Feature Film
8:30—Enchanted Valley (film)
8:45—Paris (film)

Tuesday, Feb. 17
2:00—Using the Weather
2:30—The Farmerette (Van Beuren, 1932)
3:00—Kitchen Klub
3:30—Off the air
7:30—The Farmerette (film)
7:45—Ride Along Dude (film)
8:00—Who Am I?
9:00—To be announced
9:30—Evening at the Gaylords

Wednesday, Feb. 18
2:00—Feature Film
3:00—Kitchen Klub
3:30—Off the air
7:30—Dizzy Day (Van Beuren, 1933)
7:45—Land of Eternal Science (film)
8:00—What’s the Answer?
8:30—Feature Film.

Thursday, Feb. 19
2:00—Story of the Violin (film)
2:15—A Romeo Monk (Van Beuren, 1932)
2:30—Way of the Wild (film)
3:00—Kitchen Klub
3:30—Off the air
7:30—A Romeo Monk (film)
8:00—Hobby Show
8:30—Way of the Wild (film)
9:00—Musical Ponies

Friday, Feb. 20
2:00—Southern Crossways (film)
2:15—AM to PM (film)
2:30—Archery vs. Golf (film)
2:45—Aida (film)
3:00—Kitchen Klub
3:30—Off the air
7:30—AM to PM (film)
7:45—Southern Crossways (film)
8:00—Archery vs. Golf (film)
8:15 to 11:15—Wrestling from the Music Hall Sport Arena, sponsored by George Wiedemann Brewing Company.
Jack Pinto vs. Ben Trudell; Ali Aliba and Bill Zim vs. Herb Parks and Billy Ford; Paul Steuer vs. Dan Morris.

Saturday, Feb. 21
12:45—Luncheon at the Sinton, sponsored by H. & S. Pogue department stores.
2:00—Busy Spots in Florida (film)
2:15—Overture—Der Freischuetz (film)
2:30—Holland (film)
2:45—Croon Crazy (Van Beuren, 1933)
3:00—Kitchen Klub, sponsored by Avco Mfg. Corp. (Crosley)
3:30—Off the air
7:30—Croon Crazy (film)
7:45—Holland (film)
8:00—Overture (film)
8:15—Best Spots in Florida (film)
8:30—Judo Demonstration
8:45—Table Tennis
Nine Greater Cincinnati table tennis players, including the men’s and women’s champions, will participate in a half-hour television show from 8 to 8:30 tonight over WLWT. Under the direction of Red Tornberg. The show will mark the first time the sport will have been televised in this area.

Sunday, Feb. 22
3:00—First Paradise (film)
3:15—Song Birds (film)
3:30—Cincinnati Churches
7:30—Song Birds (film)
7:45—First Paradise (film)
8:00 to 10:30—Basketball
All-Hawaii Stars, headed by guard Bob Lee, will make their annual invasion of the Music hall Sports Arena tonight to meet Jesse Owens’s Kansas City Stars in part of the pro-basketball double-header. The Harlem Globetrotters and the New York Celtics are paired in the other game.
The Hawaiian team is on its second tour of the United States and will bring along a group of Island entertainers who will stage a floor show between games.


Besides the handful of sponsors mentioned above, Steinberg's Radio Store bought three spots weekly. No one seemed anxious to have someone say “Cubby Bear has been brought to you by. . .”

In 1952, the station was ordered to change to channel 5 and resides there to this day.

Sunday, 8 February 2026

Amateur TV By the Bay

San Francisco’s first television station was KPIX.

Well, not quite.

It was the first commercial station, authorised by the FCC in October 1946, but the Bay area had a number of ham radio operators who experimented with television. The first to get on the air was Clarence Navarre Wolfe, Jr.

Associated Broadcasters (KSFO), the American Broadcasting Company (KGO) and the San Francisco Chronicle all had construction permits in 1948 and hoped to begin broadcasting that year (KPIX succeeded, the others debuted in 1949). As the newspapers covered the race to get on the air, the San Francisco Call-Bulletin noted in its Dec. 18, 1948 edition there already was a TV station sending out a signal. It was under Wolfe’s amateur radio license, W6JDI.

Wolfe was a third-generation California, born in San Francisco on June 17, 1913. By 1920, the family had moved to Burlingame where his father ran a hardware store. The younger Wolfe was employed for a time by the police department, and built its first two-way radio system at age 21. During World War II he supervised the installation of the Fire Control Radar for the sixteen-inch coastal guns for the Harbor Defense of the U.S. Signal Corps., from the Canadian border to the Mexican border. He eventually opened his own radio shop and stayed in business for 52 years.

He was granted the W6JDI license at age 16.

Here’s the Call-Bulletin’s feature story, with photos.

An Amateur In Burlingame
By HUBERT J. BERNHARD
"Gwendolyn" has been pulsing through the skies over San Francisco since last May, but only during the past month has she been seen outside of a weather beaten backyard building in Burlingame.
For "Gwendolyn" is a television image—the broadcast "trademark" of Clarence Wolfe Jr. and amateur station W6JDI-TV — and only since early November have there been sets in the bay area geared to receive her.
"For a long time," Wolfe recalled today, "we were sending to the wind. There was no one to know about it, and no one to confirm how far our signals were going.
"But we were on the air—and doing what we'd hope to do from the start. W6JDI-TV was the first station to broadcast television in northern California."
First Televiser
The 35 year old Burlingame radio amateur and wartime Army radar instructor, did more than that with his home-engineered and self-built equipment. He was, so far as he knows, the first amateur in the nation to broadcast the standard television image as defined by the Radio Manufacturers of America.
"We put out the regular image of 525 interlacing lines per picture and 30 pictures per second," he explained. "That means we maintain a broadcast total of 15,750 lines per second and produce the same visual clarity as a commercial station."
Wolfe, who was aided during a large part of the project by Les Seabold, a United Air Lines employe of San Carlos, began receiving postcards a month ago from television owners who had seen Gwendolyn.
The first was from Bob Melvin, of 50 Halkin lane, Berkeley, and shortly afterward others came in from Vallejo and Oakland.
"We know we've been picked up at least 30 miles away, and there's no telling how much farther our signals are going," he reported.
Not everyone who owns a television set can see "Gwendolyn," Wolfe added, because she is broadcast in the 429 megacycle band reserved by the FCC for amateur experimental work.
Receivers geared for the commercial band between 75 and 200 megacycles must have a converter to receive Wolfe's broadcasts. That, however, is no problem to dyed-in-the-wool radio "hams."
"There are several ways to convert," Wolfe pointed out. "One of the simplest is to buy a radio altimeter from war surplus and hook it up to your set. That will do it."
Wolfe, who operates the Broadway Radio and Record Shop in Burlingame, built his transmitter largely with parts he had accumulated during 16 years as a short-wave radio amateur.
'Used' Image
Beginning from scratch, he estimated, the parts would cost about $2,000, although his expenses were considerably less.
The Burlingame amateur, whose station is behind his home at 1517 Howard avenue where an 80 foot tall multiple antenna transmits his signals, designed all of his own circuits.
"Gwendolyn," herself is the chief store-bought item in the setup. She is the head and shoulders image of a girl stamped inside a monoscope he bought third or fourth hand long ago. Wolfe doesn't know who she is, or who first put her in the "bottle" for experimental television purposes.
He plans to complete a camera—or iconoscope—within the next few weeks, so that he can transmit living images as well as the anonymous picture.
W6JDI—TV, on which Wolfe started work two years ago as a hobby, got the jump on commercial television broadcasting in the bay area by a wide margin—but the regular stations won't be far behind. KPIX, for instance, plans to start regular programming of television on Wednesday night, December 22, and to continue on a constant schedule of 14 hours a week, plus sports events, from that time on. . . .
KGO-TV, the second station to get on the air in the bay area, doesn’t plan to send “test pattern” images until January, but hopes to schedule regular program transmissions after that.


The Call-Bulletin doesn’t mention the Chronicle station. Fancy that.

The story sparked interest in publications catering to hams and electronics lovers. Edward P. Tilton, in the June 1950 issue of QST, provided an excellently-researched article entitled “Amateur Television—A Progress Report.” In it, he outlines the prohibitive cost for amateurs of buying an iconoscope tube until 1940, and then the war getting in the way of development. More importantly, Tilton reveals there were other local hams doing the same thing as Hap Wolfe. Here is that portion of his story. (Don’t ask me to translate the ham jargon. I am a radio announcer, not an engineer).

TV in the Bay Area
Perhaps the first amateur to put a standard RMA television image on the air was W6JDI, Burlingame, Calif., who was transmitting a monoscope test pattern as far back as May, 1948. In November of that year he was received successfully by Bob Melvin, W6VSV, Berkeley, a distance of 25 miles or so. The W6JDI transmitter was a pair of 8012s operating on about 423 Mc., modulated with the RMA standard 525-line picture, interlaced 2 to 1, making it receivable on a standard home television receiver with a 420-Mcs. converter.
The work of W6JDI was featured in the San Francisco Call-Bulletin of December 16, 1948, with the operator, Clarence Wolfe, jr., receiving attention as the first person to transmit television successfully in the Bay area. His work antedated the appearance of commercial television in that region by about 9 months.
He was followed in December, 1948, by W6WCD, San Francisco, who was also being received in Berkeley by W6VSV. W6WCD was transmitting a 26214-line noninterlaced signal, 60 frames per second. He started with a modulated-oscillator r.f. section, changing soon to crystal control.
The first live pictures were transmitted by W6VSV, in March, 1949, using an RCA 5527 iconoscope and an f 1.9 lens in the camera equipment. Bob also started with a 6J6 oscillator, changing to an 832 tripler, with crystal control, eventually followed by an 832 amplifier, on 423 Mc. He uses 262 1/2-line noninterlaced scanning, at 15,750 and 60 cycles. The picture is receivable on home TV sets equipped with 420-Mc. converters.
Pictures are clear and stable, despite the lack of a sync generator. Bob has built a sync generator, but he feels that this complex equipment (his has some 30 tubes) is not required in amateur work, the receiver locking nicely on the blanking pulses. Indoor shots are made easily using two No. 2 photoflood lights. Best DX for W6VSV-TV is W6GCG, San Mateo, who receives the picture over a path of some 25 miles.
A particularly interesting feature of W6VSV’s transmissions is the combination of sound and video on the same frequency. His transmitter oscillator is frequency-modulated slightly, to give an f.m. deviation of about 20 kc. at 420 Mc. The video is grid-modulated a.m. Using a standard TV receiver there is no ill effect on the picture quality from the frequency modulation for the sound. The audio is picked up by a separate 420 Mc. receiver having f.m. detection. A 923-A surplus job is used for receiving the sound, and no video modulation is present in any type of f.m. receiver that has a satisfactory limiter to remove the video a.m. Alternatively, the sound is transmitted separately on 144 Mc. The equipment of W6VSV has been used in a number of successful demonstrations at hamfests, schools, and public meetings of various kinds.
Another Berkeley TV enthusiast is Milton Cooper, W6QT. Milt also uses a camera with a 5527, using circuits provided with the tube, but with minor changes. His camera design is similar to that of W6VSV, except that the latter has his in several units, while the W6QT camera is a single assembly. The transmitter r.f. section is an SCR-522, with the output stage tripling to 432 Mc. This drives two additional 832s as cascaded amplifiers. The second 832 straight amplifier adds considerably to the output, and the stability is good. This is occasionally used to drive an APT-5 cavity oscillator which has been converted to amplifier service, running 100 watts input.
Other TV stations actually on the air in the Bay area include W6RXW, W6UOV, and W6VQV. W6MTJ, W6AQV, and W6WGM are working on TV gear, and others are expected soon. W6UOV is working on a tripler-amplifier using 4-X150-A tetrodes, with the hope of putting out a more powerful TV signal. Antenna systems used in the TV work are mostly 16-element jobs, with horizontal polarization.

W6JDI was profiled as well in a fine article by Andrew R. Boone in the August 1949 issue of Popular Science. Click on the link if you’re interested in the subject.

Whether Hap Wolfe broadcast live pictures isn’t mentioned in these articles. Nor can I tell you when he stopped televising, though he renewed his W6JDI license through the decades.

He had other interests, too. He was a president of the San Mateo Philatelic Society, a member of the San Francisco Architectural Heritage Society, and involved in local church work; a son-in-law was a Doctor of Divinity. Wolfe was 89 when he passed away in Burlingame on Sept 18, 2002.

Sunday, 1 February 2026

TV Comes to the South

Television networks couldn’t really exist in the 1940s and 1950s without the coaxial cable, so its development was anxiously followed by broadcasting magazines and columnists.

A cable was laid south from New York to Washington. Next stop: Richmond, Virginia.

It appears the people of Richmond, much like those in St. Louis, Chicago and Cincinnati, didn’t wait for the cable to put television on the air.

WTVR was Richmond’s first station and one of a number that began programming in 1948. Published dates from the period conflict. Broadcasting stated that Havens & Martin, the owners of WMBG radio, had applied to the FCC on March 15, 1944 for a television license for Channel 3. But as you can see in the full page newspaper ad to the right from March 7, the concept was already alive. In fact, a deal had been signed to become an NBC television affiliate, just as WMBG picked up programmes from NBC radio.

Whatever the actually date was is a bit of a moot point, as the FCC enacted a policy on Feb. 23 “not to act on any of the applications until critical material shortages had eased.” Havens and Martin’s application was placed in the pending file on April 5. And there it sat.

This brings us to May 1946. Again, we have conflicting dates. Broadcasting of May 6 reported Havens and Martin received a final construction permit on Friday, May 3rd. The issue of May 20 stated the company’s application had been granted on May 17th. Then the Associated Press reported:

Local Television Permit
WASHINGTON, May 23—The Communications Commission announced today it has issued a permit to Havens and Martin, Inc., operators of Radio Station WMBG, of Richmond, Va., to operate a new television station. The commission said it had assigned the new station channel No. 3 on 60 to 66 megacycles, with visual power of 12.16 kilowatts and oral power of 6.4 kilowatts.


Martin Codel’s Television Reports of June 29, 1946 reported the call-letters WTVR had been assigned to the new station.

As the cable was laid from Washington, WTVR had studios to build, a transmitter to erect and tests to be run. This appeared in the Richmond Times-Dispatch, April 6, 1947:

WMBG Produces First Electric Picture In Its Television Lab
WMBG once more takes pride in being the pioneer in two new services to its listening public. [Omit paragraph about mobile telephone].
The second factor is the production of the first electronic television picture in Virginia. This first phase of television has been developed and produced in the television lab of WMBG and its television station WTVR. The announcement of this "first" by win was made by Wilfred W. Wood, chief engineer, in charge of research and development of the first word in television in the State of Virginia.
In announcing the development of the first electronic picture by WTVR, Wood said that plans were being rapidly formulated to have television available for persons in Richmond and the Commonwealth of Virginia in a matter of months. Thus, once more, the advance of service to the people of Richmond and Virginia has been pioneered by WMBC, thus keeping the people of the Old Dominion abreast of, and up to date with, the latest services made throughout the nation in the field of electronics.


Cables continued to be the new station’s undoing. The projected start date was pushed back. Here’s an extremely lengthy story from the Times-Dispatch, Dec. 21, 1947:

Local Station Nears Readiness for Television
By Frank Walin
While all of Richmond's major radio stations have definitely committed themselves to enter into the field of television only one—WMBG—has a station under construction.
Television, which has captured the fancy and imagination of millions of radio listeners, is now an accepted fact in such metropolitan cities as New York and San Francisco [sic]. Here in Richmond televised programs will be broadcast sometime after the first of the year, Wilbur M. Havens, president of Station WMBG, who is pioneering in this field, promised.
>WMBG, the parent station of WTVR, the city's first television station now rapidly nearing completion, is ready to go on the air almost immediately, Mr. Haven revealed.
"Our goal was set for December in opening the station,” he explained, "but we are having difficulty in getting the necessary lines from the telephone company." His immediate need is for a coaxial line from the present studios at 3301 West Broad St to the 431-foot tower at the intersection of Staples Mill Road and Broad Street. In addition the necessary facilities to pick up network programs from New York and Washington have not been completed, he explained.
"The science of television is advancing rapidly," Mr. Havens said, "New developments are being reported frequently."
He explained that television studios do not need the elaborate lighting systems now employed by the film companies to take pictures. During a practical demonstration at the Broad Street station television pictures were taken under ordinary lighting conditions and projected clearly on a receiver in a room adjacent to the studio. During the experimental tests all the lights in the studio were turned off and the subject being televised held a lighted match in front of his face. A clear picture, readily identified, was shown on the television receiver.
Although color films now can be projected by television, programs when they are televised here will be in black and white.
Two types of cameras will be used by WTVR to televise programs. One, a specially designed projector, will be used for motion pictures. The other, mounted on wheels, will be used for scenes taken in the studio. It can be moved rapidly from one corner of the studio to the other.
As an interesting sidelight, station officials have rigged a setup whereby a person can be televised in one room and actually see himself on the screen of a receiver in the control room.
When television does come to Richmond, viewers (that's the trade term used instead of listeners) will be limited to a maximum of about 25 hours of entertainment weekly, Mr. Havens said.
Programs will consist principally of sporting events and motion pictures. Yes, motion pictures. When the station goes on the air the owner of a television set will be able to sit back in his or her easy chair and watch films as they are projected in a distant station.
WTVR already has received sales pamphlets from film companies advertising films which can be projected on home receiving sets via television. Of course, they are not the latest productions of the film companies but they will furnish an entertaining evening for the average family.
Two Plans Viewed
Now as for news. Two plans are contemplated by the local television station. It may adopt the standard method of simply projecting the newscaster on the screen or it may flash a specially prepared script so that the viewer may read the news as it rolls off the teletype machines. In order to make the news flashes more dramatic, the sound of the teletype as it grinds out copy would be broadcast.
Several reasons were projected by Mr. Havens for the limited use of television in its early stages of development. He pointed out that programs available at this time are relatively limited in scope. Although all television stations will make use of motion pictures, he emphasized that not enough pictures are available to take care of a station's needs over an 18-hour day.
Elaborate plans for a large television studio in the present head-quarters of WMBG are now being studied by officials there. Present blueprints call for a large two-story studio in which a minimum of 10 scenes can be prepared. In addition, the plans call for a large carpenter shop to house scenes and construct them. The studio will be large enough to accommodate an automobile if it should be needed in a scene.
At the present a small studio on the ground floor of the WMBG building is being utilized for television tests. In various corners three scenes can be prepared for televising.
Mr. Havens said that an elaborate schedule is needed to broadcast a television program. While one scene is being televised in one corner of the studio a second scene, if necessary, must be hurriedly put together so that there will be no interruption in the continuity of the program, he explained.
What about advertising?
Varied Uses
"A sponsor's products may be demonstrated by a pretty girl actually using them or the station may flash a prepared advertisement on the screen," Mr. Havens said. This latter method is not widely used and is considered old-fashioned, he added.
In addition to local programs Richmond television fans will also receive programs from other cities much the same as under the present network plan of broadcasting oral programs. By means of the coaxial cable a cable inside a cable, television programs can he carried underground from city to city. Unlike present broadcasting facilities, television is limited to the immediate area of the station. Its waves do not follow the curvature of the globe and thus roam out into the distant atmosphere. A television station's range is limited to the immediate horizon seer from the tall antennas, Mr. Havens explained.
For this reason television antennas are raised as high as possible in order to increase the range of the stations.
Although the use of the coaxial cable appears to be the best solution for carrying network programs, powerful repeater transmitters can and are being used to relay television programs over long distances. These transmitters are stationed from 20 to 35 miles apart according to the terrain. If the terrain is low more repeater stations are needed. In hilly sections repeater transmitters may be placed on high ground in order to increase the range and thus cut down the number of transmitters needed.
WTVR is studying tentative plans to set up a series of repeater stations between Richmond and Washington to pick up programs from the nation's capital if the telephone company's plans to provide cable facilities between this city and Washington do not materialize soon, Mr. Havens said.
Managers of Richmond's four other radio stations are exploring the field of television but none of them as yet has applied to the Federal Communications Commission for the necessary construction permits. WTVR waited for almost two years before its application for a permit was granted by the FCC, Mr. Havens said.
"We are planning to enter the field very shortly and will apply for a permit from the FCC," Jack Stone, promotion and publicity manager of Station WRVA, said. In addition to the difficulty in obtaining the necessary license, the television transmitters must be tailored to meet the needs of the station, he explained. Today all television transmitters are custom built.
Edward S. Whitlock, WRNL, general manager, said, "We are giving television very serious consideration but as yet we have not applied for a permit. Space in our new building on Fourth Street across from the Times-Dispatch building has been allocated for the ultimate use of a television set up."
Lew Kent, manager of WXGI, also indicated that his station was interested in radio's newest improvement. “We are giving television serious study but have no immediate plans to install it,” he reported.
WLEE's chief engineer, James Duff, recently spent a week in New York City studying the latest televising methods, Irvin G. Abeloff, general manager, said. He, like the other three station managers, reported that his firm is interested in television and plans to enter the field as soon as it is practical.


Finally, the station went on the air. Here is the story from the Times-Dispatch, April 23, 1948:

Richmond All ‘Eyes and Ears’ As WTVR Presents Initial Television Program in State
The eyes and ears of Richmond were on television last night [22] as City and State officials and National Broadcasting Company executives assembled with a generous sprinkling of the public to participate in or watch the dedicatory program at WTVR studios.
Wilber M. Havens, manager of WTVR, WMPA, and WCOD, formally presented the new facilities while Richmonders crowded around sets in the studio, lobbies of neighborhood theaters, local dealers and department stores, or at home.
In accepting the facilities, which made Richmond the fourteenth city in the United States to have television Governor Tuck said the "free flow of news and information always has been one of the great bulwarks of our liberty".
Universal Right
Departing from his prepared text, the Governor added that "in our immortal Bill of Rights, it was declared that the freedom of the press," which he said means "all forms of communications," was one of the bulwarks of liberty. It should never be restrained and all men should have the right to declare their sentiments on all subjects, being responsible only for the abuse of that right.
"We should as American citizens, irrespective of whatever may be our avocation or our position in life . . . strive to see that the pure stream of public information will not be polluted . . . ," the Governor said.
"Had all the nations of the world the same unrestricted access to the truth as do we here in America, the misunderstandings among our peoples would be dissipated and the foundations would be laid for an unprecedented era of harmony and peace and understanding among all the people in every country of the globe," Governor Tuck said.
Governor Tuck also noted that Virginia schools have given emphasis to audio-visual education and said "television brings another great stimulus to our educational and our cultural activities. It offers unparalleled opportunity for dissemination of news and information, as well as bringing into play an entirely new source of entertainment."
Among State officials present at the studio last night were State Corporation Commission Chairman W. Marshall King; McCarthy Downs, member of the SCC; Speaker of the House of Delegates G. Alvin Massenburg, and Representative J. Vaughan Gary. Richmond's official family was represented by several department heads and Councilmen.
As was to be expected at the inaugural program, some of the pictures were distorted and a streak of bad luck hit, with electric lights and receiving sets blacking out completely sometimes. Studio personnel explained that this was caused by sets of varying voltages being hooked up to the coaxial cable.
Persons visiting the studios saw a magician hurrying through the lobby, black-faced minstrel men in loud costumes scurrying around and heard a false-bearded member of a hillbilly hand moaning, "Oh. I can't get the hull fiddle through this door." Apparently he got it through some door for the show went on with the bull fiddle.
Mayor Edwards termed the opening of the station a "significant occasion in the life of Richmond," marking "another milestone along our path of progress."
"I recall meeting his Excellency, the Governor of Virginia, on this spot one and a half-years ago," Mayor Edwards said. "Then we were hailing and congratulating WMBG upon the installation of Station WCOD with the new frequency modulation. It was the first of its kind in Virginia. Tonight we are back again—this time to celebrate the fruition of another dream — another plan — by the management of this station to be the first in Virginia to install television."
"You know, we pride ourselves here in the capital city upon the history and tradition of our people, but our eyes are always toward the future," Mayor Edwards told the spectators and listeners.
"We draw from our fine background the inspiration what keeps us in the forefront of progress as we know it today and plan for it tomorrow. It has been the constant desire of the business people in our city," he said, "to bring a fuller measure of service to the people of this community. That is why Richmond is a great marketing center. That is why tonight it is the first city in Virginia to have television. We are looking ahead and planning always for a better Richmond."
In Richmond for the big opening night wire various officials of the National Broadcasting Company, the network with which WTVA will hook up on or before June I. Among them were Witham S. Hedges, NBC vice-president in charge of planning and development; Noran Kersta, director of television operations; Charles C. Benis, Jr, relation department, and Easton C. Woodley, director stations department, who discussed the television network on the program.


And the story from the same day from the Richmond News Leader:

Scheduled Video Programs to Begin Tonight
Hundreds See Debut Of Television in City
By THEO WILSON
Richmond's new television station, WTVR, which made its bow to the city last night [22] despite technical difficulties which prevented crystal-clear reception on all sets, begins its regular telecasting activities tonight.
A weekly schedule of 77 hours was announced today, with the televised programs to be presented every day but Monday. On Wednesdays, from 3 to 4 P. M., the station will have its only afternoon telecasts. . . . All others will be from 7:30 to 9:30 P. M.
Last night, WTVR had its five-hour dedicatory program, which was viewed by hundreds of Richmonders who probably were more intrigued by the novelty than by what they actually were able to see.
STORE FRONTS CROWDED
They crowded in front of stores all along Broad Street, wherever a television receiver was in action; saw it in on a large screen in the Murphy, where the clearest reception was reported.
At WTVR itself, where guests had been invited to view the show on a number of receivers set up there, the reception was not consistently good. The sets blacked out completely on numerous occasions, the synchronization was off and the pictures were not steady.
It was explained there that through an error a set had not been attached properly and was causing difficulties on all of the other sets in the station.
On the inaugural program, Richmonders saw their first televised view of Governor Tuck, who yawned heartily once in the background when he probably forgot he was visible as well as audible.
PRAISED BY GOVERNOR
It was the Governor who jokingly said in his address, that being able to see as well as hear "has many disadvantages as well as advantages." On a more serious note, he praised television as a stimulus to educational and cultural opportunities, and as another advancement in the free flow of news and information which is “The great bulwark of our liberty.”
Also seen on television for the first time in the city was Mayor Edwards, who praised the station opening as “an event which am proud to claim for Richmond.”
Wilbur M. Havens, president and general manager of WMBG, WTVR and WCOD, also spoke, describing the station's facilities. Easton C. Woolley, of the National Broadcasting Company, told of the network's plans. NBC shows are due here in June. Two large projection-type machines in operation for the benefit of Richmonders last night threw pictures on portable screens. One was at the Byrd Theater, but was used for only the first hour of the show.
SET UP IN LOBBY
The other, at the Hotel Murphy, was brought front Washington. The screen was set up in the lobby and had a steady stream of on-lookers surrounding it. Although the Washington engineers frankly were disappointed in the transmission here, the spectators were interested enough to watch the screen for long intervals. . . .
Film made up the majority of last night's programming, which featured hillbillies, a magician, sports, news and other telecasts which will he made a regular part of the station's activities from now on.


Now that the station was on the air, the local press had almost nothing to say about it. Almost all TV news comes from wire service or syndicated stories from New York. However, there was this story in the May 11 News Leader:

Wildlife Body Will Sponsor Video Shows
A series of television programs on wildlife, among the first of their kind in the country, are being planned by the Commission of Game and Inland Fisheries, in collaboration with Station WTVR, as part of the commission's expanding information and education service.
The 10-minute programs are intended to bring before the public, “through visual means,” the aims and purposes of the wildlife policies of the commission.
The first program, to be given at 8:50 P. M. Saturday, May 22, will feature J. J. Shomon, chief of the commission's publications division, who will talk on the information and education program of the agency. He will illustrate his talk with charts and photographs.
Future programs will feature individual talks, discussion groups and lecture demonstrations, with personnel of the Caine Commission and other wildlife experts appearing as guests.


Television magazine of May 1948 reported there were also test patterns, sponsored by Commonwealth Sales Corp. and General Electric Supply Co., and a ten-minute sports show three times a week, sponsored by Wyatt-Cornick.

WTVR was added to the network on Wednesday, June 2, 1948. Here’s what the Times-Dispatch reported:

Television Cable Extended to City
Richmond’s television station was all set to hook onto the NBC network from New York today, following notification yesterday that the Eastern coaxial cable had been extended this far South.
An official at WTVR said last night that program orders from NBC were expected sometime today. He expressed a hope that some network television programs would he on the air before tomorrow.
The coaxial cable into Richmond, which represents its present Southern extremity, is a part of the Bell system's Eastern television network. Its installation here was announced by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, which said programs would reach Richmond over a 119-mile tube from Washington.
Thus the State capital becomes the sixth city linked to the Eastern network. Others are Boston, Philadelphia. Baltimore, Washington and New York.


The News Leader had an update the same day.

Network Video Scheduled Here
Richmond's first network television show will be presented tonight front 7:30 to 7:45 over WITR. Wilbur M. Havens, president of the station, announced today.
The show is from the National Broadcasting Company, with which WTVR is affiliated.
From 8 to 9 o'clock tonight, a second NBC program will be televised.
WTVR has been presenting telecasts originating locally and films while waiting completion of terminal equipment by the telephone company. Mr. Havens said today he expected to carry the full commercial schedule, but that no future programs could be announced at this time.


The difficulty with the above story is NBC did not offer programming until 7:50 p.m. It’s possible the story is an hour off due to standard-daylight time differences. From 8:30 to 8:45, the network aired In the Kelvinator Kitchen. From 9 to 10 p.m., it broadcast the Kraft Television Theatre version of “The Torch Bearers” with Valerie Cossart. This would appear likely, judging by a list of the station’s advertisers in the July 1948 issue of Television magazine. This is the list of sponsored NBC programmes it was airing:

Camel News Theatre, with John Cameron Swayze, Monday-Friday, 7:50 (Camel cigarettes).
Americana, quiz with Ben Grauer, Monday, 8:30 p.m. (Firestone tires).
Cavalcade of Sports, boxing, Mondays and Fridays (Gillette).
Texaco Star Theatre, Tuesday, 8 p.m. (Texaco gas).
In the Kelvinator Kitchen, Wednesday, 8:30 (Kelvinator).
Kraft Television Theatre, Wednesday, 9 p.m. (Kraft Foods).
You Are An Artist, drawing with John Gnagy, Thursday (Gulf oil).
The Swift Show, with Lanny Ross, Thursday, 8:30 p.m. (Swift meats).
Author Meets the Critics, Sunday, 8 p.m. (General Foods).
Outdoor Thrills, 15 mins. (Perma-Stone).
U.S. Royal Sports Time, (U.S. Rubber).

And some local spots:

Sportslight, Miller & Rhoads Dept. Store.
Bourne-Jones Motor Co., spots.
Commonwealth Sales Corp., spots.
Rockingham Clothing Store, spots.
Television, Inc., spots.

The papers do mention a few other programmes in the early going. Sunday, June 6, WTVR aired the Jackson Heights Tennis Tournament from New York from 12:45 to 5 p.m. Motorola sponsored The Wonders of the Universe, Thursdays at 8:15. Then there was the Joe Louis-Jersey Joe Walcott fight on June 23. The first boxing match on the station was Friday, June 4 at 9 p.m. from Madison Square Garden; Jess Flores vs Johnny Williams. And then there was the Republican and Democratic National Conventions. All of these were in the NBC network.

Some local shows were promoted in the July 1948 edition of Television magazine:

WTVR PROGRAMMING
Studio shows supplement NBC network programming
"Minstrel Days" duplicates the minstrel days of old, complete with "Rastus," "Sambo" and the interlocutor. The Four Minstrelairs, a Richmond quartette, supplies chorus background to comic solos by Rastus, as well as individual numbers of their own. There's an old fashioned opening and dosing chorus by the entire company and black face endmen, complete with flashy costumes and tambourins [sic].
"Uncle Schultz' Drawing School" is a simple format featuring WTVR's drawing artist Dick Hyland. Four to five drawings are made on each fifteen minute program, with "Uncle Schultz" explaining in a comic dialogue "how to draw." Show is aired three times weekly—Wednesday at 3:45; Friday at 8:05 and Sunday at 7:45.
"Which is Quicker" stars Wilfrid (the Wizard) Rutherford in a fifteen minute magic show. Four or five different illusions are utilized on each program, including the revelation of simple magic tricks. Program is another three times a week feature—Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays from 8:35 to 8:50.
"Tele-Disc," a six times a week disc jockey show, is set in a radio station, complete with turntables and control room backdrop. Local talent is interviewed by Jockey Welch and auditions are done to the current popular records. Occasionally short musical films of popular tunes are integrated with the live segments of the program. Interviews with prominent band leaders, vocalists and musicians complete the show.