Timeline: Through 1940s
from A History of Public Broadcasting

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1950s-60s>

 

 

1862
With Morrill Act, Congress endows state universities with land grants, creating what some observers believe was philosophical precedent for public broadcasting [article].

1895
Guglielmo Marconi sends wireless signal on family estate in Italy.

1912
Iowa State College’s station 9YI (named WOI since 1922) experiments with Morse code broadcasting.
..

 

1917
University of Wisconsin begins voice broadcasting with radio station 9XM, forerunner of WHA, under an experimental license.

1921
Federal government issues first license to an educational institution, Latter-day Saints University in Salt Lake City.

1925
Nov. 12: Forerunner of PBS and NPR formed: Association of College and University Broadcasting Stations (ACUBS). (It later becomes National Association of Educational Broadcasters.)

1927
Feb. 23: Radio Act of 1927 signed into law, creating Federal Radio Commission (later FCC).

1928
November: FRC’s General Order 40 shifts most radio stations’ frequencies; 23 of the first 25 clear channels are affiliated with NBC. Favoritism toward commercial stations prompts Broadcast Reform Movement.
..


Prof. Earle Terry's
students built a wireless telephone" that went on
air in 1917 at the
University of Wisconsin.

1930
Carnegie Corporation of New York, with NBC, creates National Advisory Council on Radio in Education (NACRE) to promote Cooperation Doctrine—alliances between commercial radio and educators [paper]. July: ACUBS asks Congress to reserve channels for education. September: Payne Fund begins funding Broadcast Reform Movement. October: Joy Elmer Morgan appointed to organize movement’s National Committee on Education by Radio (NCER).

1934
June 19: Communications Act of 1934 signed into law, replacing FRC with FCC. September: ACUBS changes constitution; new name is National Association of Educational Broadcasters (NAEB).

1938
Jan. 26: FCC establishes new class of noncommercial educational radio stations in high-frequency band. Cooperation doctrine subsides, NACRE closes, consensus develops for reserved channels.

1939
RCA demonstrates TV with first public broadcast at World’s Fair.

1940
FCC reserves five of the 40 channels in new high-frequency band for noncommercial educational stations. (Though planned for AM, stations go to FM as technology develops.)

1945
June 27: FCC moves FM service to VHF band, expands noncommercial FM reservation to 20 channels (88-92 MHz) of the total 100 FM channels [document on FCC site, slow download].

1948
FCC freezes licensing of TV stations, allows educational FM stations to operate with 10 watts or less power.
..


NCER, led by Joy
Elmer Morgan, fought
for educators' control
of noncommercial
stations in the '30s.

1949
FCC authorizes 50th noncommercial FM station. WNYC begins “bicycle network,” shipping taped radio programs from station to station. April 15: Pacifica begins operation of KPFA in Berkeley, claimed to be first listener-supported station [early bylaws].

Tape duplicating machines like this one at NAEB allowed the creation of unwired "bicycle" networks.

1950s-60s>

 

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Web page created January 2001
Compiled by Steve Behrens
Adapted from A History of Public Broadcasting
Current Publishing Committee, Takoma Park, Md.
E-mail: webatcurrent.org
Copyright 2001