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station_slogan = | | station_slogan = | | ||
station_branding = ''WCVE-TV 23''<br>''WCVW-TV 57''<br>''WHTJ-TV 41| | station_branding = ''WCVE-TV 23''<br>''WCVW-TV 57''<br>''WHTJ-TV 41| | ||
analog = '''WCVE:''' 23 <br> '''WCVW:''' 57<br>'''WHTJ 41| | analog = '''WCVE:''' 23 <br> '''WCVW:''' 57<br>'''WHTJ:''' 41| | ||
digital = '''WCVE:''' 42 <br> '''WCVW:''' 44<br>'''WHTJ''' 46| | digital = '''WCVE:''' 42 <br> '''WCVW:''' 44<br>'''WHTJ:''' 46| | ||
affiliations = ]| | affiliations = ]| | ||
founded = '''WCVE:''' ], ]<br> '''WCVW:''' ]| | founded = '''WCVE:''' ], ]<br> '''WCVW:''' ]| |
Revision as of 01:41, 31 May 2006
{{Infobox broadcast}} may refer to:
- Template:Infobox broadcasting network
- Template:Infobox television channel
- Template:Infobox television station
If an internal transclusion led you here, you may wish to change it to point directly to the intended page.
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WCVE (WCVE-TV since WCVE-FM was added in 1988) is a public television station licensed to Richmond, Virginia. It broadcasts on televisions channel 23 and is owned by Commonwealth Public Broadcasting Corporation. The station is a member of PBS, of which WCVE-TV became a charter member. The station signed on for the first time on September 14, 1964. It is considered "the mothership" for a group of public radio and television stations in Virginia. Offices are at 23 Sesame Street in Bon Air, a suburb of Richmond. WCVE's programming is also broadcast by a satellite in Charlottesville, Virginia on channel 41 as WHTJ.
History
The community-owned public broadcasting company was established in 1961 by Thomas Boushall (Chairman of the Richmond School Board and an officer of the Bank of Virginia) and a group of concerned citizens to employ television for educational purposes. The patron saints of public broadcasting in central Virginia were Boushall, E. Claiborne Robins Sr., Mary Ann Franklin, and Benjamin W. Spiller. Mrs. Franklin first approached Boushall and Henry I. Willett, then Superintendent of Richmond City Schools, with the idea of establishing an educational television station. Boushall and Franklin then recruited Spiller, who was hired in December 1963 and began working for them in January 1964.
WCVE's sister station, WCVW-TV (channel 57) signed on in 1967. Richmond became the first community in Virginia to have dual stations, and only the eighth in the nation to do so, doubling the amount of instructional programming provided to schools in central Virginia. Almost forty years later, both WCVE and WCVW are still in operation.
In 1974, Commonwealth Public Broadcasting took over WNVT-TV, a Fairfax public TV station on the verge of financial insolvency, in order to protect instructional television and educational services for schools in northern Virginia. In 1981, a second Northern Virginia station, WNVC-TV, was established. Today, those two stations continue to provide services to schools as well as international programming tailored to the needs of the Washington, D.C., area's culturally diverse population.
When Union Theological Seminary & Presbyterian School of Christian Education announced its plans to give up its public radio license for WRFK, which had assumed a fine music format from WFMV. To ensure public radio would remain in Richmond, WCVE-FM radio went on the air as a NPR affiliate in 1988. The following year, the company established Charlottesville's only community-licensed PBS station, WHTJ.
A 25,000 square foot (2,300 m²) TV and radio studio-office complex was added in 1991.
See also
- WCVE-FM
- Benjamin W. Spiller (1926-2004)
Sources
- Fisher, Mark D. (2005) A Brief History of WFMV: Virginia's first stereophonic good music station, Richmond Radio Group on Yahoo; Richmond, VA
External links
- WCVE-TV official webpage
- WCVE-FM information
- "An Hour With the Guitar" information
- Richmond Radio Yahoo Group
- Template:TVQ
- Template:TVQ
- Template:TVQ
Broadcast television in Central Virginia | |
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Full-power |
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Low-power |
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ATSC 3.0 | |
Defunct |
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Broadcast television in the Charlottesville area | |
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