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DuMont Television Network

The DuMont Television Network (also known as the DuMont Network, DuMont Television, simply DuMont/Du Mont, or (incorrectly) Dumont[a] /ˈdmɒnt/) was one of America's pioneer commercial television networks, rivaling NBC and CBS for the distinction of being first overall in the United States. It was owned by Allen B. DuMont Laboratories,[1] a television equipment and set manufacturer, and began operation on June 28, 1942.[3][4]

DuMont Television Network
TypeBroadcast television network
FoundedJune 28, 1942; 80 years ago (1942-06-28)
FounderAllen B. DuMont
DefunctAugust 6, 1956; 66 years ago (1956-08-06)
FateDefunct
SuccessorFox Broadcasting Company
HeadquartersUnited States
Key people
Thomas T. Goldsmith, Jr. (vice president; director of research)
Mortimer Loewi (financial consultant)
Ted Bergmann (director of sales, 1951–1953; general manager, 1953–1955)
Lawrence Phillips (director of broadcasting)
Chris Witting (director of broadcasting)
Tom Gallery (director of sales)
Don McGannon (general manager of O&Os)
James Caddigan (director of programming and production)
Paul Raibourn (executive vice president, Paramount; Paramount liaison)
OwnerAllen B. DuMont Laboratories[1]

The network was hindered by the prohibitive cost of broadcasting, a freeze on new television stations in 1948 by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) that restricted the network's growth,[5] and even the company's partner, Paramount Pictures. Despite several innovations in broadcasting and the creation of one of television's biggest stars of the 1950s—Jackie Gleason—the network never found itself on solid financial ground. Forced to expand on UHF channels during an era when UHF tuning was not yet a standard feature on television sets, DuMont fought an uphill battle for program clearances outside its three owned-and-operated stations in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Pittsburgh, ultimately ending network operations on August 6, 1956.

DuMont's latter-day obscurity, caused mainly by the destruction of its extensive program archive by the 1970s, has prompted TV historian David Weinstein to refer to it as the "forgotten network".[6] A few popular DuMont programs, such as Cavalcade of Stars and Emmy Award winner Life Is Worth Living, appear in television retrospectives or are mentioned briefly in books about U.S. television history.

History

Origins

 
DuMont programs aired in 32 cities by 1949. The live coaxial cable feed stretched from Boston to St. Louis. Other stations received programs via kinescope recordings.

Allen B. DuMont Laboratories was founded in 1931 by Allen B. DuMont with only $1,000, and a laboratory in his basement. He and his staff were responsible for many early technical innovations, including the first consumer all-electronic television receiver in 1938. Their most revolutionary contribution came when the team successfully extended the life of a cathode ray tube from 24 to 1000 hours, making television sets a practical product for consumers.[7] The company's television receivers soon became the standard of the industry.[8] In 1942, DuMont worked with the US Army in developing radar technology during World War II. This brought in $5 million for the company.[9]

Early sales of television receivers were hampered by the lack of regularly scheduled programming being broadcast. A few months after selling his first set in 1938, DuMont opened his own New York-area experimental television station (W2XVT) in Passaic, New Jersey. In 1940, the station moved to Manhattan as W2XWV on channel 4 and commenced broadcasting on June 28, 1942.[citation needed] Unlike CBS and NBC, which reduced their hours of television broadcasting during World War II, DuMont continued full-scale experimental and commercial broadcasts throughout the war. In 1944, W2XWV received a commercial license, the third in New York, under the call letters WABD (derived from DuMont's initials). In 1945, it moved to channel 5. On May 19, 1945, DuMont opened experimental W3XWT in Washington, D.C.

Paramount Pictures became a minority shareholder in DuMont Laboratories when it advanced $400,000 in 1939 for a 40% share in the company.[10][11] Paramount had television interests of its own, having launched experimental stations in Los Angeles in 1939 and Chicago in 1940. DuMont's association with Paramount would later come back to haunt DuMont.[12][13]

 
"DUMONT First with the Finest in Television" 1951 Matchbook

Soon after his experimental Washington station signed on, DuMont began experimental coaxial cable hookups between his laboratories in Passaic and his two stations. It is said that one of those broadcasts on the hookup announced that the U.S. had dropped an atomic bomb on Nagasaki, Japan, on August 9, 1945. This was later considered to be the official beginning of the DuMont Network by both Thomas T. Goldsmith, the network's chief engineer and DuMont's best friend,[6][page needed] and DuMont himself.[12] Regular network service began on August 15, 1946, on WABD and W3XWT. In November 1946, W3XWT was granted a commercial license, the capital's first, as WTTG,[14] named after Goldsmith. These two DuMont owned-and-operated stations were joined by WDTV (channel 3) in Pittsburgh on January 11, 1949.[15]

Although NBC in New York was known to have station-to-station television links as early as 1940 with WPTZ (now KYW) in Philadelphia and WRGB in Schenectady, New York, DuMont received its station licenses before NBC resumed its previously sporadic network broadcasts after the war.[16] ABC had just come into existence as a radio network in 1943 and did not enter network television until 1948 when its flagship station in New York City, WJZ-TV (now WABC-TV), began broadcasting. CBS also waited until 1948 to begin network operations, because it was waiting for the Federal Communications Commission to approve its color television system (which it eventually did not)[why?]. Other companies, including Mutual, the Yankee Network, and Paramount, were interested in starting television networks, but were prevented from successfully doing so by restrictive FCC regulations, although the Paramount Television Network did have some limited success in network operations in the late 1940s and early 1950s.[citation needed]

Programming

 
Still from Rocky King, Inside Detective, one of DuMont's most popular programs

Despite no history of radio programming, no stable of radio stars to draw on, and perennial cash shortages, DuMont was an innovative and creative network.[17] Without the radio revenues that supported mighty NBC and CBS, DuMont programmers relied on their wits and on connections with Broadway. Eventually, the network provided original programs that are remembered more than 60 years later.[6][page needed]

The network largely ignored the standard business model of 1950s TV, in which one advertiser sponsored an entire show, enabling it to have complete control over its content. Instead, DuMont sold commercials to many different advertisers, freeing producers of its shows from the veto power held by sole sponsors. This eventually became the standard model for US television. Some commercial time was sold regionally on a co-op basis, while other spots were sold network-wide.[citation needed]

DuMont also holds another important place in American TV history. WDTV's sign-on made it possible for stations in the Midwest to receive live network programming from stations on the East Coast, and vice versa.[18] Before then, the networks relied on separate regional networks in the two time zones for live programming, and the West Coast received network programming from kinescopes (films shot directly from live television screens) originating from the East Coast. On January 11, 1949, the coaxial cable linking East and Midwest (known in television circles as "the Golden Spike," in reference to the golden spike that united the First transcontinental railroad) was activated. The ceremony, hosted by DuMont and WDTV, was carried on all four networks.[19] WGN-TV (channel 9) in Chicago and WABD in New York were able to share programs through a live coaxial cable feed when WDTV signed on in Pittsburgh, because the station completed the East Coast-to-Midwest chain, allowing stations in both regions to air the same program simultaneously, which is still the standard for US TV. It was another two years before the West Coast got live programming from the East (and the East able to get live programming from the West), but this was the beginning of the modern era of network television.[20]

 
WDTV broadcast of We, the People on April 18, 1952. The guest is New York Yankees player Bill Bevens.
 
Benny Goodman and his band on the DuMont show Star Time, ca. 1950.

The first broadcasts came from DuMont's 515 Madison Avenue headquarters. It soon found additional space, including a fully functioning theater, in the New York branch of Wanamaker's department store at Ninth Street and Broadway.[12][21] Later, a lease on the Adelphi Theatre on 54th Street and the Ambassador Theatre on West 49th Street gave the network a site for variety shows. In 1954, the lavish DuMont Tele-Centre opened in the former Jacob Ruppert's Central Opera House at 205 East 67th Street, today the site of the Fox Television Center and home of WABD successor station WNYW.[22][23]

DuMont was the first network to broadcast a film production for TV: Talk Fast, Mister, produced by RKO in 1944. DuMont also aired the first TV situation comedy, Mary Kay and Johnny, as well as the first network-televised soap opera, Faraway Hill. Cavalcade of Stars, a variety show hosted by Jackie Gleason, was the birthplace of The Honeymooners (Gleason took his variety show to CBS in 1952, but filmed the "Classic 39" Honeymooners episodes at DuMont's Adelphi Theater studio in 1955–56). Bishop Fulton J. Sheen's devotional program Life Is Worth Living went up against Milton Berle in many cities, becoming the first show to compete successfully in the ratings against "Mr. Television". In 1952, Sheen won an Emmy Award for "Most Outstanding Personality".[24] The network's other notable programs include:

The network was a pioneer in TV programming aimed at minority audiences and featuring minority performers, at a time when the other American networks aired few television series for non-whites. Among DuMont's minority programs were The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong, starring Asian American film actress Anna May Wong, the first US TV show to star an Asian American;[27] and The Hazel Scott Show, starring pianist and singer Hazel Scott, the first US network TV series to be hosted by a black woman.[28][29]

Although DuMont's programming pre-dated videotape, many DuMont offerings were recorded on kinescopes. These kinescopes were said to be stored in a warehouse until the 1970s.[12] Actress Edie Adams, the wife of comedian Ernie Kovacs (both regular performers on early television) testified in 1996 before a panel of the Library of Congress on the preservation of television and video. Adams claimed that so little value was given to these films that the stored kinescopes were loaded into three trucks and dumped into Upper New York Bay.[30] Nevertheless, a number of DuMont programs survive at The Paley Center for Media in New York City, the UCLA Film and Television Archive in Los Angeles, in the Peabody Awards Collection at the University of Georgia, and the Museum of Broadcast Communications in Chicago.[31]

Although nearly the entire DuMont film archive was destroyed, several surviving DuMont shows have been released on DVD. Much of what survived was either never properly copyrighted (live telecasts, because they were not set on a fixed medium, were not eligible for copyright at the time, although films of those telecasts could if they contained a proper copyright notice) or lapsed into the public domain in the late 1970s when DuMont's successor-company Metromedia declined to renew the copyrights. A large number of episodes of Life Is Worth Living have been saved, and they are now aired weekly on Catholic-oriented cable network, the Eternal Word Television Network, which also makes a collection of them available on DVD (in the biographical information about Fulton J. Sheen added to the end of many episodes, a still image of Bishop Sheen looking into a DuMont Television camera can be seen). Several companies that distribute DVDs over the Internet have released a small number of episodes of Cavalcade of Stars and The Morey Amsterdam Show. Two more DuMont programs, Captain Video and His Video Rangers and Rocky King, Inside Detective, have had a small number of surviving episodes released commercially by at least one major distributor of public domain programming. Because so few episodes remain of most DuMont series, they are seldom rerun, even though there is no licensing cost to do so.[citation needed]

Awards

DuMont programs were by necessity low-budget affairs, and the network received relatively few awards from the TV industry. Most awards during the 1950s went to NBC and CBS, who were able to out-spend other companies and draw on their extensive history of radio broadcasting in the relatively new television medium.

During the 1952–53 TV season, Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, host of Life Is Worth Living, won an Emmy Award for Most Outstanding Personality. Sheen beat out CBS's Arthur Godfrey, Edward R. Murrow, and Lucille Ball, who were nominated for the same award. Sheen was also nominated for – but did not win – Public Service Emmys in 1952, 1953, and 1954.[32]

DuMont received an Emmy nomination for Down You Go, a popular game show during the 1952–53 television season (in the category Best Audience Participation, Quiz, or Panel Program). The network was nominated twice for its coverage of professional football during the 1953–54 and 1954–55 television seasons.[33]

The Johns Hopkins Science Review, a DuMont public affairs program, was awarded a Peabody Award in 1952 in the Education category. Sheen's Emmy and the Science Review Peabody were the only national awards the DuMont Network received.[34] Though DuMont series and performers continued to win local TV awards, by the mid-1950s the DuMont network no longer had a national presence.[citation needed]

Ratings

Videodex 62 City Ratings
First week of August 1950
Rank Series Network # of cities % TV homes
1 Toast of the Town CBS 34 37.2
2 Stop the Music ABC 50 28.4
3 Kraft TV Theater NBC 34 27.5
4 Ford Star Revue NBC 45 26.9
5 The Garry Moore Show CBS 19 26.4
6 The Big Story NBC 32 25.6
7 The Original Amateur Hour NBC 54 25.3
8 Break the Bank NBC 42 24.2
9 The Lone Ranger ABC 39 23.9
10 Your Hit Parade NBC 18 23.7
11 Cavalcade of Stars DuMont 20 22.2
12 Mama CBS 16 22.0
13 Wrestling DuMont 15 21.4
14 Beat the Clock CBS 33 20.7
15 Masterpiece Playhouse NBC 32 19.2

The earliest measurements of TV audiences were performed by the C. E. Hooper company of New York. DuMont performed well in the Hooper ratings; in fact, DuMont's talent program, The Original Amateur Hour, was the most popular series of the 1947–48 season.[35] Two seasons later, Variety ranked DuMont's popular variety series Cavalcade of Stars as the tenth most popular series.[36]

In February 1950, Hooper's competitor A. C. Nielsen bought out the Hooper ratings system. DuMont did not fare well with the change: none of its shows appeared on Nielsen's annual top 20 lists of the most popular series.[36] One of the DuMont Network's biggest hits of the 1950s, Life is Worth Living, did receive Nielsen ratings of up to 11.1, meaning that they attracted more than 10 million viewers. Sheen's one-man program – in which he discussed philosophy, psychology and other fields of thought from a Christian perspective – was the most widely viewed religious series in the history of television. 169 local television stations aired Life, and for three years the program competed successfully against NBC's popular The Milton Berle Show. The ABC and CBS programs that aired in the same timeslot were canceled.[32]

Life is Worth Living was not the only DuMont program to achieve double-digit ratings. In 1952, Time magazine reported that popular DuMont game show Down You Go had attracted an audience estimated at 16 million viewers.[37] Similarly, DuMont's summer 1954 replacement series, The Goldbergs, achieved audiences estimated at 10 million.[38][page needed] Still, these series were only moderately popular compared to NBC's and CBS's highest-rated programs.

Nielsen was not the only company to report TV ratings. Companies such as Trendex, Videodex, and Arbitron had also measured TV viewership. The chart in this section comes from Videodex's August 1950 ratings breakdown, as reported in Billboard magazine.[39]

Disputes with AT&T and Paramount

DuMont struggled to get its programs aired in many parts of the country, in part due to technical limitations of network lines maintained by telephone company AT&T Corporation. During the 1940s and 1950s, television signals were sent between stations via coaxial cable and microwave links that were owned by AT&T. The service provider did not have enough circuits to provide signal relay service from the four networks to all of their affiliates at the same time, so AT&T allocated times when each network could offer live programs to its affiliates. In 1950, AT&T allotted NBC and CBS each over 100 hours of live prime time network service, but gave ABC 53 hours, and DuMont 37. AT&T also required each television network to lease both radio and television lines. DuMont was the only television network without a radio network, so it was the only network forced to pay for a service it did not use. DuMont protested AT&T's actions with the Federal Communications Commission, and eventually reached a compromise.[40]

DuMont's biggest corporate hurdle may have been with the company's own partner, Paramount. Relations between the two companies were strained as early as 1939 when Paramount opened experimental television stations in Los Angeles and Chicago without DuMont's involvement. Dr. DuMont claimed that the original 1937 acquisition proposal required Paramount to expand its television interests "through DuMont". Paramount representative Paul Raibourn, who also was a member of DuMont's board of directors, denied that any such restriction had ever been discussed, but Dr. DuMont was vindicated by a 1953 examination of the original draft document.[41]

DuMont aspired to grow beyond its three stations, applying for new television station licenses in Cincinnati and Cleveland in 1947.[42] This would give the network five owned-and-operated stations (O&Os), the maximum allowed by the FCC at the time. However, DuMont was hampered by Paramount's two stations, KTLA (channel 5) in Los Angeles and WBKB (channel 4, now WBBM-TV on channel 2) in Chicago – the descendants of the two experimental stations that rankled DuMont in 1940. Although these stations did not carry DuMont programming (with the exception of KTLA for one year from 1947 to 1948), and in fact competed against DuMont's affiliates in those cities, the FCC ruled that Paramount essentially controlled DuMont, which effectively placed the network at the five-station cap.[43] Paramount's exertion of influence over the network's management and the power of its voting stock led the FCC to its conclusion.[44] Thus, DuMont was unable to open additional stations as long as Paramount owned stations or owned a portion of DuMont. Paramount refused to sell.

In 1949, Paramount Pictures launched the Paramount Television Network, a service that provided local television stations with filmed television programs. Paramount's network "undercut the company that it had invested in."[40] Paramount did not share its stars, big budgets, or filmed programs with DuMont; the company had stopped financially supporting DuMont in 1941.[40] Although Paramount executives indicated they would produce programs for DuMont, the studio never supplied the network with programs or technical assistance.[45] The acrimonious relationship between Paramount and DuMont climaxed during the 1953 FCC hearings regarding the ABC–United Paramount Theaters merger when Paul Raibourn, an executive at Paramount, publicly derided the quality of DuMont television sets in court testimony.[46]

Early troubles

 
The DuMont Building at 515 Madison Avenue in New York, with the original WABD broadcast tower still standing, 2008.

DuMont began with one basic disadvantage: unlike NBC, CBS and ABC, it did not have a radio network from which to draw big-name talent, affiliate loyalty or radio profits to underwrite television operations until the television medium itself became profitable.[47] Most early television licenses were granted to established radio broadcasters, and many longtime relationships with radio networks carried over to the new medium. As CBS and NBC (and to a lesser extent, ABC) gained their footing, they began to offer programming that drew on their radio backgrounds, bringing over the most popular radio stars. Early television station owners, when deciding which network would receive their main affiliation, were more likely to choose CBS's roster of Lucille Ball, Jack Benny, and Ed Sullivan, or NBC's lineup of Milton Berle and Sid Caesar, over DuMont, which offered a then-unknown Jackie Gleason and Bishop Fulton J. Sheen.[35] In smaller markets, with a limited number of stations, DuMont and ABC were often relegated to secondary status, so their programs got clearance only if the primary network was off the air or delayed via kinescope recording ("teletranscriptions" in DuMont parlance).[citation needed]

Adding to DuMont's troubles was the FCC's 1948 "freeze" on television license applications.[35] This was done to sort out the thousands of applications that had come streaming in, but also to rethink the allocation and technical standards laid down prior to World War II. It became clear soon after the war that 12 channels ("channel 1" had been removed from television broadcasting use because storms and other types of interference could severely affect the quality of its signals) were not nearly enough for national television service. What was to be a six-month freeze lasted until 1952, when the FCC opened the UHF spectrum. The FCC, however, did not require television manufacturers to include UHF capability.[13] In order to see UHF stations, most people had to buy expensive converters. Even then, the picture quality was marginal at best (see also: UHF television broadcasting § UHF reception issues).[48] Tied to this was a decision to restrict VHF allocations in medium- and smaller-sized markets. Meanwhile, television sets would not be required to have all-channel tuning until 1964, with the passage of the All-Channel Receiver Act.[49]

Forced to rely on UHF to expand, DuMont saw one station after another go dark due to dismal ratings.[35] It bought small, distressed UHF station KCTY (channel 25) in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1954, but ran it for just three months before shutting it down at a considerable loss[50] after attempting to compete with three established VHF stations.[51]

The FCC's Hyman Goldin said in 1960, "If there had been four VHF outlets in the top markets, there's no question DuMont would have lived and would have eventually turned the corner in terms of profitability."[52][page needed]

Decline and the end of the network

During the early years of television, there was some measure of cooperation among the four major U.S. television networks. However, as television grew into a profitable business, an intense rivalry developed between the networks, just as it had in radio. NBC and CBS competed fiercely for viewers and advertising dollars, a contest neither underfunded DuMont nor ABC could hope to win. According to author Dennis Mazzocco, "NBC tried to make an arrangement with ABC and CBS to destroy the DuMont network." The plan was for NBC and CBS to exclusively offer ABC their most popular series after they had aired on the bigger networks. ABC would become a network of re-runs, but DuMont would be shut out. ABC president Leonard Goldenson rejected NBC executive David Sarnoff's proposal, but did not report it to the Justice Department.[53]

DuMont survived the early 1950s only because of WDTV in Pittsburgh, the lone commercial VHF station in what was then the sixth-largest market in the country (after New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Washington). WDTV's only competition came from UHF stations WENS-TV (frequency now occupied by WINP-TV) & WKJF-TV (now WPGH-TV) and distant stations from Johnstown, Pennsylvania; Youngstown, Ohio; and Wheeling, West Virginia.[54] There were also external factors; the FCC's "freeze" on licenses and intense competition for the remaining VHF licenses in Pittsburgh including WENS-TV appealing the FCC's granting of the channel 11 license that was eventually affirmed for WIIC-TV (now WPXI), the battle between the Hearst Corporation (then-owners of WCAE) and KQV over the channel 4 license that would eventually become WTAE-TV, and (perhaps the most impactful one to DuMont's future) locally based Westinghouse Electric Corporation (owners of radio pioneer KDKA) battling with local interest groups for the channel 13 license that was intended to be a non-commercial license. The FCC also denied CBS's request to be granted the channel 9 allocation in nearby Steubenville, Ohio and move it to Pittsburgh so that Steubenville had a chance to have its own television station. As a result, no other commercial VHF station signed on in Pittsburgh until WIIC-TV in 1957, giving WDTV a de facto monopoly on television in the area.[55] Since WDTV carried secondary affiliations with the other three networks, DuMont used this as a bargaining chip to get its programs cleared in other large markets.[54][56]

 
"DUMONT TELEVISION" art on 1951 Matchbook

Despite its severe financial straits, by 1953, DuMont appeared to be on its way to establishing itself as the third national network.[28][57] This was the case despite a smaller footprint than ABC. While DuMont programs aired live on 16 stations, the network could count on only seven primary stations – its three owned-and-operated stations ("O&Os"), plus WGN-TV in Chicago, KTTV (channel 11) in Los Angeles, KFEL-TV (channel 2, now KWGN-TV) in Denver, and WTVN-TV (channel 6, now WSYX) in Columbus, Ohio.

In contrast, by 1953 ABC had a full complement of five O&Os, augmented by nine primary affiliates.[58] ABC also had a radio network (it was descended from NBC's Blue Network) from which to draw talent, affiliate loyalty, and generate income to subsidize television operations.[35] However, ABC had only 14 primary stations, while CBS and NBC had over 40 each. By 1951, ABC was badly overextended and on the verge of bankruptcy.[59] That year, the company announced a merger with United Paramount Theaters (UPT) (the former theater division of Paramount Pictures, which was spun off as a result of the United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. antitrust decision), but it was not until 1953 that the FCC approved the merger.[citation needed]

By this time, DuMont had begun to differentiate itself from NBC and CBS. It allowed its advertisers to choose the locations where their advertising ran, potentially saving them millions of dollars. By contrast, ABC followed NBC and CBS' practice of forcing advertisers to purchase a large "must-buy" list of stations, even though it was only a fourth the size of NBC and CBS.[60]

ABC's fortunes were dramatically altered in February 1953, when the FCC cleared the way for UPT to buy the network. The merger provided ABC with a badly needed cash infusion, giving it the resources to mount "top shelf" programming and to provide a national television service on a scale approaching that of CBS and NBC.[61] Through UPT president Leonard Goldenson, ABC also gained ties with the Hollywood studios that more than matched those DuMont's producers had with Broadway.[citation needed]

Realizing that ABC had more resources than they could even begin to match, DuMont officials were receptive to a merger offer from ABC. Goldenson quickly brokered a deal with Ted Bergmann, DuMont's managing director, under which the merged network would have been called "ABC-DuMont" until at least 1958 and would have honored all of DuMont's network commitments. In return, DuMont would get $5 million in cash, guaranteed advertising time for DuMont sets and a secure future for its staff.[54] A merged ABC-DuMont would have been a colossus rivaling CBS and NBC, as it would have owned stations in five of the six largest U.S. television markets (excluding only Philadelphia) as well as ABC's radio network. It also would have inherited DuMont's de facto monopoly in Pittsburgh and would have been one of two networks to have full ownership of a station in the nation's capital (the other being NBC). However, it would have had to sell a New York station – either DuMont's WABD or ABC flagship WJZ-TV (channel 7, now WABC-TV), probably the former. It also would have had to sell two other stations – most likely ABC's two smallest O&Os, WXYZ-TV in Detroit and KGO-TV in San Francisco (both broadcasting on channel 7) – to get under the FCC's limit of five stations per owner.[citation needed]

However, Paramount vetoed the plan almost out of hand due to antitrust concerns.[8] A few months earlier, the FCC had ruled that Paramount controlled DuMont, and there were still some questions about whether UPT had really separated from Paramount.[citation needed]

 
Table showing primary station affiliation for each of the four U.S. commercial television networks in 1954. DuMont had primary affiliation agreements with 39 stations in the largest markets, but most of these stations were poorly watched UHF stations.[62]

With no other way to readily obtain cash, DuMont sold WDTV to Westinghouse for $9.75 million in late 1954, after Westinghouse decided to give public backing to the public interest groups for the channel 13 allocation in Pittsburgh, allowing the station to launch that spring as educational WQED.[54] While this gave DuMont a short-term cash infusion, it eliminated the leverage the network had to get program clearances in other markets. Without its de facto monopoly in Pittsburgh, the company's advertising revenue shrank to less than half that of 1953. By February 1955, DuMont realized it could not continue as a television network.[63] The decision was made to shut down network operations and operate WABD and WTTG as independent stations.

On April 1, 1955, most of DuMont's entertainment programs were dropped. Bishop Sheen aired his last program on DuMont on April 26 and later moved to ABC.[29] By May, just eight programs were left on the network, with only inexpensive shows and sporting events keeping the remains of the network going through the summer. The network also largely abandoned the use of the intercity network coaxial cable, on which it had spent $3 million in 1954 to transmit shows that mostly lacked station clearance.[64] The company only retained network links for live sports programming and utilizing the company's Electronicam process to produce studio-based programming. Ironically, Electronicam is best remembered for being used by Jackie Gleason's producers for the 39-half-hour episodes of The Honeymooners that aired on CBS during the 1955–56 television season.[citation needed]

In August 1955, Paramount, with the help of other stockholders, seized full control of DuMont Laboratories. The last non-sports program on DuMont, the game show What's the Story, aired on September 23, 1955.[65] After that, DuMont's network feed was used only for occasional sporting events. The last broadcast on what was left of the DuMont Television Network, a boxing match, aired on August 6, 1956.[66] (The date has also been reported as September 1955,[67][68] November 1957[69] or August 4, 1958 [70] with the last broadcast of Monday Night Fights.) According to one source, the final program aired on only five stations nationwide.[70] It appears that the boxing show was syndicated to a few other east coast stations until 1958, but likely not as a production of DuMont or its successor company. Likewise, the remains of DuMont were used to syndicate a high school football Thanksgiving game in 1957; that telecast, the only DuMont broadcast to have been sent in color, was a personal project of Allen DuMont himself, whose hometown team in Montclair, New Jersey, was contending in the game for a state championship.[69]

DuMont spun off WABD and WTTG as the "DuMont Broadcasting Corporation". The name was later changed to "Metropolitan Broadcasting Company" to distance the company from what was seen as a complete failure.[71] In 1958, John Kluge bought Paramount's shares for $4 million,[12] and in 1960 renamed the company Metromedia. WABD became WNEW-TV and later WNYW. WTTG still broadcasts under its original call letters as a Fox affiliate.

For 50 years, DuMont was the only major broadcast television network to cease operations,[72] until CBS Corporation and Time Warner merged two other struggling networks, UPN and The WB, in September 2006, to create The CW Television Network – whose schedule was originally composed largely of programs from both of its predecessor networks.

Failed revival of the DuMont brand

On February 22, 2018, Lightning One, Inc., owned by Smashing Pumpkins lead singer Billy Corgan, filed a U.S. trademark application for "The Dumont Network."[73] The application by Lightning One was very likely associated with its ownership of the "National Wrestling Alliance" trademark, the moniker of one of the oldest wrestling promotions in the United States.[74][75] However, according to the registration filing, the trademark for "The Dumont Network" as owned by Lightning One was allowed to lapse on July 2, 2020, rendering the trademark dead.

Present day use of the DuMont brand in broadcasting

In late 2016, a small local terrestrial television programming service was established in Houston, Texas called The NuDu (or The New Dumont Television Network) based on the structure of the original DuMont. The channel's programming is available online via livestream and through the third digital subchannel of KBPX-LD.

Fate of the DuMont stations

All three DuMont-owned stations are still operating and are owned-and-operated stations of their respective networks, just as when they were part of DuMont. Of the three, only Washington's WTTG still has its original call letters.[76]

WTTG and New York's WABD (later WNEW-TV, and now WNYW) survived as Metromedia-owned independents until 1986, when they were purchased by the News Corporation to form the nucleus of the new Fox television network. Clarke Ingram, who maintained a DuMont memorial site, has suggested that Fox can be considered a revival, or at least a linear descendant, of DuMont.[77]

Westinghouse changed WDTV's call letters to KDKA-TV after the pioneering radio station of the same name, and switched its primary affiliation to CBS immediately after the sale. Westinghouse's acquisition of CBS in 1995 made KDKA-TV a CBS owned-and-operated station.

DuMont programming library

DuMont produced more than 20,000 television episodes from 1946–1956. Because they were created prior to the launch of Ampex's electronic videotape recorder in late 1956, they were initially broadcast live in black and white, then recorded on film kinescope for West Coast rebroadcasts and reruns. By the early 1970s, their vast library of 35mm and 16mm kinescopes eventually wound up in the hands of "a successor network," who reportedly disposed of them in New York City's East River to make room for more recent videotapes in a warehouse.[30]

Although films submerged for decades have been successfully recovered (see The Carpet from Bagdad as an example), there have been no salvage-diving efforts to locate or recover the DuMont archive. If it survived in that environment, most of the films have likely been damaged. Other kinescopes were put through a silver reclaiming process, because of the microscopic amounts of silver that made up the emulsion of black-and-white film during this time.[78]

It is estimated that only about 350 complete DuMont television shows survive today, the most famous being virtually all of Jackie Gleason's Honeymooners comedy sketches. Most of the existing episodes are believed to have come from the personal archives of DuMont's hosts, such as Gleason and Dennis James.

Affiliates

 
A DuMont Telecruiser, circa 1953. This mobile TV unit, Model B, Serial Number 101, was built by DuMont Labs for KBTV in Dallas. It was in use until the early 1970s.

At its peak in 1954, DuMont was affiliated with around 200 television stations.[79] In those days, television stations were free to "cherry-pick" which programs they would air, and many stations affiliated with multiple networks, depending mainly on the number of commercial television stations available in a market at a given time (markets where only one commercial station was available carried programming from all four major networks). Many of DuMont's "affiliates" carried very little DuMont programming, choosing to air one or two more popular programs (such as Life Is Worth Living) and/or sports programming on the weekends. Few stations carried the full DuMont program lineup. For example, the promising WKLO-TV (UHF Ch. 21) in the growing Louisville, Kentucky/Indiana market had to split its time between DuMont and ABC-TV. The station lasted only seven months (September 1953 – April 1954) on the air.[citation needed]

In its later years, DuMont was carried mostly on poorly watched UHF channels or had only secondary affiliations on VHF stations. DuMont ended most operations on April 1, 1955, but honored network commitments until August 1956.[6][page needed]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The name of the network has been spelled both "DuMont" and "Du Mont". "Dumont" and "DUMONT" are generally considered incorrect. Weinstein (2004) uses "DuMont" for the name of the network. Bergmann (2002) prefers "Du Mont".[2] For the purposes of this article, the Weinstein spelling is used. (The name was pronounced on-air to sound like DOO-mont, with an accent on the "Du".)

References

  • Bergmann, Ted; Skutch, Ira (2002). The DuMont Television Network: What Happened?. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-8108-4270-0.
  • Garvin, Glenn (March 2005). "Who Killed Captain Video? How the FCC strangled a TV pioneer". Reason Online. Retrieved January 5, 2007.[dead link]
  • Hess, Gary Newton (1979). An Historical Study of the DuMont Television Network. New York: Ayer Publishers. ISBN 978-0-405-11758-9.
  • Ingram, C. (2002). . Archived from the original on January 22, 2009. Retrieved December 24, 2008.
  • Merlin, Jan (May 11, 2006). . Archived from the original on January 10, 2007. Retrieved December 28, 2006.
  • Weinstein, David (2004). The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. pp. 228. ISBN 978-1-59213-245-4.

Citations

  1. ^ a b "Allen B. DuMont | American engineer and inventor". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on July 3, 2019. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  2. ^ Weinstein, David (2004). The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. pp. vi. ISBN 978-1-59213-499-1.
  3. ^ Weinstein, David (2004). The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television, p. 16. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 1-59213-499-8.
  4. ^ "A U. S. Television Chronology, 1875-1970". jeff560.tripod.com. from the original on June 13, 2011. Retrieved June 20, 2019.
  5. ^ Ponce de Leon, Charles L. (2015). . press.uchicago.edua. Beginnings. Archived from the original on July 28, 2020. Retrieved July 26, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d Weinstein, D."The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television" (PDF) October 12, 2006, at the Wayback Machine Temple University Press, 2004. Retrieved on January 6, 2007.
  7. ^ Hart, Hugh. "Jan. 29, 1901: DuMont Will Make TV Work". WIRED. from the original on December 28, 2017. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  8. ^ a b Dean, L. DuMont TV — KTTV TV11 December 31, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. Larry Dean's R-VCR Television Production website. Retrieved December 28, 2006.
  9. ^ Bergmann, Ted, Skutch, Ira. (2002) The Du Mont Television Network: What Happened? : A significant episode in the history of broadcasting. Lanham, Md. : Scarecrow Press.
  10. ^ Castleman, H. & Podrazik, W. (1982) Watching TV: Four Decades of American Television, p. 11. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  11. ^ Auter, P. & Boyd, D. DuMont: The Original Fourth Television Network. The Journal of Popular Culture. Vol. 29 Issue 3 Page 63 Winter 1995. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  12. ^ a b c d e Spadoni, M. (June 2003). DuMont: America's First "Fourth Network" at the Wayback Machine (archived February 11, 2007). Television Heaven. Retrieved on September 6, 2019.
  13. ^ a b McDowell, W. Remembering the DuMont Network: A Case Study Approach September 6, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. College of Mass Communication and Media Arts, Southern Illinois University. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  14. ^ Brennan, Patricia (May 14, 1995). "WTTG Marks 50 Years". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 25, 2020.
  15. ^ "Network Television to Reach City". The Pittsburgh Press. January 11, 1949. p. 29. Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  16. ^ Bergmann, Ted; Skutch, Ira (2002). The DuMont Television Network: What Happened?, pp. 16–18. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4270-X
  17. ^ Auter, P. (2005)DuMont, Allen B September 23, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. The Museum of Broadcast Communications. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  18. ^ Downs, S. (November 3, 1996). "The Golden Age of Pittsburgh Television" March 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. Greensburg Tribune-Review. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  19. ^ Hundt, B. (July 30, 2006). "Remember When: First tube"[dead link]. Observer-Reporter Publishing. Retrieved on January 7, 2007.
  20. ^ History of the AT&T Network — Milestones in AT&T Network History January 7, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. AT&T, 2006. Retrieved on December 28, 2006
  21. ^ Inc, Nielsen Business Media (August 15, 1953). Billboard. New York City: Nielsen Business Media, Inc. p. 4. Retrieved March 5, 2020. DU M SHUTS DOWN STORE OPERATION . . . NEW YORK, Aug. 8. — Du Mont Television Network is closing down its studios and master control unit at Wanamaker's department store next Friday (14). Master control will begin operating at the Du Mont's Tele-Center the next day. Among the shows that had been originating at Wanamaker's was "Captain Video". {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  22. ^ . FCC Public Inspection Files. Federal Communications Commission. Archived from the original on July 11, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2020.
  23. ^ Inc, Nielsen Business Media (June 19, 1954). Billboard. New York City: Nielsen Business Media, Inc. p. 14. Du M. Tele-Center To Be Officially Opened on Monday NEW YORK, June 12[, 1954]. The Boys from Boise, the first original televised musical, was aired on the network in 1944. — Du Mont on Monday will hold the official tape-cutting ceremonies for its Tele-Center, which has actually been in use for over a year. Speakers at the event will be Dr. Allen Du Mont and Mayor Robert Wagner.[...]It was originally the Central Opera House. Du Mont invested $5,000,000 (equivalent to about $50,500,000 in 2021) to re-build it for TV use. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  24. ^ McNeil, Alex (1996). Total Television (4th ed.), p. 1040. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-024916-8
  25. ^ Merlin, J. Roaring Rockets: The Space Hero Files January 13, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  26. ^ Weinstein, D. (2004). The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television, p. 69. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 1-59213-499-8
  27. ^ "Film reveals real-life struggles of an onscreen 'Dragon Lady'." March 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine UCLA Today Online September 3, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, January 3, 2008. Retrieved: May 27, 2008.
  28. ^ a b Brooks, Tim & Marsh, Earle (1964). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows (3rd ed.). New York: Ballantine. p. xiv. ISBN 0-345-31864-1.
  29. ^ a b McNeil, Alex (1996). Total Television (4th ed.), p. 479. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-024916-8
  30. ^ a b Adams, Edie (March 1996). . National Film Preservation Board. Library of Congress. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007. Retrieved September 24, 2007.
  31. ^ Collections — Early television January 3, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. The UCLA Film and Television Archive. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  32. ^ a b Weinstein, D. (2004). The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television, p. 156-157. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 1-59213-499-8
  33. ^ . Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. 2005. Archived from the original on April 3, 2009. Retrieved September 24, 2007.
  34. ^ McNeil, Alex (1996). Total Television (4th ed.), 1121. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-024916-8
  35. ^ a b c d e Jajkowski, S. (2001). Chicago Television: And Then There Was… DuMont October 5, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  36. ^ a b McNeil, Alex (1996). Total Television (4th ed.), 1143–1145. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-024916-8
  37. ^ . Time. April 28, 1952. Archived from the original on January 21, 2009. Retrieved September 30, 2007.
  38. ^ Smith, Glenn D. Jr. (2007). Something on My Own: Gertrude Berg and American Broadcasting, 1929–1956. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press. ISBN 978-0-8156-0887-5.
  39. ^ "Videodex 62-Market Survey". Billboard. Vol. 62, no. 39. September 30, 1950. p. 6.
  40. ^ a b c Auter, P.J.; Boyd, D.A. (1995). "DuMont: The Original Fourth Television Network" (PDF). Journal of Popular Culture. 29 (3): 63–83. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.1995.00063.x. (PDF) from the original on September 4, 2011. Retrieved June 28, 2009.
  41. ^ Hess, Gary Newton (1979). An Historical Study of the DuMont Television Network, p 91. New York: Arno Press. ISBN 0-405-11758-2.
  42. ^ Hess, Gary Newton (1979). An Historical Study of the DuMont Television Network, pp. 52–53. New York: Arno Press. ISBN 0-405-11758-2.
  43. ^ IEEE History Center: Thomas Goldsmith Abstract December 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (May 14, 1973). IEEE History Center. Retrieved on January 6, 2007.
  44. ^ Weinstein, David (2004). The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television (pp. 24–25). Philadelphia: Temple University.
  45. ^ White, Timothy R. (1992). Hollywood's Attempt to Appropriate Television: The Case of Paramount Pictures. Ann Arbor, MI: UMI. pp. 117–118.
  46. ^ White, Timothy R. (1992). "Hollywood on (Re)Trial: The American Broadcasting-United Paramount Merger Hearing" October 7, 2016, at the Wayback Machine Cinema Journal, Vol. 31, No. 3. (Spring, 1992), pp. 19–36.
  47. ^ DUMONT, ALLEN B. The Museum of Broadcast Communications. September 23, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  48. ^ Ingram, Clarke. "Channel Six: UHF" August 4, 2009, at the Wayback Machine DuMont Television Network Historical Web Site. Accessed January 21, 2010.
  49. ^ The FCC and the All-Channel Receiver Bill of 1962, LAWRENCE D. LONGLEY, JOURNAL OF BROADCASTING. Vol. XLII. NO. 3 (Summer 1969)
  50. ^ Clarke Ingram's historical account at https://uhfhistory.com/articles/kcty.html has this as exactly two months; DuMont closed on the acquisition at the start of 1 Jan 1954 and took the station dark at the end of 28 Feb 1954. It lost DuMont $250,000 and lost Empire Coil, the original proprietor, $750,000. It was the third of a long list of UHF pioneers to fail.
  51. ^ Bergmann, Ted; Skutch, Ira (2002). The DuMont Television Network: What Happened?, p. 66. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8108-4270-X.
  52. ^ Hess, Gary Newton (1979). A Historical Study of the DuMont Television Network. New York: Ayer Publishers. ISBN 0-405-11758-2.
  53. ^ Mazzocco, Dennis (1999). Networks of Power: Corporate TV's Threat to Democracy. South End Press. pp. 33. ISBN 978-0-89608-472-8.
  54. ^ a b c d Bergmann, Ted; Skutch, Ira (2002). The DuMont Television Network: What Happened?, pp. 79–83. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8108-4270-X.
  55. ^ O'Brien, E. (July 1, 2003). Pittsburgh Area Radio and TV December 11, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  56. ^ Castleman, H. & Podrazik, W. (1982) Watching TV: Four Decades of American Television, p. 39. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  57. ^ Grace, R. (October 3, 2002). "Reminiscing: Channel 2, Your Du Mont Station" August 25, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. Metropolitan News-Enterprise Online. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  58. ^ Jajkowski, S. (2005). Chicago Television: My Afternoon With Red November 5, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on January 6, 2007.
  59. ^ Goldenson, Leonard H. and Wolf, Marvin J. (1991). Beating the Odds. Charles Scribner's Sons ISBN 0-684-19055-9. pp 114–115
  60. ^ Bergmann, Ted; Skutch, Ira (2002). The DuMont Television Network: What Happened?, pp. 69–70. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8108-4270-X.
  61. ^ Jajkowski, S. (2005). "Flashback: The 50th Anniversary of ABC" April 11, 2005, at the Wayback Machine. Museum of Broadcast Communications. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  62. ^ Bergmann, Ted; Skutch, Ira (2002). The DuMont Television Network: What Happened?. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, pp 116–126. ISBN 0-8108-4270-X.
  63. ^ Bergmann, Ted; Skutch, Ira (2002). The DuMont Television Network: What Happened?, pp. 82–83. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8108-4270-X.
  64. ^ Bergmann, Ted; Skutch, Ira (2002). The DuMont Television Network: What Happened?, pp. 77–78. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8108-4270-X.
  65. ^ McNeil, Alex (1996). Total Television (4th ed.), p. 907. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-024916-8
  66. ^ Brooks, Tim; Marsh, Earle (2007). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network Cable and TV Shows, 1946–Present (9 ed.). New York: Ballantine. p. 174. ISBN 978-0-345-49773-4.
  67. ^ "NewspaperArchive® |.aspx historic newspaper articles including obituaries, births, marriages, divorces and arrests". www.newspaperarchive.com.
  68. ^ "NewspaperArchive® |.aspx historic newspaper articles including obituaries, births, marriages, divorces and arrests". www.newspaperarchive.com.
  69. ^ a b Tober, Steve (November 20, 2017).Thanksgiving football games a disappearing tradition December 1, 2017, at the Wayback Machine. NorthJersey.com. Retrieved November 21, 2017. "The ’57 Thanksgiving game at Foley Field was televised live and in color (both rarities in those early TV days) on Channel 5 via the old Dumont Television Network, which was under the leadership of Dr. Dumont, who – by the way – was a Montclair resident. Also, the late, great Chris Schenkel did the play by play."
  70. ^ a b Castleman, Harry; Podrazik, Walter J. (1982). Watching TV: Four Decades of American Television. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 121. ISBN 978-0-07-010269-9. August 4, 1958. Monday Night Fights, the final show of the old Dumont network dies. At the end, it is carried on only five stations, nationwide.
  71. ^ Bergmann, Ted; Skutch, Ira (2002). The DuMont Television Network: What Happened?, p. 85. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8108-4270-X.
  72. ^ Ryan, J. (January 24, 2006). "Exit WB, UPN; Enter the CW" October 1, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. E! Online News. Retrieved on January 6, 2007.
  73. ^ "THE DUMONT NETWORK Trademark of LIGHTNING ONE, INC. Serial Number: 87806925 :: Trademarkia Trademarks". trademark.trademarkia.com.
  74. ^ "Billy Corgan reboots an old favorite, the National Wrestling Alliance". Chicago Tribune. from the original on March 9, 2018.
  75. ^ . Archived from the original on March 8, 2018.
  76. ^ See the individual station histories, WNYW-TV, KDKA-TV, WTTG, for details.
  77. ^ Ingram, C. (2002). DuMont Television Network Historical Web Site October 27, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.
  78. ^ . Archived from the original on January 5, 2010. Retrieved April 11, 2017.
  79. ^ Corarito, Gregory (1967). Tulsa TV History Thesis — KCEB September 14, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on December 28, 2006.

External links

  • Clarke Ingram's DuMont Television Network Historical Website February 24, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  • List of DuMont programs at the Internet Movie Database

Kinescopes

  • Kinescopes of DuMont Network programs, from the Internet Archive: The Adventures of Ellery Queen, Captain Video and His Video Rangers, Cavalcade of Stars, Life Is Worth Living, Miss U.S. Television 1950 Contest, The Morey Amsterdam Show, The Old American Barn Dance, Okay Mother, On Your Way, Public Prosecutor, Rocky King — Detective, School House, They Stand Accused and A DuMont Network identification

dumont, television, network, also, known, dumont, network, dumont, television, simply, dumont, mont, incorrectly, dumont, america, pioneer, commercial, television, networks, rivaling, distinction, being, first, overall, united, states, owned, allen, dumont, la. The DuMont Television Network also known as the DuMont Network DuMont Television simply DuMont Du Mont or incorrectly Dumont a ˈ d uː m ɒ n t was one of America s pioneer commercial television networks rivaling NBC and CBS for the distinction of being first overall in the United States It was owned by Allen B DuMont Laboratories 1 a television equipment and set manufacturer and began operation on June 28 1942 3 4 DuMont Television NetworkTypeBroadcast television networkFoundedJune 28 1942 80 years ago 1942 06 28 FounderAllen B DuMontDefunctAugust 6 1956 66 years ago 1956 08 06 FateDefunctSuccessorFox Broadcasting CompanyHeadquartersUnited StatesKey peopleThomas T Goldsmith Jr vice president director of research Mortimer Loewi financial consultant Ted Bergmann director of sales 1951 1953 general manager 1953 1955 Lawrence Phillips director of broadcasting Chris Witting director of broadcasting Tom Gallery director of sales Don McGannon general manager of O amp Os James Caddigan director of programming and production Paul Raibourn executive vice president Paramount Paramount liaison OwnerAllen B DuMont Laboratories 1 The network was hindered by the prohibitive cost of broadcasting a freeze on new television stations in 1948 by the Federal Communications Commission FCC that restricted the network s growth 5 and even the company s partner Paramount Pictures Despite several innovations in broadcasting and the creation of one of television s biggest stars of the 1950s Jackie Gleason the network never found itself on solid financial ground Forced to expand on UHF channels during an era when UHF tuning was not yet a standard feature on television sets DuMont fought an uphill battle for program clearances outside its three owned and operated stations in New York City Washington D C and Pittsburgh ultimately ending network operations on August 6 1956 DuMont s latter day obscurity caused mainly by the destruction of its extensive program archive by the 1970s has prompted TV historian David Weinstein to refer to it as the forgotten network 6 A few popular DuMont programs such as Cavalcade of Stars and Emmy Award winner Life Is Worth Living appear in television retrospectives or are mentioned briefly in books about U S television history Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Programming 1 2 1 Awards 1 2 2 Ratings 1 3 Disputes with AT amp T and Paramount 1 4 Early troubles 1 5 Decline and the end of the network 1 6 Failed revival of the DuMont brand 1 7 Present day use of the DuMont brand in broadcasting 2 Fate of the DuMont stations 3 DuMont programming library 4 Affiliates 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Citations 9 External links 9 1 KinescopesHistory EditOrigins Edit DuMont programs aired in 32 cities by 1949 The live coaxial cable feed stretched from Boston to St Louis Other stations received programs via kinescope recordings Allen B DuMont Laboratories was founded in 1931 by Allen B DuMont with only 1 000 and a laboratory in his basement He and his staff were responsible for many early technical innovations including the first consumer all electronic television receiver in 1938 Their most revolutionary contribution came when the team successfully extended the life of a cathode ray tube from 24 to 1000 hours making television sets a practical product for consumers 7 The company s television receivers soon became the standard of the industry 8 In 1942 DuMont worked with the US Army in developing radar technology during World War II This brought in 5 million for the company 9 Early sales of television receivers were hampered by the lack of regularly scheduled programming being broadcast A few months after selling his first set in 1938 DuMont opened his own New York area experimental television station W2XVT in Passaic New Jersey In 1940 the station moved to Manhattan as W2XWV on channel 4 and commenced broadcasting on June 28 1942 citation needed Unlike CBS and NBC which reduced their hours of television broadcasting during World War II DuMont continued full scale experimental and commercial broadcasts throughout the war In 1944 W2XWV received a commercial license the third in New York under the call letters WABD derived from DuMont s initials In 1945 it moved to channel 5 On May 19 1945 DuMont opened experimental W3XWT in Washington D C Paramount Pictures became a minority shareholder in DuMont Laboratories when it advanced 400 000 in 1939 for a 40 share in the company 10 11 Paramount had television interests of its own having launched experimental stations in Los Angeles in 1939 and Chicago in 1940 DuMont s association with Paramount would later come back to haunt DuMont 12 13 DUMONT First with the Finest in Television 1951 Matchbook Soon after his experimental Washington station signed on DuMont began experimental coaxial cable hookups between his laboratories in Passaic and his two stations It is said that one of those broadcasts on the hookup announced that the U S had dropped an atomic bomb on Nagasaki Japan on August 9 1945 This was later considered to be the official beginning of the DuMont Network by both Thomas T Goldsmith the network s chief engineer and DuMont s best friend 6 page needed and DuMont himself 12 Regular network service began on August 15 1946 on WABD and W3XWT In November 1946 W3XWT was granted a commercial license the capital s first as WTTG 14 named after Goldsmith These two DuMont owned and operated stations were joined by WDTV channel 3 in Pittsburgh on January 11 1949 15 Although NBC in New York was known to have station to station television links as early as 1940 with WPTZ now KYW in Philadelphia and WRGB in Schenectady New York DuMont received its station licenses before NBC resumed its previously sporadic network broadcasts after the war 16 ABC had just come into existence as a radio network in 1943 and did not enter network television until 1948 when its flagship station in New York City WJZ TV now WABC TV began broadcasting CBS also waited until 1948 to begin network operations because it was waiting for the Federal Communications Commission to approve its color television system which it eventually did not why Other companies including Mutual the Yankee Network and Paramount were interested in starting television networks but were prevented from successfully doing so by restrictive FCC regulations although the Paramount Television Network did have some limited success in network operations in the late 1940s and early 1950s citation needed Programming Edit Still from Rocky King Inside Detective one of DuMont s most popular programs Despite no history of radio programming no stable of radio stars to draw on and perennial cash shortages DuMont was an innovative and creative network 17 Without the radio revenues that supported mighty NBC and CBS DuMont programmers relied on their wits and on connections with Broadway Eventually the network provided original programs that are remembered more than 60 years later 6 page needed The network largely ignored the standard business model of 1950s TV in which one advertiser sponsored an entire show enabling it to have complete control over its content Instead DuMont sold commercials to many different advertisers freeing producers of its shows from the veto power held by sole sponsors This eventually became the standard model for US television Some commercial time was sold regionally on a co op basis while other spots were sold network wide citation needed DuMont also holds another important place in American TV history WDTV s sign on made it possible for stations in the Midwest to receive live network programming from stations on the East Coast and vice versa 18 Before then the networks relied on separate regional networks in the two time zones for live programming and the West Coast received network programming from kinescopes films shot directly from live television screens originating from the East Coast On January 11 1949 the coaxial cable linking East and Midwest known in television circles as the Golden Spike in reference to the golden spike that united the First transcontinental railroad was activated The ceremony hosted by DuMont and WDTV was carried on all four networks 19 WGN TV channel 9 in Chicago and WABD in New York were able to share programs through a live coaxial cable feed when WDTV signed on in Pittsburgh because the station completed the East Coast to Midwest chain allowing stations in both regions to air the same program simultaneously which is still the standard for US TV It was another two years before the West Coast got live programming from the East and the East able to get live programming from the West but this was the beginning of the modern era of network television 20 WDTV broadcast of We the People on April 18 1952 The guest is New York Yankees player Bill Bevens Benny Goodman and his band on the DuMont show Star Time ca 1950 The first broadcasts came from DuMont s 515 Madison Avenue headquarters It soon found additional space including a fully functioning theater in the New York branch of Wanamaker s department store at Ninth Street and Broadway 12 21 Later a lease on the Adelphi Theatre on 54th Street and the Ambassador Theatre on West 49th Street gave the network a site for variety shows In 1954 the lavish DuMont Tele Centre opened in the former Jacob Ruppert s Central Opera House at 205 East 67th Street today the site of the Fox Television Center and home of WABD successor station WNYW 22 23 DuMont was the first network to broadcast a film production for TV Talk Fast Mister produced by RKO in 1944 DuMont also aired the first TV situation comedy Mary Kay and Johnny as well as the first network televised soap opera Faraway Hill Cavalcade of Stars a variety show hosted by Jackie Gleason was the birthplace of The Honeymooners Gleason took his variety show to CBS in 1952 but filmed the Classic 39 Honeymooners episodes at DuMont s Adelphi Theater studio in 1955 56 Bishop Fulton J Sheen s devotional program Life Is Worth Living went up against Milton Berle in many cities becoming the first show to compete successfully in the ratings against Mr Television In 1952 Sheen won an Emmy Award for Most Outstanding Personality 24 The network s other notable programs include Ted Mack s The Original Amateur Hour which began on radio in the 1930s under original host Edward Bowes The Morey Amsterdam Show a comedy variety show hosted by Morey Amsterdam which started on CBS before moving to DuMont in 1949 Captain Video and His Video Rangers a hugely popular kids science fiction series 25 26 The Arthur Murray Party a dance program Down You Go a popular panel show Rocky King Inside Detective a private eye series starring Roscoe Karns The Plainclothesman a camera s eye view detective series Live coverage of boxing and professional wrestling the latter featuring matches staged by National Wrestling Alliance member Fred Kohler Enterprises in Chicago under the name Wrestling from Marigold Arena The Johns Hopkins Science Review a Peabody Award winning education program Cash and Carry the first network televised game show The Ernie Kovacs Show the first truly innovative show in what was then visual radio not television clarification needed The network was a pioneer in TV programming aimed at minority audiences and featuring minority performers at a time when the other American networks aired few television series for non whites Among DuMont s minority programs were The Gallery of Madame Liu Tsong starring Asian American film actress Anna May Wong the first US TV show to star an Asian American 27 and The Hazel Scott Show starring pianist and singer Hazel Scott the first US network TV series to be hosted by a black woman 28 29 Although DuMont s programming pre dated videotape many DuMont offerings were recorded on kinescopes These kinescopes were said to be stored in a warehouse until the 1970s 12 Actress Edie Adams the wife of comedian Ernie Kovacs both regular performers on early television testified in 1996 before a panel of the Library of Congress on the preservation of television and video Adams claimed that so little value was given to these films that the stored kinescopes were loaded into three trucks and dumped into Upper New York Bay 30 Nevertheless a number of DuMont programs survive at The Paley Center for Media in New York City the UCLA Film and Television Archive in Los Angeles in the Peabody Awards Collection at the University of Georgia and the Museum of Broadcast Communications in Chicago 31 Although nearly the entire DuMont film archive was destroyed several surviving DuMont shows have been released on DVD Much of what survived was either never properly copyrighted live telecasts because they were not set on a fixed medium were not eligible for copyright at the time although films of those telecasts could if they contained a proper copyright notice or lapsed into the public domain in the late 1970s when DuMont s successor company Metromedia declined to renew the copyrights A large number of episodes of Life Is Worth Living have been saved and they are now aired weekly on Catholic oriented cable network the Eternal Word Television Network which also makes a collection of them available on DVD in the biographical information about Fulton J Sheen added to the end of many episodes a still image of Bishop Sheen looking into a DuMont Television camera can be seen Several companies that distribute DVDs over the Internet have released a small number of episodes of Cavalcade of Stars and The Morey Amsterdam Show Two more DuMont programs Captain Video and His Video Rangers and Rocky King Inside Detective have had a small number of surviving episodes released commercially by at least one major distributor of public domain programming Because so few episodes remain of most DuMont series they are seldom rerun even though there is no licensing cost to do so citation needed Awards Edit DuMont programs were by necessity low budget affairs and the network received relatively few awards from the TV industry Most awards during the 1950s went to NBC and CBS who were able to out spend other companies and draw on their extensive history of radio broadcasting in the relatively new television medium During the 1952 53 TV season Bishop Fulton J Sheen host of Life Is Worth Living won an Emmy Award for Most Outstanding Personality Sheen beat out CBS s Arthur Godfrey Edward R Murrow and Lucille Ball who were nominated for the same award Sheen was also nominated for but did not win Public Service Emmys in 1952 1953 and 1954 32 DuMont received an Emmy nomination for Down You Go a popular game show during the 1952 53 television season in the category Best Audience Participation Quiz or Panel Program The network was nominated twice for its coverage of professional football during the 1953 54 and 1954 55 television seasons 33 The Johns Hopkins Science Review a DuMont public affairs program was awarded a Peabody Award in 1952 in the Education category Sheen s Emmy and the Science Review Peabody were the only national awards the DuMont Network received 34 Though DuMont series and performers continued to win local TV awards by the mid 1950s the DuMont network no longer had a national presence citation needed Ratings Edit Videodex 62 City RatingsFirst week of August 1950Rank Series Network of cities TV homes1 Toast of the Town CBS 34 37 22 Stop the Music ABC 50 28 43 Kraft TV Theater NBC 34 27 54 Ford Star Revue NBC 45 26 95 The Garry Moore Show CBS 19 26 46 The Big Story NBC 32 25 67 The Original Amateur Hour NBC 54 25 38 Break the Bank NBC 42 24 29 The Lone Ranger ABC 39 23 910 Your Hit Parade NBC 18 23 711 Cavalcade of Stars DuMont 20 22 212 Mama CBS 16 22 013 Wrestling DuMont 15 21 414 Beat the Clock CBS 33 20 715 Masterpiece Playhouse NBC 32 19 2The earliest measurements of TV audiences were performed by the C E Hooper company of New York DuMont performed well in the Hooper ratings in fact DuMont s talent program The Original Amateur Hour was the most popular series of the 1947 48 season 35 Two seasons later Variety ranked DuMont s popular variety series Cavalcade of Stars as the tenth most popular series 36 In February 1950 Hooper s competitor A C Nielsen bought out the Hooper ratings system DuMont did not fare well with the change none of its shows appeared on Nielsen s annual top 20 lists of the most popular series 36 One of the DuMont Network s biggest hits of the 1950s Life is Worth Living did receive Nielsen ratings of up to 11 1 meaning that they attracted more than 10 million viewers Sheen s one man program in which he discussed philosophy psychology and other fields of thought from a Christian perspective was the most widely viewed religious series in the history of television 169 local television stations aired Life and for three years the program competed successfully against NBC s popular The Milton Berle Show The ABC and CBS programs that aired in the same timeslot were canceled 32 Life is Worth Living was not the only DuMont program to achieve double digit ratings In 1952 Time magazine reported that popular DuMont game show Down You Go had attracted an audience estimated at 16 million viewers 37 Similarly DuMont s summer 1954 replacement series The Goldbergs achieved audiences estimated at 10 million 38 page needed Still these series were only moderately popular compared to NBC s and CBS s highest rated programs Nielsen was not the only company to report TV ratings Companies such as Trendex Videodex and Arbitron had also measured TV viewership The chart in this section comes from Videodex s August 1950 ratings breakdown as reported in Billboard magazine 39 Disputes with AT amp T and Paramount Edit DuMont struggled to get its programs aired in many parts of the country in part due to technical limitations of network lines maintained by telephone company AT amp T Corporation During the 1940s and 1950s television signals were sent between stations via coaxial cable and microwave links that were owned by AT amp T The service provider did not have enough circuits to provide signal relay service from the four networks to all of their affiliates at the same time so AT amp T allocated times when each network could offer live programs to its affiliates In 1950 AT amp T allotted NBC and CBS each over 100 hours of live prime time network service but gave ABC 53 hours and DuMont 37 AT amp T also required each television network to lease both radio and television lines DuMont was the only television network without a radio network so it was the only network forced to pay for a service it did not use DuMont protested AT amp T s actions with the Federal Communications Commission and eventually reached a compromise 40 DuMont s biggest corporate hurdle may have been with the company s own partner Paramount Relations between the two companies were strained as early as 1939 when Paramount opened experimental television stations in Los Angeles and Chicago without DuMont s involvement Dr DuMont claimed that the original 1937 acquisition proposal required Paramount to expand its television interests through DuMont Paramount representative Paul Raibourn who also was a member of DuMont s board of directors denied that any such restriction had ever been discussed but Dr DuMont was vindicated by a 1953 examination of the original draft document 41 DuMont aspired to grow beyond its three stations applying for new television station licenses in Cincinnati and Cleveland in 1947 42 This would give the network five owned and operated stations O amp Os the maximum allowed by the FCC at the time However DuMont was hampered by Paramount s two stations KTLA channel 5 in Los Angeles and WBKB channel 4 now WBBM TV on channel 2 in Chicago the descendants of the two experimental stations that rankled DuMont in 1940 Although these stations did not carry DuMont programming with the exception of KTLA for one year from 1947 to 1948 and in fact competed against DuMont s affiliates in those cities the FCC ruled that Paramount essentially controlled DuMont which effectively placed the network at the five station cap 43 Paramount s exertion of influence over the network s management and the power of its voting stock led the FCC to its conclusion 44 Thus DuMont was unable to open additional stations as long as Paramount owned stations or owned a portion of DuMont Paramount refused to sell In 1949 Paramount Pictures launched the Paramount Television Network a service that provided local television stations with filmed television programs Paramount s network undercut the company that it had invested in 40 Paramount did not share its stars big budgets or filmed programs with DuMont the company had stopped financially supporting DuMont in 1941 40 Although Paramount executives indicated they would produce programs for DuMont the studio never supplied the network with programs or technical assistance 45 The acrimonious relationship between Paramount and DuMont climaxed during the 1953 FCC hearings regarding the ABC United Paramount Theaters merger when Paul Raibourn an executive at Paramount publicly derided the quality of DuMont television sets in court testimony 46 Early troubles Edit The DuMont Building at 515 Madison Avenue in New York with the original WABD broadcast tower still standing 2008 DuMont began with one basic disadvantage unlike NBC CBS and ABC it did not have a radio network from which to draw big name talent affiliate loyalty or radio profits to underwrite television operations until the television medium itself became profitable 47 Most early television licenses were granted to established radio broadcasters and many longtime relationships with radio networks carried over to the new medium As CBS and NBC and to a lesser extent ABC gained their footing they began to offer programming that drew on their radio backgrounds bringing over the most popular radio stars Early television station owners when deciding which network would receive their main affiliation were more likely to choose CBS s roster of Lucille Ball Jack Benny and Ed Sullivan or NBC s lineup of Milton Berle and Sid Caesar over DuMont which offered a then unknown Jackie Gleason and Bishop Fulton J Sheen 35 In smaller markets with a limited number of stations DuMont and ABC were often relegated to secondary status so their programs got clearance only if the primary network was off the air or delayed via kinescope recording teletranscriptions in DuMont parlance citation needed Adding to DuMont s troubles was the FCC s 1948 freeze on television license applications 35 This was done to sort out the thousands of applications that had come streaming in but also to rethink the allocation and technical standards laid down prior to World War II It became clear soon after the war that 12 channels channel 1 had been removed from television broadcasting use because storms and other types of interference could severely affect the quality of its signals were not nearly enough for national television service What was to be a six month freeze lasted until 1952 when the FCC opened the UHF spectrum The FCC however did not require television manufacturers to include UHF capability 13 In order to see UHF stations most people had to buy expensive converters Even then the picture quality was marginal at best see also UHF television broadcasting UHF reception issues 48 Tied to this was a decision to restrict VHF allocations in medium and smaller sized markets Meanwhile television sets would not be required to have all channel tuning until 1964 with the passage of the All Channel Receiver Act 49 Forced to rely on UHF to expand DuMont saw one station after another go dark due to dismal ratings 35 It bought small distressed UHF station KCTY channel 25 in Kansas City Missouri in 1954 but ran it for just three months before shutting it down at a considerable loss 50 after attempting to compete with three established VHF stations 51 The FCC s Hyman Goldin said in 1960 If there had been four VHF outlets in the top markets there s no question DuMont would have lived and would have eventually turned the corner in terms of profitability 52 page needed Decline and the end of the network Edit During the early years of television there was some measure of cooperation among the four major U S television networks However as television grew into a profitable business an intense rivalry developed between the networks just as it had in radio NBC and CBS competed fiercely for viewers and advertising dollars a contest neither underfunded DuMont nor ABC could hope to win According to author Dennis Mazzocco NBC tried to make an arrangement with ABC and CBS to destroy the DuMont network The plan was for NBC and CBS to exclusively offer ABC their most popular series after they had aired on the bigger networks ABC would become a network of re runs but DuMont would be shut out ABC president Leonard Goldenson rejected NBC executive David Sarnoff s proposal but did not report it to the Justice Department 53 DuMont survived the early 1950s only because of WDTV in Pittsburgh the lone commercial VHF station in what was then the sixth largest market in the country after New York City Chicago Los Angeles Philadelphia and Washington WDTV s only competition came from UHF stations WENS TV frequency now occupied by WINP TV amp WKJF TV now WPGH TV and distant stations from Johnstown Pennsylvania Youngstown Ohio and Wheeling West Virginia 54 There were also external factors the FCC s freeze on licenses and intense competition for the remaining VHF licenses in Pittsburgh including WENS TV appealing the FCC s granting of the channel 11 license that was eventually affirmed for WIIC TV now WPXI the battle between the Hearst Corporation then owners of WCAE and KQV over the channel 4 license that would eventually become WTAE TV and perhaps the most impactful one to DuMont s future locally based Westinghouse Electric Corporation owners of radio pioneer KDKA battling with local interest groups for the channel 13 license that was intended to be a non commercial license The FCC also denied CBS s request to be granted the channel 9 allocation in nearby Steubenville Ohio and move it to Pittsburgh so that Steubenville had a chance to have its own television station As a result no other commercial VHF station signed on in Pittsburgh until WIIC TV in 1957 giving WDTV a de facto monopoly on television in the area 55 Since WDTV carried secondary affiliations with the other three networks DuMont used this as a bargaining chip to get its programs cleared in other large markets 54 56 DUMONT TELEVISION art on 1951 Matchbook Despite its severe financial straits by 1953 DuMont appeared to be on its way to establishing itself as the third national network 28 57 This was the case despite a smaller footprint than ABC While DuMont programs aired live on 16 stations the network could count on only seven primary stations its three owned and operated stations O amp Os plus WGN TV in Chicago KTTV channel 11 in Los Angeles KFEL TV channel 2 now KWGN TV in Denver and WTVN TV channel 6 now WSYX in Columbus Ohio In contrast by 1953 ABC had a full complement of five O amp Os augmented by nine primary affiliates 58 ABC also had a radio network it was descended from NBC s Blue Network from which to draw talent affiliate loyalty and generate income to subsidize television operations 35 However ABC had only 14 primary stations while CBS and NBC had over 40 each By 1951 ABC was badly overextended and on the verge of bankruptcy 59 That year the company announced a merger with United Paramount Theaters UPT the former theater division of Paramount Pictures which was spun off as a result of the United States v Paramount Pictures Inc antitrust decision but it was not until 1953 that the FCC approved the merger citation needed By this time DuMont had begun to differentiate itself from NBC and CBS It allowed its advertisers to choose the locations where their advertising ran potentially saving them millions of dollars By contrast ABC followed NBC and CBS practice of forcing advertisers to purchase a large must buy list of stations even though it was only a fourth the size of NBC and CBS 60 ABC s fortunes were dramatically altered in February 1953 when the FCC cleared the way for UPT to buy the network The merger provided ABC with a badly needed cash infusion giving it the resources to mount top shelf programming and to provide a national television service on a scale approaching that of CBS and NBC 61 Through UPT president Leonard Goldenson ABC also gained ties with the Hollywood studios that more than matched those DuMont s producers had with Broadway citation needed Realizing that ABC had more resources than they could even begin to match DuMont officials were receptive to a merger offer from ABC Goldenson quickly brokered a deal with Ted Bergmann DuMont s managing director under which the merged network would have been called ABC DuMont until at least 1958 and would have honored all of DuMont s network commitments In return DuMont would get 5 million in cash guaranteed advertising time for DuMont sets and a secure future for its staff 54 A merged ABC DuMont would have been a colossus rivaling CBS and NBC as it would have owned stations in five of the six largest U S television markets excluding only Philadelphia as well as ABC s radio network It also would have inherited DuMont s de facto monopoly in Pittsburgh and would have been one of two networks to have full ownership of a station in the nation s capital the other being NBC However it would have had to sell a New York station either DuMont s WABD or ABC flagship WJZ TV channel 7 now WABC TV probably the former It also would have had to sell two other stations most likely ABC s two smallest O amp Os WXYZ TV in Detroit and KGO TV in San Francisco both broadcasting on channel 7 to get under the FCC s limit of five stations per owner citation needed However Paramount vetoed the plan almost out of hand due to antitrust concerns 8 A few months earlier the FCC had ruled that Paramount controlled DuMont and there were still some questions about whether UPT had really separated from Paramount citation needed Table showing primary station affiliation for each of the four U S commercial television networks in 1954 DuMont had primary affiliation agreements with 39 stations in the largest markets but most of these stations were poorly watched UHF stations 62 With no other way to readily obtain cash DuMont sold WDTV to Westinghouse for 9 75 million in late 1954 after Westinghouse decided to give public backing to the public interest groups for the channel 13 allocation in Pittsburgh allowing the station to launch that spring as educational WQED 54 While this gave DuMont a short term cash infusion it eliminated the leverage the network had to get program clearances in other markets Without its de facto monopoly in Pittsburgh the company s advertising revenue shrank to less than half that of 1953 By February 1955 DuMont realized it could not continue as a television network 63 The decision was made to shut down network operations and operate WABD and WTTG as independent stations On April 1 1955 most of DuMont s entertainment programs were dropped Bishop Sheen aired his last program on DuMont on April 26 and later moved to ABC 29 By May just eight programs were left on the network with only inexpensive shows and sporting events keeping the remains of the network going through the summer The network also largely abandoned the use of the intercity network coaxial cable on which it had spent 3 million in 1954 to transmit shows that mostly lacked station clearance 64 The company only retained network links for live sports programming and utilizing the company s Electronicam process to produce studio based programming Ironically Electronicam is best remembered for being used by Jackie Gleason s producers for the 39 half hour episodes of The Honeymooners that aired on CBS during the 1955 56 television season citation needed In August 1955 Paramount with the help of other stockholders seized full control of DuMont Laboratories The last non sports program on DuMont the game show What s the Story aired on September 23 1955 65 After that DuMont s network feed was used only for occasional sporting events The last broadcast on what was left of the DuMont Television Network a boxing match aired on August 6 1956 66 The date has also been reported as September 1955 67 68 November 1957 69 or August 4 1958 70 with the last broadcast of Monday Night Fights According to one source the final program aired on only five stations nationwide 70 It appears that the boxing show was syndicated to a few other east coast stations until 1958 but likely not as a production of DuMont or its successor company Likewise the remains of DuMont were used to syndicate a high school football Thanksgiving game in 1957 that telecast the only DuMont broadcast to have been sent in color was a personal project of Allen DuMont himself whose hometown team in Montclair New Jersey was contending in the game for a state championship 69 DuMont spun off WABD and WTTG as the DuMont Broadcasting Corporation The name was later changed to Metropolitan Broadcasting Company to distance the company from what was seen as a complete failure 71 In 1958 John Kluge bought Paramount s shares for 4 million 12 and in 1960 renamed the company Metromedia WABD became WNEW TV and later WNYW WTTG still broadcasts under its original call letters as a Fox affiliate For 50 years DuMont was the only major broadcast television network to cease operations 72 until CBS Corporation and Time Warner merged two other struggling networks UPN and The WB in September 2006 to create The CW Television Network whose schedule was originally composed largely of programs from both of its predecessor networks Failed revival of the DuMont brand Edit On February 22 2018 Lightning One Inc owned by Smashing Pumpkins lead singer Billy Corgan filed a U S trademark application for The Dumont Network 73 The application by Lightning One was very likely associated with its ownership of the National Wrestling Alliance trademark the moniker of one of the oldest wrestling promotions in the United States 74 75 However according to the registration filing the trademark for The Dumont Network as owned by Lightning One was allowed to lapse on July 2 2020 rendering the trademark dead Present day use of the DuMont brand in broadcasting Edit In late 2016 a small local terrestrial television programming service was established in Houston Texas called The NuDu or The New Dumont Television Network based on the structure of the original DuMont The channel s programming is available online via livestream and through the third digital subchannel of KBPX LD Fate of the DuMont stations EditAll three DuMont owned stations are still operating and are owned and operated stations of their respective networks just as when they were part of DuMont Of the three only Washington s WTTG still has its original call letters 76 WTTG and New York s WABD later WNEW TV and now WNYW survived as Metromedia owned independents until 1986 when they were purchased by the News Corporation to form the nucleus of the new Fox television network Clarke Ingram who maintained a DuMont memorial site has suggested that Fox can be considered a revival or at least a linear descendant of DuMont 77 Westinghouse changed WDTV s call letters to KDKA TV after the pioneering radio station of the same name and switched its primary affiliation to CBS immediately after the sale Westinghouse s acquisition of CBS in 1995 made KDKA TV a CBS owned and operated station DuMont programming library EditDuMont produced more than 20 000 television episodes from 1946 1956 Because they were created prior to the launch of Ampex s electronic videotape recorder in late 1956 they were initially broadcast live in black and white then recorded on film kinescope for West Coast rebroadcasts and reruns By the early 1970s their vast library of 35mm and 16mm kinescopes eventually wound up in the hands of a successor network who reportedly disposed of them in New York City s East River to make room for more recent videotapes in a warehouse 30 Although films submerged for decades have been successfully recovered see The Carpet from Bagdad as an example there have been no salvage diving efforts to locate or recover the DuMont archive If it survived in that environment most of the films have likely been damaged Other kinescopes were put through a silver reclaiming process because of the microscopic amounts of silver that made up the emulsion of black and white film during this time 78 It is estimated that only about 350 complete DuMont television shows survive today the most famous being virtually all of Jackie Gleason s Honeymooners comedy sketches Most of the existing episodes are believed to have come from the personal archives of DuMont s hosts such as Gleason and Dennis James Affiliates EditMain article List of former DuMont Television Network affiliates A DuMont Telecruiser circa 1953 This mobile TV unit Model B Serial Number 101 was built by DuMont Labs for KBTV in Dallas It was in use until the early 1970s At its peak in 1954 DuMont was affiliated with around 200 television stations 79 In those days television stations were free to cherry pick which programs they would air and many stations affiliated with multiple networks depending mainly on the number of commercial television stations available in a market at a given time markets where only one commercial station was available carried programming from all four major networks Many of DuMont s affiliates carried very little DuMont programming choosing to air one or two more popular programs such as Life Is Worth Living and or sports programming on the weekends Few stations carried the full DuMont program lineup For example the promising WKLO TV UHF Ch 21 in the growing Louisville Kentucky Indiana market had to split its time between DuMont and ABC TV The station lasted only seven months September 1953 April 1954 on the air citation needed In its later years DuMont was carried mostly on poorly watched UHF channels or had only secondary affiliations on VHF stations DuMont ended most operations on April 1 1955 but honored network commitments until August 1956 6 page needed See also Edit Television portal United States portal 1950s portal Companies portalElectronicam Fourth television network Golden Age of Television List of DuMont programs List of surviving DuMont Television Network broadcasts BBC One ABS CBN 1939 Temporary shutdown of BBC Television Service temporary closure of the BBC Television Service in the United Kingdom from 1939 until 1946 during World War II 1972 Martial law under Ferdinand Marcos era lasted from 1972 until 1981 that forced the closure of ABS CBN for the first time Rede Tupi Banahaw Broadcasting Corporation RCTV 2007 Venezuelan RCTV protests similar actions by the government to close a private broadcast network in the Venezuela 51 years later Seven TV ATV ABS CBN franchise renewal controversy similar actions by the government to close a private broadcast network in the Philippines 64 years later Death on the Rock documentary broadcast about Operation Flavius by Thames Television that led to the loss of their ITV franchise due to an alleged political motivations against airing it List of former DuMont Television Network affiliates NFL on DuMont NTA Film Network Passaic Birthplace of Television and the DuMont Story 1951 TV special on history of DuMont Lost television broadcastNotes Edit The name of the network has been spelled both DuMont and Du Mont Dumont and DUMONT are generally considered incorrect Weinstein 2004 uses DuMont for the name of the network Bergmann 2002 prefers Du Mont 2 For the purposes of this article the Weinstein spelling is used The name was pronounced on air to sound like DOO mont with an accent on the Du References EditBergmann Ted Skutch Ira 2002 The DuMont Television Network What Happened Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press p 146 ISBN 978 0 8108 4270 0 Garvin Glenn March 2005 Who Killed Captain Video How the FCC strangled a TV pioneer Reason Online Retrieved January 5 2007 dead link Hess Gary Newton 1979 An Historical Study of the DuMont Television Network New York Ayer Publishers ISBN 978 0 405 11758 9 Ingram C 2002 DuMont Television Network Historical Web Site Archived from the original on January 22 2009 Retrieved December 24 2008 Merlin Jan May 11 2006 Space Hero Files Captain Video Archived from the original on January 10 2007 Retrieved December 28 2006 Weinstein David 2004 The Forgotten Network DuMont and the Birth of American Television Philadelphia Temple University Press pp 228 ISBN 978 1 59213 245 4 Citations Edit a b Allen B DuMont American engineer and inventor Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on July 3 2019 Retrieved July 30 2019 Weinstein David 2004 The Forgotten Network DuMont and the Birth of American Television Philadelphia Temple University Press pp vi ISBN 978 1 59213 499 1 Weinstein David 2004 The Forgotten Network DuMont and the Birth of American Television p 16 Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 1 59213 499 8 A U S Television Chronology 1875 1970 jeff560 tripod com Archived from the original on June 13 2011 Retrieved June 20 2019 Ponce de Leon Charles L 2015 That s the Way It Is A History of Television News in America press uchicago edua Beginnings Archived from the original on July 28 2020 Retrieved July 26 2020 a b c d Weinstein D The Forgotten Network DuMont and the Birth of American Television PDF Archived October 12 2006 at the Wayback Machine Temple University Press 2004 Retrieved on January 6 2007 Hart Hugh Jan 29 1901 DuMont Will Make TV Work WIRED Archived from the original on December 28 2017 Retrieved December 27 2017 a b Dean L DuMont TV KTTV TV11 Archived December 31 2006 at the Wayback Machine Larry Dean s R VCR Television Production website Retrieved December 28 2006 Bergmann Ted Skutch Ira 2002 The Du Mont Television Network What Happened A significant episode in the history of broadcasting Lanham Md Scarecrow Press Castleman H amp Podrazik W 1982 Watching TV Four Decades of American Television p 11 New York McGraw Hill Auter P amp Boyd D DuMont The Original Fourth Television Network The Journal of Popular Culture Vol 29 Issue 3 Page 63 Winter 1995 Retrieved on December 28 2006 a b c d e Spadoni M June 2003 DuMont America s First Fourth Network Archive at the Wayback Machine archived February 11 2007 Television Heaven Retrieved on September 6 2019 a b McDowell W Remembering the DuMont Network A Case Study Approach Archived September 6 2006 at the Wayback Machine College of Mass Communication and Media Arts Southern Illinois University Retrieved on December 28 2006 Brennan Patricia May 14 1995 WTTG Marks 50 Years The Washington Post Retrieved October 25 2020 Network Television to Reach City The Pittsburgh Press January 11 1949 p 29 Retrieved October 26 2020 Bergmann Ted Skutch Ira 2002 The DuMont Television Network What Happened pp 16 18 Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 4270 X Auter P 2005 DuMont Allen B Archived September 23 2006 at the Wayback Machine The Museum of Broadcast Communications Retrieved on December 28 2006 Downs S November 3 1996 The Golden Age of Pittsburgh Television Archived March 11 2007 at the Wayback Machine Greensburg Tribune Review Retrieved on December 28 2006 Hundt B July 30 2006 Remember When First tube dead link Observer Reporter Publishing Retrieved on January 7 2007 History of the AT amp T Network Milestones in AT amp T Network History Archived January 7 2007 at the Wayback Machine AT amp T 2006 Retrieved on December 28 2006 Inc Nielsen Business Media August 15 1953 Billboard New York City Nielsen Business Media Inc p 4 Retrieved March 5 2020 DU M SHUTS DOWN STORE OPERATION NEW YORK Aug 8 Du Mont Television Network is closing down its studios and master control unit at Wanamaker s department store next Friday 14 Master control will begin operating at the Du Mont s Tele Center the next day Among the shows that had been originating at Wanamaker s was Captain Video a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help WYNW TV Station Profile FCC Public Inspection Files Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original on July 11 2020 Retrieved February 19 2020 Inc Nielsen Business Media June 19 1954 Billboard New York City Nielsen Business Media Inc p 14 Du M Tele Center To Be Officially Opened on Monday NEW YORK June 12 1954 The Boys from Boise the first original televised musical was aired on the network in 1944 Du Mont on Monday will hold the official tape cutting ceremonies for its Tele Center which has actually been in use for over a year Speakers at the event will be Dr Allen Du Mont and Mayor Robert Wagner It was originally the Central Opera House Du Mont invested 5 000 000 equivalent to about 50 500 000 in 2021 to re build it for TV use a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help McNeil Alex 1996 Total Television 4th ed p 1040 New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 024916 8 Merlin J Roaring Rockets The Space Hero Files Archived January 13 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on December 28 2006 Weinstein D 2004 The Forgotten Network DuMont and the Birth of American Television p 69 Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 1 59213 499 8 Film reveals real life struggles of an onscreen Dragon Lady Archived March 27 2012 at the Wayback Machine UCLA Today Online Archived September 3 2008 at the Wayback Machine January 3 2008 Retrieved May 27 2008 a b Brooks Tim amp Marsh Earle 1964 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows 3rd ed New York Ballantine p xiv ISBN 0 345 31864 1 a b McNeil Alex 1996 Total Television 4th ed p 479 New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 024916 8 a b Adams Edie March 1996 Television Video Preservation Study Los Angeles Public Hearing National Film Preservation Board Library of Congress Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved September 24 2007 Collections Early television Archived January 3 2011 at the Wayback Machine The UCLA Film and Television Archive Retrieved on December 28 2006 a b Weinstein D 2004 The Forgotten Network DuMont and the Birth of American Television p 156 157 Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 1 59213 499 8 Advanced Primetime Awards Search Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences 2005 Archived from the original on April 3 2009 Retrieved September 24 2007 McNeil Alex 1996 Total Television 4th ed 1121 New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 024916 8 a b c d e Jajkowski S 2001 Chicago Television And Then There Was DuMont Archived October 5 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on December 28 2006 a b McNeil Alex 1996 Total Television 4th ed 1143 1145 New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 024916 8 The Adenoidal Moderator Time April 28 1952 Archived from the original on January 21 2009 Retrieved September 30 2007 Smith Glenn D Jr 2007 Something on My Own Gertrude Berg and American Broadcasting 1929 1956 Syracuse N Y Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 0887 5 Videodex 62 Market Survey Billboard Vol 62 no 39 September 30 1950 p 6 a b c Auter P J Boyd D A 1995 DuMont The Original Fourth Television Network PDF Journal of Popular Culture 29 3 63 83 doi 10 1111 j 0022 3840 1995 00063 x Archived PDF from the original on September 4 2011 Retrieved June 28 2009 Hess Gary Newton 1979 An Historical Study of the DuMont Television Network p 91 New York Arno Press ISBN 0 405 11758 2 Hess Gary Newton 1979 An Historical Study of the DuMont Television Network pp 52 53 New York Arno Press ISBN 0 405 11758 2 IEEE History Center Thomas Goldsmith Abstract Archived December 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine May 14 1973 IEEE History Center Retrieved on January 6 2007 Weinstein David 2004 The Forgotten Network DuMont and the Birth of American Television pp 24 25 Philadelphia Temple University White Timothy R 1992 Hollywood s Attempt to Appropriate Television The Case of Paramount Pictures Ann Arbor MI UMI pp 117 118 White Timothy R 1992 Hollywood on Re Trial The American Broadcasting United Paramount Merger Hearing Archived October 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine Cinema Journal Vol 31 No 3 Spring 1992 pp 19 36 DUMONT ALLEN B The Museum of Broadcast Communications Archived September 23 2006 at the Wayback Machine Ingram Clarke Channel Six UHF Archived August 4 2009 at the Wayback Machine DuMont Television Network Historical Web Site Accessed January 21 2010 The FCC and the All Channel Receiver Bill of 1962 LAWRENCE D LONGLEY JOURNAL OF BROADCASTING Vol XLII NO 3 Summer 1969 Clarke Ingram s historical account at https uhfhistory com articles kcty html has this as exactly two months DuMont closed on the acquisition at the start of 1 Jan 1954 and took the station dark at the end of 28 Feb 1954 It lost DuMont 250 000 and lost Empire Coil the original proprietor 750 000 It was the third of a long list of UHF pioneers to fail Bergmann Ted Skutch Ira 2002 The DuMont Television Network What Happened p 66 Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press 2002 ISBN 0 8108 4270 X Hess Gary Newton 1979 A Historical Study of the DuMont Television Network New York Ayer Publishers ISBN 0 405 11758 2 Mazzocco Dennis 1999 Networks of Power Corporate TV s Threat to Democracy South End Press pp 33 ISBN 978 0 89608 472 8 a b c d Bergmann Ted Skutch Ira 2002 The DuMont Television Network What Happened pp 79 83 Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press 2002 ISBN 0 8108 4270 X O Brien E July 1 2003 Pittsburgh Area Radio and TV Archived December 11 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on December 28 2006 Castleman H amp Podrazik W 1982 Watching TV Four Decades of American Television p 39 New York McGraw Hill Grace R October 3 2002 Reminiscing Channel 2 Your Du Mont Station Archived August 25 2007 at the Wayback Machine Metropolitan News Enterprise Online Retrieved on December 28 2006 Jajkowski S 2005 Chicago Television My Afternoon With Red Archived November 5 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on January 6 2007 Goldenson Leonard H and Wolf Marvin J 1991 Beating the Odds Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 0 684 19055 9 pp 114 115 Bergmann Ted Skutch Ira 2002 The DuMont Television Network What Happened pp 69 70 Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press 2002 ISBN 0 8108 4270 X Jajkowski S 2005 Flashback The 50th Anniversary of ABC Archived April 11 2005 at the Wayback Machine Museum of Broadcast Communications Retrieved on December 28 2006 Bergmann Ted Skutch Ira 2002 The DuMont Television Network What Happened Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press pp 116 126 ISBN 0 8108 4270 X Bergmann Ted Skutch Ira 2002 The DuMont Television Network What Happened pp 82 83 Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press 2002 ISBN 0 8108 4270 X Bergmann Ted Skutch Ira 2002 The DuMont Television Network What Happened pp 77 78 Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press 2002 ISBN 0 8108 4270 X McNeil Alex 1996 Total Television 4th ed p 907 New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 024916 8 Brooks Tim Marsh Earle 2007 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network Cable and TV Shows 1946 Present 9 ed New York Ballantine p 174 ISBN 978 0 345 49773 4 NewspaperArchive aspx historic newspaper articles including obituaries births marriages divorces and arrests www newspaperarchive com NewspaperArchive aspx historic newspaper articles including obituaries births marriages divorces and arrests www newspaperarchive com a b Tober Steve November 20 2017 Thanksgiving football games a disappearing tradition Archived December 1 2017 at the Wayback Machine NorthJersey com Retrieved November 21 2017 The 57 Thanksgiving game at Foley Field was televised live and in color both rarities in those early TV days on Channel 5 via the old Dumont Television Network which was under the leadership of Dr Dumont who by the way was a Montclair resident Also the late great Chris Schenkel did the play by play a b Castleman Harry Podrazik Walter J 1982 Watching TV Four Decades of American Television New York McGraw Hill p 121 ISBN 978 0 07 010269 9 August 4 1958 Monday Night Fights the final show of the old Dumont network dies At the end it is carried on only five stations nationwide Bergmann Ted Skutch Ira 2002 The DuMont Television Network What Happened p 85 Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press 2002 ISBN 0 8108 4270 X Ryan J January 24 2006 Exit WB UPN Enter the CW Archived October 1 2007 at the Wayback Machine E Online News Retrieved on January 6 2007 THE DUMONT NETWORK Trademark of LIGHTNING ONE INC Serial Number 87806925 Trademarkia Trademarks trademark trademarkia com Billy Corgan reboots an old favorite the National Wrestling Alliance Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on March 9 2018 TESS NWA Archived from the original on March 8 2018 See the individual station histories WNYW TV KDKA TV WTTG for details Ingram C 2002 DuMont Television Network Historical Web Site Archived October 27 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on December 28 2006 REMINISCING Day in Court Winchell Mahoney Time DuMont Shows Not to Be Seen Again ROGER M GRACE Metropolitan News Enterprise May 29 2003 Archived from the original on January 5 2010 Retrieved April 11 2017 Corarito Gregory 1967 Tulsa TV History Thesis KCEB Archived September 14 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on December 28 2006 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to DuMont Television Network Clarke Ingram s DuMont Television Network Historical Website Archived February 24 2021 at the Wayback Machine The Golden Telecruiser Historic Pictures List of DuMont programs at the Internet Movie DatabaseKinescopes Edit Kinescopes of DuMont Network programs from the Internet Archive The Adventures of Ellery Queen Captain Video and His Video Rangers Cavalcade of Stars Life Is Worth Living Miss U S Television 1950 Contest The Morey Amsterdam Show The Old American Barn Dance Okay Mother On Your Way Public Prosecutor Rocky King Detective School House They Stand Accused and A DuMont Network identification Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title DuMont Television Network amp oldid 1132235174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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