TV Hill

WBAL, WJZ, WMAR, and the Tallest Broadcast Tower of 1958

For over sixty years, tall broadcasting towers have stood high above the old homes in Baltimore鈥檚 Woodberry neighborhood. The two tallest towers now standing on聽Television Hill beam out the signals of four television stations and three radio stations across the city and surrounding area. A third smaller tower relays municipal police, fire and rescue personnel communications.

Of course, this area wasn鈥檛 always called TV Hill. It may be hard to believe but there wasn鈥檛 always television. Before test patterns and Saturday morning cartoons, the area was known as Malden Hill. In the summer of 1948, only twenty thousand or so Baltimore families (and only one in ten households in the United States) owned televisions. The first two stations in the city鈥 WMAR-TV and WBAL-TV鈥攐ffered fuzzy reception at best for most local viewers.

By the end of 1948, however, WAAM鈥揟V (Channel 13),聽owned by Baltimore businessmen and Brothers Ben and Herman Cohen, had started construction on a new station and new transmission tower. The station picked Malden Hill, 334 feet above the surrounding landscape, to give their signal a better chance of reaching Baltimore televisions. With this advantage, the station's new 530-foot tower stood 864 feet above sea level and聽WAAM鈥揟V had the first television studio in Baltimore designed specifically for this still new technology. On November 1, 1948, the station went on the air and the next day stayed on the air for twenty-three hours straight covering incumbent Democrat Harry S. Truman surprise win over Republican Thomas E. Dewey in the 1948 presidential election.

Flash forward nine years and WAAM-TV had changed both call letters and ownership. In May 1957, the station sold to Westinghouse Broadcasting Company and was renamed WJZ-TV. The competing WBAL-TV鈥檚 studios and broadcast tower had already relocated to Malden Hill several years earlier. Still, despite being home to two of Baltimore鈥檚 three television stations, only a few folks called it TV Hill until 1958 when a new tower began to rise.

TV reception could be a bit tricky in those pre-cable and satellite days of rooftop antennas or set top 鈥渞abbit ears.鈥 WJZ and WBAL chose the elevated ground in Woodberry for their transmitter towers as a partial solution, but broadcast engineers knew that even higher towers could improve both reception and station coverage. Though air traffic concerns imposed an upper limti on how high a station could build, both stations had room to grow.

But neither WJZ nor WBAL could afford the expense of a new tower on their own, especially when the stations sought to go as high as the law allowed. The solution was a partnership between the neighboring stations to build one gigantic tower topped with two separate transmitter masts. When Baltimore鈥檚 oldest TV station, WMAR, heard of this plan, station managers decided they wanted in. WMAR worried that if viewers could get two stations by pointing their antennas in one direction they wouldn鈥檛 bother making adjustments to tune in to WMAR鈥攅specially if their broadcast looked worse than the competition coming from the new tower.

Baltimore鈥檚 three TV stations struck a unique deal to share one gigantic tower, a tower topped with three separate transmitter masts, a first at the time. The stations would all have improved coverage and picture quality at a cost they couldn鈥檛 have borne alone. Baltimore area television viewers could take a 鈥渟et it and forget it鈥 approach to their antennas.

Construction began in October of 1958 and continued through the spring. In 1997, Fred Rasmussen recalled on the history of the tower for the Baltimore Sun describing the 500 tons of nickel-chrome alloy steel used to build a structure covered with 2 1/2 tons of paint. The tower was stabilized by guy-wires made from three miles of steel wire rope anchored by 33-foot square concrete slabs buried 16 feet deep. Together the tower base and cable anchors required a remarkable 2,250 tons of concrete. Finally, in a ceremony on August 9, 1959, Governor J. Millard Tawes joined station managers to throw the switch and turn on the broadcast.

At the time of its completion, the giant $1.125 million 鈥渃andelabra tower鈥 on what was then known to everyeone as TV Hill, was the tallest free-standing broadcast tower in the United States. A 270-foot addition in 1964 brought the top to 1315 feet above sea level. Today, however, the tower isn鈥檛 even the tallest in the neighborhood. A second tower completed on a nearby hill in 1987 by Cunningham Communications holds that honor, at 1,549 feet above sea level.

The newer tower is a single mast structure, and though both hills and the three towers they support are now collectively known as TV Hill, there鈥檚 still only one candelabra tower.

Video

Television Hill
A feature on WJZ-TV and the then-new antenna on TV Hill for a promotional short entitled "This is Baltimore." Background music is Heliotrope (Aeronaut) by Blue Dot Sessions (CC BY-NC). ~ Source: Mid-Atlantic Regional Moving Image Archive (MARMIA) ~...
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3723 Malden Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21211