The Bluefield Daily Telegraph is a newspaper based in Bluefield, West Virginia , and also covering surrounding communities in McDowell , Mercer and Monroe counties, West Virginia ; and Bland , Buchanan , Giles and Tazewell counties, Virginia (including the town of Bluefield, Virginia ). It publishes online Monday through Saturday. A print edition is distributed Tuesday through Saturday.
22-572: The Bluefield Daily Telegraph was launched on January 16, 1896, by long-time editor Hugh Ike Shott , who at one point controlled Bluefield's newspaper, both leading radio stations, and only television station. Nobel Prize winner John Forbes Nash Jr., a Bluefield native, worked for a time as an inserter, hand inserting sales pieces into the Bluefield Daily Telegraph before going on to a distinguished career in mathematics . The weekly Princeton Times , covering Princeton, West Virginia ,
44-605: A foundation in 1984 with the objective to help improve the social and economic quality of life within the trade area of the Bluefield Daily Telegraph. Shott Jr. was with the newspaper founded by his father for more than 60 years. WVVA WVVA (channel 6) is a television station licensed to Bluefield, West Virginia , United States, serving the Bluefield– Beckley – Oak Hill market as an affiliate of NBC and The CW Plus . Owned by Gray Television ,
66-431: A cable-only station with the fictional call sign "WBB". It was a WB affiliate through The WB 100+ which was a similar operation to the current CW Plus service. "WBB" was identified on-air as "West Virginia's WB 18" (based on its channel location on cable). WVVA provided promotional and advertising services for this station. On January 24, 2006, it was announced that The WB and UPN would end broadcasting and merge to form
88-476: A few weeks during the summer of 2007, WVVA produced a weeknight prime time newscast at 10 on WVVA-DT2. Airing for thirty minutes, the show featured news anchor Erica Greenway (no longer with station), chief meteorologist Corey Henderson, and sports director P. J. Ziegler (now with WJW in Cleveland ). It is unknown why the program was dropped after such a short run. WVVA remains one of the strongest NBC affiliates in
110-703: A long time, the WHIS stations were the only broadcasting outlets in Bluefield. Although the Shotts' media holdings were considered a monopoly by some (as highlighted in a July 1974 Wall Street Journal article ), only the newspaper was a vehicle for their conservative political views. But in 1975, the FCC decreed that a single company could not own all of the media outlets in one area , and required several small-market broadcast-print combinations to be broken up by 1980. The Shotts opted to keep
132-533: A new combined service, which would be called The CW. The letters would represent the first initial of corporate parents CBS (the parent company of UPN) and the Warner Bros. unit of Time Warner . When The CW launched on September 18, "WBB" was added to a new second digital subchannel of WVVA to offer non-cable subscribers access to the network. At this point, it began using the WVVA-DT2 calls in an official manner. For
154-491: A result, the proposed station on the channel 6 frequency would therefore be limited to one-half of the visual maximum effective radiated power for analog channels 2 through 6, or 50,000 watts . Unable to obtain a network feed, the Shotts were forced to construct a privately owned microwave relay system to receive NBC programming from WSLS-TV in Roanoke, Virginia , the closest and most accessible city receiving network signals via
176-484: Is also published at the Bluefield Daily Telegraph office. Both newspapers are owned by Community Newspaper Holdings Inc, who acquired them from The Thomson Corporation in 2000. This article about a West Virginia newspaper is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This West Virginia -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Hugh Ike Shott Hugh Ike Shott (September 3, 1866 – October 12, 1953)
198-790: The Bluefield Daily Telegraph along with WHIS radio ( 1440 AM and 98.7 FM, now WHAJ ). Channel 6 signed on under the special commitment of a VHF allotment to Bluefield after the release of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)'s Sixth Report and Order in 1952. Because of its proposed antenna height and location on East River Mountain, the channel 6 allocation in Bluefield was short-spaced to WATE-TV (also on channel 6) in Knoxville, Tennessee , and side-spaced to WCYB-TV (on adjacent channel 5) in Bristol, Virginia . As
220-592: The AT&T Long Lines system. When it was completed in September WHIS-TV began carrying NBC programs, the first being The Pinky Lee Show . The station's operations were originally housed in the Bluefield Municipal Building ; on January 1, 1967, the WHIS stations moved into new facilities on Big Laurel Highway ( US 19 – 460 ), known as "Broadcast Center," and channel 6 began full color operations. For
242-510: The Daily Telegraph and the radio stations and sell channel 6. In 1979, after four years of appeals, the Shotts sold WHIS-TV to Quincy, Illinois –based Quincy Newspapers . After the sale was completed, the new owners changed the station's call letters to WVVA (so as to comply with an FCC rule in effect at the time that required TV and radio stations in the same market, but with different ownership to use different call letters) on May 1, 1979;
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#1732886873760264-609: The Wheeling – Steubenville market and the portions of the Washington, D.C. , and Pittsburgh markets that extend into West Virginia as the only parts of the state not covered by a Gray station (though Washington houses a national political bureau for Gray). From 1995 until late 1998, The WB 's programming was available in the Beckley–Bluefield–Oak Hill market via WGN-TV 's national feed . The station launched in late-1998 as
286-543: The Daily Telegraph Printing Co. obtained a license for the only radio station in Bluefield at the time. The call letters stood for his initials – WHIS . In 1948, Jim and Hugh, Jr. started a companion FM station, WHIS-FM. The venture turned out to be premature, as there weren't enough FM receivers to make the station a success, and it was temporarily shut down. The FM station now has the call letters WHAJ . His control of both daily newspapers and both of
308-411: The call letters refer to the states that channel 6 serves, West Virginia and Virginia. On February 17, 2009, WVVA switched to " Digital Nightlight " service on its analog signal showing information on the transition to exclusive digital television and its nightly 6 o'clock newscast. Post-transition digital operations continued on channel 46, remapping to virtual channel 6. The station's analog service
330-676: The city, which likewise carried his WHIS initials. After extended litigation, the United States Supreme Court ordered that no one company could own both the primary AM and FM stations, the only TV station, and the only daily newspaper in the same town. WHIS-TV was sold and the call letters changed to WVVA in 1979. His name lives on in WHIS-AM although it also was later sold, as was the FM station he owned. The Hugh Ike Shott, Jr. Foundation – Shott's youngest son, H.I. Shott, Jr., established
352-700: The country and continually averages high Nielsen rating shares in the mountainous nine county market. WVVA began broadcasting local newscasts in high definition from a totally renovated studio with new sets as well as a new control room in June 2012. In addition to its main studios, WVVA operates a Beckley Bureau (on Main Street along North Kanawha Street/ WV 210 ) and a "virtual" Greenbrier Valley Bureau (covering Summers , Monroe , and Greenbrier counties in West Virginia as well as Giles County, Virginia ). The station's signal
374-431: The primary radio stations gave him a virtual news monopoly in his area. His newspaper, the Bluefield Daily Telegraph, was an unashamedly Republican publication. The radio stations and the television station that would later become part of the company were not organs of opinion. In 1955 his heirs obtained, by the only special exception ever granted by the Federal Communications Commission , the sole television station in
396-541: The station maintains studios on U.S. Route 460 in Bluefield, West Virginia, and its transmitter is located atop East River Mountain, near the West Virginia–Virginia border. The station went on the air on July 31, 1955, as WHIS-TV. It was named in honor of longtime West Virginia politician Hugh Ike Shott , who had died two years earlier. It was owned by the Shott family's Daily Telegraph Publishing Company, which owned
418-480: Was a candidate for the special Senate "short term" caused by the resignation of Matthew M. Neely . He won and served from November 18, 1942 to January 3, 1943. The election was almost honorary, as the Senate only met twice during his term of office. He was not a candidate in the regular election, held on the same day, for the following regular six-year term. He was referred to as "Senator" for the rest of his life. In 1928,
440-650: Was also involved in the railway mail service and was postmaster for several years. In that era, postmaster was a political appointment given by the President of the United States . He was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1928 and re-elected in 1930. However, he was defeated for a third term in 1932, as well as in his attempt to run for the United States Senate in 1936. In 1942, he
462-470: Was an American newspaper editor, pioneer broadcaster , and Republican politician in the U.S. State of West Virginia . Shott apprenticed as a printer . He moved to the then-booming new city of Bluefield, West Virginia . He took control of the Bluefield Daily Telegraph , the city's primary morning newspaper. Via straw parties, he also controlled the "competing" evening Mountain Sunset Review . He
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#1732886873760484-824: Was terminated altogether in late-April 2009. On February 1, 2021, Gray Television announced its intent to purchase Quincy Media for $ 925 million. The acquisition was completed on August 2, making WVVA sister to Gray stations in nearby markets, including CBS affiliates WDBJ in Roanoke and WDTV in Clarksburg , ABC affiliate WHSV-TV in Harrisonburg and fellow NBC affiliates WSAZ-TV in Huntington – Charleston , WTAP-TV in Parkersburg and WVIR-TV in Charlottesville . This leaves
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