- Frank K. Spain
Frank Kyle Spain (
November 29 ,1927 -April 25 ,2006 ) was an Americaninventor andtelevision engineer . He is best known for founding and buildingWTVA , anNBC affiliate inTupelo, Mississippi .In his later life, Spain also owned and operated other stations and a
microwave service company. He was also a principal investor ofMCI Southeast .Early life
Spain was born in
North Lewisburg, Ohio , onNovember 29 ,1927 . He spent most of his youth in Tupelo. Even early in his life, Spain took great fascination with the wayelectronics worked. While still a high school student, he helped build and operate a localAM radio station,WELO . Spain also served as the chief engineer on a part-time basis. After graduating with honors fromMississippi State University at the age of 19, Spain took hiselectrical engineering degree and ventured toWashington, D.C. Career
Shortly after being employed by
NBC , Spain assisted in the construction ofWNBW (nowWRC-TV ). He helped with the first live television feeds which originated fromThe Capitol ,The White House , and other various historic locations, including the1948 Presidential Inauguration .In 1949, Spain joined the
NBC Development Group inNew York City to design television and microwave relay equipment.Spain explains the development group here in a 2000 interview:
"In those days, at least in the case of
NBC andCBS , they had design and development groups who were basically manufacturing their own cameras and equipment and whatever. And thenRCA andGeneral Electric would take these designs and modify them somewhat and sell them commercially. So, the projects we were working on were very shortly thereafter [evolved into]color television ."While there, he also helped build the first
UHF television station inBridgeport, Connecticut , and supervised the pattern measurements of the station's antenna.New standard
With technology rapidly changing the scope of television in 1950, the decision was made by the
Federal Communications Commission to adopt a color standard for allbroadcast television networks. Spain participated in the 1949-1950 demonstration of theRCA -compatible color television system. Though the FCC initially dropped RCA's system, a rehearing was held two years later and RCA's all-electronic system was adopted.Two years later, Spain left NBC to take an engineering director position at WHEN-AM-FM-TV in
Syracuse, New York .Origins of WTWV
While working in Syracuse, Spain hoped to build a station in Tupelo. In December 1953, Spain successfully petitioned the FCC to allocate channel 9 to Tupelo, and was granted a construction permit three years later. The station first went on the air on
March 18 ,1957 . The station's equipment--antenna, transmitter, cameras, etc.--had been hand-built by Spain.Though many NBC executives believed Tupelo was not a desirable place for a local affiliate station because of its rural location, they told Spain that if he could figure out a way to obtain a network signal, he could carry it. After several under-the-table deals with
WMC-TV in Memphis, Spain set up a network of microwave relays and repeater systems to carry the WMC-TV signal to Tupelo. WTWV became an official NBC affiliate sometime in the mid-1960s. WTWV changed its call letters toWTVA years later.Microwave Service Company
In 1959, Spain started Microwave Service Company to provide distant signals to
CATV systems and network interconnects for broadcast facilities. At the peak of his terrestrial transmission business, the company served twelve states.Because of the strategic location of these facilities, Spain joined
Jack Goeken and Bill McGowan in the start-up ofMCI . He maintained a sole ownership inMCI Mid-South and an equal partnership with the Meredith Corporation inMCI Southeast .Later years
Spain began a fascination with antique cars after buying his first in 1974. Today, the
Tupelo Automobile Museum houses all of Spain's 150-car collection. The museum, founded by Spain, opened in 2002 and was designated as the official state automobile museum in 2003.Spain was known internationally in broadcast circles and was awarded the
Gold Circle Emmy Award in 2005 for 50 years' Lifetime Achievement in Broadcasting.Though his health declined after the turn of the millennium, Spain continued to visit WTVA almost daily until his death. Known to many of his employees as a true hands-on owner, Spain often bragged that he could "take the Channel 9 staff anywhere in the world and they would be second to none." Of all the accomplishments Spain had overseen, WTVA was his crown jewel.
Spain died at
North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo onApril 25 ,2006 after a long battle withcancer . His family still owns WTVA, along with one other station,WMDN inMeridian, Mississippi References
* [http://www.lib.usm.edu/~spcol/coh/cohspainfb.html Oral History with Mr. Frank Kyle Spain]
* [http://www.wtva.com/pages/history.html History of WTVA]
* [http://www.meridianstar.com/obituaries/local_story_118003405.html Frank K. Spain Obituary]External links
* [http://www.wtva.com/ WTVA Homepage]
* [http://www.tupeloautomobilemuseum.com/ Tupelo Automobile Museum Web site]
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