- Augie Hiebert
A. G. "Augie" Hiebert (
December 4 ,1916 –September 13 ,2007 ) was anAlaskan television pioneer. [cite news |work=KTVA CBS 11 |title=Pioneer Broadcasting Legend August G. "Augie" Hiebert: 1916-2007 |url=http://www.ktva.com/topstory/ci_6911888 |date=2007-09-21] Hiebert is credited with buildingAlaska 's firsttelevision station ,KTVA inAnchorage in 1953.cite news |first=Rachel |last=D'Oro |title= Alaska broadcast pioneer dies at 90
url=http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/6420AP_WST_Obit_Hiebert.html |work=Seattle Times |date=2007-09-13 |accessdate=2007-09-18] cite news |title=Augie Hiebert
url=http://www.legacy.com/Obituaries.asp?Page=APStory&Id=13430 |work=Associated Press |publisher=Legacy.com |date=2007-09-14 |accessdate=2007-09-18] cite news |first=Debra |last=McKinney |title=Hiebert, 'Father of Alaska TV,' dies
url=http://www.adn.com/news/alaska/story/9301519p-9215988c.html |work= "Anchorage Daily News " |date=2007-09-14 |accessdate=2007-09-18] He is often called the "father of Alaskan television."Early life
Augie Hiebert was born in
Trinidad, Washington . Fascinated withelectronics as ateenager , he built his firstamateur radio inBend, Oregon , when he was only 15. He landed his first job inWenatchee, Washington , at aradio station after graduating from high school. He worked his way up from an announcer to a station engineer at another radio station in Bend.Alaskan television and radio
Alaskan radio
In 1939, Hiebert followed one of his Bend, Oregon, co-workers, Austin E. "Cap" Lathrop, to
Fairbanks, Alaska , where they built the city's first radio station,KFAR .Hiebert also helped to set upKENI , anotherAM station , inAnchorage in 1948.Additionally, Hiebert established Alaska's first FM radio station,
KNIK , in Anchorage in 1960.Alaskan television
Augie Hiebert founded
Northern Television , an Alaska based production and broadcasting company. Hiebert and his small company would help found many of Alaska's original television station. (Hiebert sold Northern Television in 1997.)In 1953 Hiebert and his company built Alaska's first television station,
KTVA , in Anchorage. The station initially offered local news, as well as some television programs and featurefilms . KTVA only broadcast for a few hours a day in its early years. Much of its network programming had to be physically flown in astapes from the mainlandUnited States , since there were nosatellite broadcasting or nearby antenna broadcasts available in Alaska in those days.In 1955, just two years after launching KTVA, Hiebert founded
KTVF , Alaska's second television station, in Fairbanks.Hiebert worked behind the scenes to bring live coverage of
Neil Armstrong 'swalk on the moon onJuly 20 ,1969 . The lunar live coverage was a coup for Hiebert and Alaska, since live coverage of events usually had to be pre-taped and shipped to the state in the late 1960s. Hiebert and other station owners negotiated with theU.S. military and the Alaskan congressional delegation to bring a livesatellite feed of the landing to Alaska.Hiebert was advocate for the special needs of Alaska's broadcasters. He organized 'Alaska Days' for
Federal Communication Commission to educate members about the difficulties of broadcasting in a vast and sparsely populated state such as Alaska.Retirement
Hiebert retired in 1997 at the age of 80 and sold his company, Northern Television the same year. However, he continued to be active in broadcasting after his retirement. He focused much of his energy on establishing a video-news program for
Mirror Lake Middle School . He also worked with theFCC to get Mirror Lake's FM radio station,KAUG , federally licensed. KAUG was the firstmiddle school radio station in the United States to be licensed by the FCC.Death
Augie Hiebert died in
Anchorage, Alaska onSeptember 13 2007 at the age of 90. He had recently been diagnosed withnon-Hodgkins lymphoma . Veteran televisionnewscaster andjournalist Walter Cronkite released a prepared statement on the news of Hiebert's death, "The great state of Alaska has lost one of its most distinguished citizens. Augie Hiebert was the pioneer of communications who brought radio and later television to his beloved home state"."References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.