[quote name=\'DjohnsonCB\' post=\'184538\' date=\'Apr 21 2008, 12:07 PM\']
Some of those ads mention shows from NBC and CBS on the same station. I presume WGAL-8 was in one of those markets that had to wait to get a second or third affiliate until well after everyone owned a TV with UHF built in.
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Warning: television geekery ahead.
It wasn't until 1961 when our entire hyphenated market was able to receive a good, solid CBS affililate - in fact, it came in the form of three stations that served different areas of our market:
WLYH for Lancaster and Lebanon (now the CW affiliate),
WHP for Harrisburg and points north and west, and
WSBA in York, now our Fox affiliate. Each of these stations were not satellites of each other: they were owned by different companies and had their own distinct lineup aside from network programming, but called themselves "The Keystone Network." In the early '80s, WSBA flipped calls to WPMT and became an indie, then a Fox affiliate in 1986. WLYH was a CBS affiliate through the mid-90s. At one time, Lancaster cable systems programmed an amazing 4 CBS affiliates - WLYH, WHP, WCAU (Philadelphia), and WBAL (Baltimore).
So to answer your question/statement there, yes, WGAL programmed the strongest-performing programs across all three networks for most of the '50s. If you lived in Lancaster, you watched WGAL, and that's how it goes today as well.
To this day, at my house in Lancaster, I cannot receive WHP (or WHTM, the ABC affiliate) with a fair-quality antenna...it's easier to pull in KYW or WJZ.