Monroe, Louisiana | |
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Channels | Analog: 13 (VHF) |
Owner | Louisiana Educational Television Commission (Louisiana State Department of Education) |
First air date | March 9, 1957 |
Last air date | 1964 |
Call letters' meaning | Louisiana State Department of Education |
Transmitter power | 30 kW visual, 15 kW aural |
Height | 97.5 metres (320 ft) |
KLSE, channel 13, was an educational television station in Monroe, Louisiana. The station was owned by the Louisiana State Department of Education, and operated by the Louisiana Educational Television Commission, an agency of the Department of Education.
After lifting the 1948 TV allocation "freeze" with its Sixth Report and Order (1952), the Federal Communications Commission allocated channels 8, 13, and 43 to Monroe and West Monroe, with channel 13 reserved for non-commercial (educational) broadcasting.[1] The State Department of Education signed KLSE on the air March 9, 1957, from a studio and transmitter facility on Forsythe Avenue. The facility was originally used by KFAZ-TV Channel 43 until KFAZ went dark May 1, 1954.[1][2] It was the fourth television station in the Monroe/El Dorado, Arkansas area, after KFAZ-TV, KNOE-TV, and KRBB-TV (now KTVE),[1] the 24th educational television station in the US, and the first educational television station in Louisiana,[3] going on-the-air almost one month prior to WYES-TV in New Orleans. KLSE's sign-on predates the debut of Louisiana Public Broadcasting's first station, WLPB-TV in Baton Rouge, by over 18 years.[4]
KLSE was to be the first station in an intended statewide educational television network along the lines of Alabama Educational Television, which had been created two years earlier. LSU professor Lucille Woodward had urged Governor Robert Kennon to create the Educational Television Commission a few years earlier.
The state's limited budget[5] meant the station signed on with a transmitter and antenna providing one tenth the maximum allowed effective radiated power for a station on channel 13. In addition, its tower was only half as tall as that of KNOE.[1] This combination limited KLSE's viewing area to Monroe and West Monroe, with viewing in nearby towns difficult.[6] In addition, the amount of educational television programming available to the state from National Educational Television and other sources in the late 1950s and early 1960s was limited in comparison to the programming available to commercial stations. By 1964, the state decided to shut down KLSE. The Ark-La-Miss area would not receive another educational station until LPB went on-the-air in Monroe with KLTM Channel 13 on September 8, 1976. There is no record of any television station using the former KLSE facilities after its closure.
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