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Born in Memphis Tennesee on October 11, 1895, Lafayette Rogan Jones moved with
his parents, Francis Goodbar Jones and Mary Rogan Jones to Boston in 1901, and
then to Aberdeen, Washington in 1906. He attended private schools in Boston,
public schools in Aberdeen and spent one year at Columbia University where he
studied business. Jones lived in Aberdeen intermittently until 1930.
Jones acquired his first radio station, KXRO, in Aberdeen, Washington in 1928,
and purchased KVOS in Bellingham, Washington the following year. In addition to
these stations, Jones owned KPQ radio in Wenatchee and KPCB in Seattle. A
pioneer in his field, Jones often generated conflict through his attempts to
expand the interests and role of radio broadcasters and attract larger
audiences. The legal case KVOS v Associated Press (ca. 1934-1936)
comprised one of the most noteworthy legal battles of his career. Responding to
refusals by the Associated Press, the United Press, and the International News
Service to sell news copy to radio stations, Jones and KVOS rewrote and then
broadcast information found in newspapers. Accusing Jones of “news piracy”,
local newspapers such as the Bellingham Herald and national news organizations
including the Associated Press filed suit against KVOS. In 1936, the US Supreme
Court decided in favor of KVOS, allowing for greater access by radio
broadcasters to news sources (including sporting events), and paving the way
towards the sale of information by news organizations to radio.
During the 1950s, Jones attracted further controversy through his creation of
International Good Music (IGM), a centralized service providing recorded music
and radio shows for broadcast across the world. In 1964, the American Society of
Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) sued IGM and recipient stations,
arguing that IGM broadcast music without their permission or that of the
artists. The case was decided in favor of the IGM and other defendants.
Having established himself in radio, Jones soon expanded his professional
interests to include television, creating one of the first commercial cable
systems in Bellingham, Washington. His first TV station, KVOS-TV, aired its
first broadcast on May 23, 1953. Jones also founded cable television station,
KPQ-CA in Wenatchee in 1953, before selling the station the following year. The
British Columbia company Wometco eventually bought KVOS in 1962.
Rogan Jones died on 27 April, 1972 in Bellingham, Washington. |
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