This is a timeline of the history of the British broadcaster Scottish Television (now known as STV Central). It provides the ITV network service for Central Scotland.
The timeline also includes events for the whole of the merged STV channel covering Central and Northern Scotland after 2006.
31 August – At 5:30 pm, Scottish Television starts broadcasting on VHF ch10 from the newly built transmitter at Black Hill,[2] close to the BBC's mast at Kirk o'Shotts and becomes the first ITV company to broadcast seven days a week.
18 September – Scottish launches a sports programme called Sports Desk which was soon renamed Scotsport.[3] The programme would be broadcast for the next fifty years.
1958
No events.
1959
No events.
1960s
1960
No events.
1961
No events.
1962
May – Scottish Television's weekly listings magazine is renamed from TV Guide to The Viewer.
1963
No events.
1964
Scottish is given a three-year extension to its licence. This is later extended by a further year.
15 August – Scottish launches Scotsport Results to provide Scottish viewers with a round-up of the day's Scottish football. It is broadcast on Saturday teatimes at around 5pm during the football season.
1965
The chairman of the Independent Television AuthorityCharles Hill pays a visit to STV's Glasgow studios during which he observed an edition of the popular daytime entertainment show The One O'Clock Gang. He was so appalled by it, he personally axed the programme with the words My God, how long have you been getting away with this?.[4] Consequently, Scottish no longer broadcasts programming at lunchtime.
September – The final edition of Scottish TV's listings magazine The Viewer is published. Subsequently, Scottish's listings are carried in the magazine TVTimes.
Scottish Television retains its franchise, despite strong competition from a consortium led by the future BBC Director General Alasdair Milne and strong indications that the company would lose its franchise. Lord Thomson is forced by the ITA to reduce his stake in the station from 80% to 25%, effectively ending the company's standing as a subsidiary of the Thomson Group.
1968
August – A technicians strike forces ITV off the air for several weeks although management manage to launch a temporary ITV Emergency National Service with no regional variations.
30 August - A television relay of Black Hill opens for Rothesay on VHF ch8.
13 December - a further relay station opens at Rosneath, improving reception of Scottish Television for viewers in Dunoon and the Firth of Clyde areas, on VHF ch13.
1969
31 January - a third and final VHF relay broadcasting Scottish on ch12 opens at Lethahill, improving reception in the Girvan and Ayr areas.
October – Scottish starts producing programmes in colour and marks the occasion by opening new secondary studios at the Gateway Theatre in Edinburgh.
November – A major fire badly damages Scottish's Glasgow studios.[5]
13 December – Scottish starts broadcasting in colour, using the 625 linesPAL system from the Black Hill transmitter on ch43.
1970s
1970
Scottish launches a brand new ‘’STV’’ logo with the words Scottish Television displayed below the actual logo.[6]
1971
27 September - a second high-power UHF transmitter opens broadcasting Scottish Television from Craigkelly[7] on UHF ch24. The tower, at Burntisland, improves Colour television for much of Edinburgh and parts of Fife.
1972
Scottish begins the construction of its new purpose-built complex in Glasgow, at Cowcaddens.
11 September – Scotland Today is launched, although the programme is only broadcast for ten months each year. Magazine programmes are shown during the summer break.
16 October – Following a law change which removed all restrictions on broadcasting hours, ITV is able to launch an afternoon service.
1 December - Colour television reception is improved south-west of Glasgow with the opening of the Darvel UHF transmitter on ch23.[8]
1973
No events.
1974
The 1974 franchise round sees no changes in ITV's contractors as it is felt that the huge cost in switching to colour television would have made the companies unable to compete against rivals in a franchise battle.
23 May-9 June – A strike over the payments agreed before the government-imposed pay freeze came into force results in many ITV companies being unable to broadcast.[10] All of the companies affected by the strike were fully back on air by the end of May, apart from at Scottish where the dispute dragged on for a further fortnight.
1976
1 April – Following ITV wanting to have a Scottish soap for its daytime line-up, Scottish launches Garnock Way.
11 June - The Torosay transmitter broadcasting on UHF ch25 opens, extending Scottish TV in colour to the Oban and Fort William areas. [11]
1977
No events.
1978
Scotland Today’s annual summer break is scrapped and consequently the programme is now on air all year round.
7 October – Following a 21.8% increase in profits for the first six months of 1978, Scottish announces an increase in local programming.[12]
1979
10 August – The ten week ITV strike forces Scottish Television off the air. The strike ends on 24 October.
Scottish ends production of soap opera Garnock Way due to a lack of interest from the English companies - only one English region (Southern Television) had ever broadcast the show, and only did so for just over one year.
1980s
1980
19 February – The first edition of soap-opera Take the High Road is broadcast. Unlike predecessor Garnock Way, the new soap was carried by all ITV regions and they continued to do so until the late 1990s.
1981
October – Scottish Television becomes the first ITV station to launch a regional Oracle teletext service, containing over 60 pages of local news, sport and information.[13]
1982
No events.
1983
1 February – ITV's breakfast television service TV-am launches. It is a UK-wide service and therefore contains no Scottish-specific content. Consequently, Scottish's broadcast day now begins at 9:25 am.
1984
8 October – Scotland Today is relaunched as a features-led magazine format with the news relegated to brief summaries before and after the programme.[14]
1985
3 January – The last day of transmission using the 405-lines system.
31 August – Scottish launches a new computer-generated ident and revives the Scottish Television branding.[6]
1986
20 October – Following considerable criticism, including from the Independent Broadcasting Authority, the 1984 changes to Scotland Today are reversed and the programme once again becomes a news bulletin with the feature elements transferred to a new lunchtime programme called Live at One Thirty.
1987
7 September – Following the transfer of ITV Schools to Channel 4, ITV provides a full morning programme schedule, with advertising, for the first time. The new service includes regular five-minute national and regional news bulletins.
Scottish abandons in-vision continuity, apart from the overnight hours.
1989
1 September – ITV introduces its first official logo as part of an attempt to unify the network under one image whilst retaining regional identity. Scottish chooses not to fully adopt the ident although it does use it in conjunction with its own identity, which Scottish had refreshed earlier in 1989.[6]
1990s
1990
No events.
1991
October – Scottish rebrands its overnight service as Scottish Night Time, and removes the overnight in-vision continuity.[16]
16 October –
Scottish retains its licence to broadcast. It bids a nominal amount (£2,000 a year, plus 2% of their annual advertising revenue) for the licence due to there being no other applicants.
Scottish is one of the backers of GMTV which is awarded the breakfast television contract.
Scottish TV's production arm is placed into a separate company, Scottish Television Enterprises.
1992
No events.
1993
1 January – Scottish Television launches new idents and presentation.[6]
January – Scottish launches a 30-minute lunchtime edition of Scotland Today.
June – Scottish launches a new political programme called Platform.[19]
July – Scottish renames itself Scottish Media Group (SMG), doing so to reflect its expansion into other aspects of the media following the acquisition of Caledonian Publishing – then-publishers of The Herald and the Glasgow Evening Times.[20] and Scottish
6 October – Scottish updates its on-screen presentation.[6]
1 November – SMG plc and BSkyB launch Sky Scottish as a joint venture. Broadcast for two hours each evening, the channel is aimed at Scots living in other parts of the UK.[21]
1997
June – SMG buys Grampian Television, the ITV contractor for Northern Scotland, for £105 million.[22] Shortly afterwards, the company became SMG.
1998
31 May – Sky Scottish closes because the channel failed to meet its financial targets.[23]
15 November – The public launch of digital terrestrial TV in the UK takes place.
27 July – S2 closes and consequently ITV2 starts broadcasting in Scotland.
2002
No events.
2003
27 April – After 1,517 episodes and more than 23 years on air, the final edition of soap opera Take the High Road is broadcast.
June – STV North's Aberdeen headquarters move to new smaller studios in the city's Tullos area in June 2003.
2004
January – SMG sells its stake in Scottish Radio Holdings to EMAP for £90 million in anticipation of consolidation in the radio market.[29]
8 January – STV launches a new political magazine programme Politics Now. It replaces Platform and Grampian's politics and current affairs programme Crossfire.
2 February – SMG sells its stake in GMTV to ITV plc for £31 million.[30]
Autumn – The lunchtime edition of Scotland Today is axed.
2006
30 May – Scottish Television is rebranded as 'STV' and the rebrand is rolled out across all of Scotland, thereby consigning the Grampian Television brand to history after 45 years. The area formerly covered by Grampian is now called STV North.
STV moves from their Cowcaddens base to a new, smaller building at Pacific Quay alongside the headquarters of BBC Scotland.
2007
8 January – STV launches separate news services for the East and West of the STV Central region, initially as a five-minute opt out within the 6:00 pm edition of Scotland Today on weeknights.
1 October – Scottish Media Group is rebranded STV Group plc. It does this because it wants to highlight its renewed focus on television.[31][32]
November – STV starts opting out of ITV programmes they claim were not performing well in their broadcast region'. ITV's coverage of the FA Cup is also dropped.
July – STV announces that it is withdrawing more ITV programmes from tis schedules, such as The Bill, Doc Martin, Midsomer Murders, Poirot, Lewis, instead preferring to concentrate on programming made within Scotland.[35]
September – ITV plc claims that STV were in breach of their network agreements by making this decision and sued STV for £38 million.[36]
2010s
2010
STV plc sells off the last of its non-television assets.[37] This helped reduce the group's debt and allowed it to concentrate on its core television businesses.
20 October – Digital switchover in STV North (formerly the Grampian Television region) is completed when the analogue signal emanating from Rosemarkie is switched off.
7 November – The final episode of Taggart is broadcast, bringing to an end a series which had been on air for more than 25 years.
2011
11 January – STV +1 launches.
27 April – ITV plc and STV settle their legal dispute, with the former receiving £18 million from STV.[39][40]
May – Separate half-hour editions of STV News at Six for the East and West are launched along with localised late night news bulletins each weeknight.
24 October – STV launches a 30-minute late evening news programme Scotland Tonight.[41] It encompasses the weekly political programme Politics Now.
2012
March – A deal is announced between ITV and the other Channel 3 licence holders which would transform its commercial relationship with them after the broadcasters negotiated new Channel 3 networking arrangements. The deal would see STV and UTV become "affiliates" of the network, meaning they would pay an up-front fee for the rights to broadcast ITV content. At the time, the licence holders paid a percentage of the Channel 3 network costs based on their share of qualifying revenue.[42][43]
April – STV's Edinburgh operation moves from George Street in the city centre to a new studio at Fountainbridge.
2013
8 April - Margaret Thatcher's death is announced on TV and is met with celebration[44]
2014
28 April – STV HD launches on the Sky and Freesat EPGs.[45]
2 June –
STV launches the first of its local television channels – STV Glasgow.
12 January – STV launches its second local television channel STV Edinburgh.
March – STV is awarded three more local licenses, to cover Aberdeen, Ayr and Dundee.
2016
No events.
2017
24 April – STV merges its local channels and relaunches them as a single channel called STV2.[46] The output includes a primetime weeknight news programme called STV News Tonight which combines news from across all of Scotland with UK and international news.[47]
2018
30 June – STV2 closes down and the channel's assets are sold to That's Media, owners of the That's TV network of local television stations in England.[48] The closure results in the cancellation of STV News Tonight.
7 September – The Edinburgh edition of STV News at Six ends and is replaced on the 10th by shorter opt-outs within a Central Scotland programme.[49]
2019
No events.
2020s
2020
No events.
2021
No events.
2022
November – STV launches Night Vision, which features news, sport and weather from across Scotland. Previously, STV had broadcast ITV's overnight filler programme Unwind with ITV (which was branded by STV as Unwind with STV).