Arch MacDonald (July 18, 1911, Fort Lauderdale, Florida – June 3, 1985, Needham, Massachusetts) [1] was an American broadcast journalist and television pioneer in Boston.
MacDonald started in broadcasting at WPRO (AM) in Providence, Rhode Island. [1] He began working at WBZ (AM) radio in Boston in 1936. When WBZ-TV began television broadcasting in 1948 as an NBC affiliate, MacDonald was the station's first news anchorperson (not called that, as that term was not yet extant). [2] He hosted the station's first broadcast, shown at 6:15 PM on June 9, 1948. [3] Arch's signature sign off was "All of which brings us up to time".
In 1969, after two decades at WBZ-TV, MacDonald was recruited away by WKBG-TV ( UHF channel 56) to host its new 10:00 PM newscast, Ten PM News, the first prime time newscast on a commercial television station in the Boston market. The program (which was the first on-air job for Natalie Jacobson) was not a financial success and WKBG-TV dissolved its news department at the end of 1970. MacDonald remained at the station for another year and hosted a weekday morning interview program.[ citation needed]
MacDonald at one time or another worked for all three network-affiliated television stations in Boston, and several radio stations, in the course of his 54-year career. [2] He worked up into the year of his death at 73, his last job being editorial director of WRKO radio in Boston. [1]
MacDonald was elected to the Academy of New England Journalists in 1967, [3] received the Governor's Award for lifetime achievement from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in 1983, [1] was honored at a 1984 ceremony at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, where a letter from Ronald Reagan describing MacDonald as "a Boston institution" was read, [1] and was elected to the Massachusetts Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 2009. [4]