On 2 October 1946, the first episode of “Faraway Hill” was aired. The first-ever soap opera was broadcast by the DuMont Television Network from 2 October 1946 to 18 December 1946. The story centred on a widowed New York woman who moved to a small town to be near relatives. There she met a man who had been adopted by her family, and with whom she fell in love. However, he was already engaged to another woman.
“Faraway Hill” was broadcast live from a studio pavilion and had a budget of around $300 an episode. The DuMont Television Network also made history as the first commercial television network in the United States. No footage from the series has survived: the show was done live; methods to record television, such as kinescopes, did not exist until 1947 and videotapes did not become prevalent until 1958.
The name “soap opera” appeared somewhat earlier. In the 1930s, the term was used to describe radio shows that contained a large number of advertisements by Procter & Gamble and Colgate, as well as other manufacturers of household cleaning products. The term soon assumed near official status and ultimately adhered to TV series aimed at housewives. The era of soap operas continues to this day.
Source:
David Weinstein, “The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television”, Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2004