February 26 - Fulton Sheen, on his program Life Is Worth Living, reads Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, with the names of high-ranking Soviet officials replacing the key characters. At the end of the reading, Sheen intoned that "Stalin must one day meet his judgment". Stalin died one week later.
April 3 - TV Guide is published for the first time, with 10 editions and a circulation of 1,562,000.
May 25 - KUHT in Houston becomes the first non-commercial educational TV station.
June 2 - The Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II is televised in the UK. Sales of TV sets rise sharply in the weeks leading up to the event. It is also one of the earliest broadcasts to be deliberately recorded for posterity and still exists in its entirety today.
November 22 - RCA airs (with special permission from the FCC) the first commercial color program in compatible color, the Colgate Comedy Hour with Donald O'Connor.
December 2 - BBC broadcasts its 'Television Symbol' for the first time, the first animated television presentation symbol in the world.
December 17 - The FCC reverses its 1951 decision and approves the RCA/NTSC color system.