WFHW-LP (channel 58) was a low-power television station in Buffalo, New York, United States.
The only commercial effort to serve Jamestown directly with over-the-air television since the aborted launch of WJTN-TV was in the late 1960s, when WJTN's crosstown rival WKSN—then owned by future Pax TV and HSN founder Bud Paxson—launched WNYP (the forerunner of current religious broadcaster WNYB) on channel 26.
[3] In summer 1989, consumer rights advocate Ralph Nader reactivated Western New York's channel 58 allocation with the launch of translator station W58AV.
[8] At some point in the mid-1990s, the station upgraded from translator to LPTV status, and changed its call letters to WFHW-LP after what would become its last operator, the local chapter of the non-profit Friendship House.
[9] The station went silent on Halloween in 1999 after the Friendship House ceased operations, several years before the digital television transition in the United States.