I used to have a neighbor with an older-generation 10-channel 46/49 MHz cordless phone with the base station (which had a telescopic whip antenna) located on the top floor of their 3-story home. The cordless phone base station in question got out several miles and the neighbor talked on the phone a lot.
The 49 MHz band is still used even though most baby monitors have moved up to the various ISM bands 900MHz/2.4GHz/5.8GHz (and various combinations of digital/video/spread spectrum). The same can be said for cordless phones (plus the 1.9GHz DECT band). However, cheaper cordless phones still use analog 900 MHz band (902-928 MHz) for base-to-handset link transmissions, often using random frequency steps (there appears to be no standardization in regards to this, with some companies using 12.5 kHz channel steps, others using 40 kHz channel steps, etc).
RadioShack used to sell 49MHz walkie-talkies (the TRC-512 model among others) before they switched to selling FRS radios. The 5 channels used by these radios were also the channels used by baby monitors (and cordless phone handsets!). Made for interesting situations when a neighborhood had baby monitors, cordless phones, and kids with 49MHz FM walkie talkies all on the same frequency. Further complicating things is the fact that 49.600-50.000 MHz is technically a US military band, and US Army helicopters have been monitored on 49.700 MHz, 49.750 MHz and 49.950 MHz.
49.830 MHz
49.845 MHz (some companies use/used 49.850 MHz instead)
49.860 MHz
49.875 MHz (some companies use/used 49.870 MHz instead)
49.890 MHz