WHAP

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WHAP
City of license Hopewell, Virginia
Slogan Heart & Soul of Hopewell
Frequency 1340 kHz
Format Variety
Power 1,000 watts unlimited
Class C
Facility ID 33900
Transmitter Coordinates 37°17′46.00″N 77°18′50.00″W / 37.2961111, -77.3138889
Callsign meaning " Hopewell And Petersburg "
Owner P.T. Brown Broadcast Company, Inc.,
Website whap.com

WHAP (1340 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Variety format.Licensed to Hopewell, Virginia, USA. The station is currently owned by P.T. Brown Broadcast Company, Inc.,.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

The station signed on the air in 1949, broadcasting from the same building it does now, at 150 S. Mesa Dr in Hopewell.The Building was said to have originally been built as a take-out pizza restaurant. The call letters are said to mean " Hopewell And Petersburg " The station had been the flagship station for The local Hopewell Blue Devils of Hopewell High School and for a short time in the early 80s, also broadcast the New York Yankees, as well as the Motor Racing Network.

By the 1960s the station was a very popular Top 40 station in the Tri-cities, calling itself, for a while ," Happy Radio ". The station's popularity remained until being overcome in the early 70s by higher powered Top 40 competitors WSSV-AM/FM from Petersburg and WRVQ-FM in Richmond. In 1974 the station adjusted their format to adult contemporary. WHAP had been an ABC Radio Network affiliate for many years, but in 1979 switched to the CBS Radio Network.

[edit] Owners

In the 1970s the station went thru a trio of owners, first North Carolina businessman Roy Wooster, then The Chessie System ( who were forced to sell the station after it's merger with Seaboard Coast Lines ) , and finally , Ohio businessman Carl Adams in 1980. In 1985, Adams sold the station station to his General Manager , Bruce Connon.

[edit] Format Evolutions

In the late 1970s business started to fall off for many small AM stations, and WHAP was no exception . The station at first attempted to counteract by adding album cuts in with its normal adult contemporary playlist, next in the early eighties was a soft rock format. Then in late 1981, an uptempo oldies/beach music oriented Adult Contemporary format . In 1983 the station switched to a country music format . By the late eighties , the station was a hybrid of talk, sports, news , and some blocks of country music .

[edit] WHAP Falls On Hard Times

In the early 1990s the station had fallen on hard times. Business was bad overall for small stand alone AM stations during the early 1990s recession. The 1992 suicide death of owner Bruce Connon caused the station to sign off a few months after his death. It is unclear why Connon took his own life . Suspicions have been that due to the ever reducing advertising business he was getting for the station , he unable to continue to pay on his loan that he took out in 1985 to buy the station , which had been financed by former owner Carl Adams . Adams later took back possession of the station from Connon's estate, and in the 1993 the station was purchased by businessman Howard Keller and some partners , and signed back on with a news/talk format, largely from network sources. In the late 1990s the station was purchased by 4M Communications of Richmond , who already owned Richmond stations 990/WLEE, 1320/WVNZ, 1480/WTOX, and 1540/WREJ. 4M decided to simulcast the station with 990/WLEE, at that time doing a Big Band format. In 2004, MainQuad Broadcasting purchased the station.MainQuad at that time owned Richmond stations WBBT-FM, WLFV-FM, and WARV-FM. The company was not sure what to do with WHAP so they signed off the station until further notice,which was about 10 months In 2005, Mainline Broadcasting of Philadelphia purchased the assets of MainQuad Richmond, but Mainline did not want WHAP. MainQuad had difficulty selling off WHAP. The first buyer was Silver Dolphin Communications, who signed the station back on with a Classic Country format June 1, 2006, but was forced to sign the station off on August 8/17/06. The sale to the next potential buyer , Benjamin-Dane of Maryland never closed. The station was finally purchased in the spring of 2007 by Preston Brown , who also owned Richmond station WCLM-AM , which was doing a variety based format. The station began running some of the same programming as WCLM on a time delay basis. The station just recently began simulcasting Richmond R&B Legend Kirby Carmicheal' afternoon show from sister station WCLM .

[edit] Alumni

Many radio people got their start at WHAP. Some former staff members include current top rated WTVR-FM (Lite 98) morning man Bill Bevins, local "Sunday Night Beach Party " host Steve Leonard, local VCU Sports Anchor Terry Sisisky, Charlie Lake, who later programmed many successful stations all over the country and is currently Program Director at WMGK Philadelphia, former WVOD & WRSF Nags Head DJ Melissa Frampton Newcomer, David Lee Micheals, who was later a top rated jock at WSSV & WRVQ, as well as morning host and program director in Roanoke Va at WXLK "K92" & WJJS "Jammin JJS", Kevin Kofax, who later programmed WKJS "KISS-FM" in Richmond, longtime Richmond DJ & Traffic reporter Scott Stevens, former WTVR & WRVQ personality & current WWBT-TV engineer Tom Ogburn, Brian Pecht, currently afternoons on WILV / Chicago, Richmond radio veteran Bill James, Nick Allen, now Program Director of Lite 102.9 in Charlotte NC, Former WROV-AM Roanoke & WTVR-AM Richmond DJ Perry Woods, Former WTVR-AM, WSSV, and WRVQ jock Dennis "Chris Stevens" Jennings, former WRNL, WRXL, and WVGO DJ Greg Rodriguz, former WBCI Williamsburg, WGH and WCMS Norfolk, WMXB , WKIK, and WJRV Richmond DJ Jon Seid, former longtime WOBR Nags Head Program Director John Harper, former WBT-AM Charlotte Production Director and now independent voice talent Joe Van Ryper, former WCDX, WMXB, WRCL and WBBT Richmond jock Matt Nicholls, Former WKHK, WCDX, WRXL, and WJRV Richmond personality Angie Engle, former WCDX/Power 92 "Quiet Storm" host Greg Goins, Former WRXL, WVGO, and WMXB DJ Steve Mitchell, current WLEE/"All News 990" Richmond Program Director Kevin Ferrell, former WTVR-AM, WLEE,and WRNL Richmond DJ Mike Oliver, 18 year WRSF-FM (Dixie 105.7) Nags Head, NC Program Director & DJ Randy Gill, Former GM & Air Talent Tom Robinson, now owner of WXGM AM/FM in Gloucester Va, and former WMXB, WRVQ & WRVA personality Chip Cook.

Some other longtime WHAP personalities included Mike Dawson, Tom Sawyer, Tina Woods, Steve King, Susan James, David Good, Chris Donovan, Marie "Bird" Dane, Monroe Harris, Don Sebera, Emmett Beasley, Former GM/Air Talent Gordon Finney, Ron Bear, Edward "Lee Micheals" Allen, Paul Ferguson, and "Cousin" Dave Adkins.

[edit] References

  1. ^ WHAP Facility Record. United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.

[edit] External links