HCJB
HCJB, "The Voice of the Andes", was the first radio station with daily programming in the South American country of Ecuador and the first Christian missionary radio station in the world. The station was founded in 1931 by Clarence W. Jones,[1][2] Reuben Larson, and D. Stuart Clark.[3] Since the 2009 shut down of most of its short wave broadcasts, HCJB is now heard only on FM in Quito at 89.3 MHz, and AM at 690 kHz, and within Ecuador on 6050 kHz, short wave.
History
Radio station HCJB started as the vision of Clarence W. Jones, a musician, graduate of Moody Bible Institute, and the son of a Salvation Army minister. Following his graduation from Moody, Jones worked under evangelist Paul Rader and was part of the founding staff of the Chicago Gospel Tabernacle where Jones assisted in leading music, working with youth and overseeing Rader's weekly radio ministry called "WJBT" (Where Jesus Blesses Thousands)[4]:31 Impressed by the impact Rader's radio ministry had made, Jones felt called to establish missionary radio in Latin America. As a result, Jones traveled to Venezuela, Colombia, Panama and Cuba on a seven-week trip in 1928 looking for a suitable location for his envisioned radio station, but was unable to obtain the necessary government permits.[4]:54 Back in Chicago nearly two years later, Jones met Christian & Missionary Alliance (CMA) missionaries from Ecuador - Reuben and Grace Larson, John and Ruth Clark and Paul and Bernice Young. These missionaries encouraged Jones to consider Ecuador as the place to start his missionary radio station.
As the first step in fulfilling his vision, Jones needed to obtain a contract of approval from the Ecuadorian government for setting up the radio station. Reuben Larson and D.Stuart Clark, along with Ecuadorian lawyer Luís Calisto, worked to procure the initial contract. On August 15, 1930, the Ecuadorian Congress approved a bill which granted Jones a 25-year contract to operate a radio station in the country.[4]:67
As with all countries having a governing body over broadcast operations, the call letters HCJB were obtained through the government of Ecuador, beginning with the internationally allocated prefix for Ecuador's broadcast stations (HC). Station co-founders Jones and Larson advocated for, and were granted by the government, call letters that were an acronym indicative of the stations' agreed upon purpose. The result was Heralding Christ Jesus' Blessings. In Spanish (one of the original broadcast languages of the South American station) the call letters represent Hoy Cristo Jesús Bendice.[4]:77
Jones incorporated the World Radio Missionary Fellowship, Inc. (WRMF) on March 9, 1931 as a non-profit entity and overseeing organization over HCJB. Jones was also the non-profit corporation's first president. The corporation's first officers were Adam Welty as treasurer, Ruth Churchill, secretary, and Lance Latham and his wife, Virginia, along with Howard Jones and Reuben Larson serving on the board of directors.[5]
HCJB's first broadcast on Christmas Day, 1931 had the potential of being heard by the six radio receivers capable of receiving the program and existing in the country at the time.[6] The inaugural program was broadcast in English and Spanish from a studio in the Joneses' living room and powered by a 200-watt, table-top transmitter. The antenna used was a simple, single wire antenna strung between two makeshift telephone poles. The broadcast lasted 30 minutes.[7]
Frequencies, QSLs, and programming
Initially, HCJB only broadcast programs in English and Spanish. In 1941, however, live programs were added in Russian, Swedish and Quichua. By 1944, the station had aired programing in 14 languages including live programs in Czech, Dutch, French and German. Programs in languages such as Arabic, Italian and Hebrew were recorded elsewhere and sent to Quito on large acetate coated aluminium transcription discs. By 1967, live programming would be added in Portuguese and Japanese.
Milestones and achievements
- 1931 - The station's first broadcast using a 200-watt transmitter designed and built by HCJB Engineer Eric Williams.[citation needed]
- 1936 - An RCA medium-wave transmitter is added.[citation needed]
- 1937 - The addition of a 1,000 watt transmitter designed and built by HCJB Engineer Victoriano Salvador.[citation needed]
- 1940 - The station adds a 10,000 watt transmitter designed and built by HCJB Engineer Clarence C. Moore, allowing the station's broadcast signal to reach around the world.[citation needed]
- 1940 - Clarence Moore invents, and later patents the cubical quad antenna and puts it into use at HCJB.[10]
- 1952 - the station moves its shortwave broadcasting to a new site in Pifo, Ecuador.[citation needed]
- 1956 - HCJB begins broadcasting with its first high-powered 50,000 watt transmitter designed by HCJB Engineer Herb Jacobson and built by HCJB engineers and staff.[citation needed]
- 1965 - The station's own hydro-electric plant at Papallacta begins generating electrity to power shortwave broadcasts from Pifo.[citation needed]
- 1967 - The station purchases three RCA 100,000-watt shortwave transmitters. The units required extensive reworking and entered into service in 1968, 1969 and 1970.[citation needed]
- 1979 - The construction of a steerable antenna is completed.[citation needed]
- 1981 - A 500,000-watt shortwave transmitter capable of overcoming any Russian jamming efforts is put into use. The transmitter was designed and built by HCJB Engineers at facilities loaned by Clarence Moore at Crown International in Elkhart, Indiana.[citation needed]
- 1982 - A second hydro-electric plant at Papallacta to provide power for the station's shortwave broadcasts is added.[citation needed]
- 1986 - The HCJB World Radio Engineering Center (now called the HCJB Global Technology Center) was created at the Crown International facilities under the direction of David Pasechnik. The goal was to design and build HC100 (100,000-watt) shortwave transmitters for HCJB and its the ministry's contributors in the "World by 2000" challenge.[citation needed]
- 1990 - The first HC-100 (100,000-watt) transmitter goes on the air in Quito, Ecuador. Since that time eight more HC-100s were built and put into use by the World Radio Missionary Fellowship, Inc. in Ecuador, Swaziland and Australia.[citation needed]
- 1992 - A radio station in Bukavu, Zaire is "planted" by HCJB. The station used a portable FM transmitter designed and built by staff at the HCJB Engineering Center.[citation needed]
HCJB Global Technology staff members are involved in research, development, training and technical support for AM, FM and shortwave radio stations as well as satellite distribution and satellite-based Internet services. In recent years they developed station automation systems and a fixed-tuned, solar-powered SonSet radio that can be pretuned to pick up a specific Christian radio station. HCJB Global staff have been active in pioneering equipment and software for a form of digital radio broadcasting called DRM.[citation needed]
End of a broadcasting era
After nearly 80 years of shortwave broadcasting from Ecuador, Radio Station HCJB ended the remaining regional shortwave transmissions on September 30, 2009.[citation needed] The international transmitter site in Pifo was dismantled [11] to make way for the city of Quito's new airport. According to HCJB Global President Wayne Pederson, the change was made because, “the way people consume media has changed, so we have the opportunity to change to delivery systems such as satellite, AM/FM and the Internet. The closing of shortwave in Latin America is strategic because of the planting of local radio stations across the region and around the world. These stations are staffed and programmed by local Christians who can speak to the culture in their own communities.”[12] HCJB Global's focus is now on “radio planting”—assisting local Christian ministries in beginning implementing their own Christian radio ministry. Worldwide, more than 350 local stations have been assisted in this type of endeavor, including nearly 60 stations in Latin America alone. Although the historic station and transmitter sites in Ecuador will no longer operate on the shortwave bands, Shortwave broadcasts continue from HCJB Global Australia's site in Kununurra,[13] Australia and from commercial broadcast sites and partner ministry broadcast sites around the world. HCJB can still be heard on 6050 kHz from Mt. Pichincha, near Quito, with Spanish and indigenous languages of Ecuador. The double dipole (CT2/1/0.3) antenna [14]:4-5,17-18 is designed to cover only Ecuador, but the 10 Kw signal is heard worldwide from time to time.[15]
See also
References
- ↑ The Founders
- ↑ Radio Station HCJB
- ↑ "Vision to Reach the World". HCJB Global 2006
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Come Up To This Mountain, Neely, Lois - Tyndale Publishers, 1980
- ↑ Billy Graham Center Archives – Papers of Clarence Wesley Jones – Collection 349
- ↑ Raidio.com NewsArchive article on HCJB
- ↑ Preparing the Soil for Global Revival: Station HCJB's Radio Circle, 1949-59; Timothy H.B. Stomenman - March 2007
- ↑ Shortwave DX frequency guide
- ↑ Nightsounds with Bill Pearce - Easy Listening for Hard Times
- ↑ Patent information on cubical quad antenna
- ↑ Voice of the Andes Begins Antenna Removal
- ↑ HCJB Global Voice Moves Up End Date of Shortwave Broadcasts from Ecuador
- ↑ Register of Radiocommunications Licences
- ↑ http://www.itu.int/ITU-R/terrestrial/broadcast/hf/refdata/ant/antcode.pdf
- ↑ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSpAV9s3g8k
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to HCJB. |
- HCJB official sites
Coordinates: 15°47′53″S 128°41′6″E / 15.79806°S 128.68500°E
|