WHBC (AM)
Broadcast area | Canton, Ohio |
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Branding | News/Talk 1480 WHBC |
Frequency | 1480kHz |
First air date | March 9, 1925 |
Format | News/Talk |
Power |
15,000 watts (daytime) 5,000 watts (nighttime) |
Class | B |
Callsign meaning | none, sequentially assigned |
Owner | NextMedia |
Website | www.whbc.com |
WHBC is an AM radio station in Canton, Ohio operating on 1480 kHz and featuring a news/talk format supplemented with sports play-by-play in the evenings and weekends. The station is one of about 40 stations in the country that have split site transmitters—one site for daytime broadcasting and a different site for nighttime broadcasting. WHBC's daytime transmitter is located northeast of Canton off Diamond Street near Middlebranch Road. WHBC's night-time transmitter is located southwest of Canton off Gooding Street near the intersection of Sherman Church Avenue and Fohl Street. Its studios and offices are located in the historic WHBC building at 550 Market Avenue South in downtown Canton, where they have been for over 60 years.
History
WHBC is the oldest radio station in Canton. The license for the station was granted on February 13, 1925 to Father Edward P. Graham and the St. John Catholic Church . WHBC began broadcasting on March 9, 1925 at 1180 kHz with 100 watts. It was the first Catholic radio station on the air in the U.S., as WLWL in New York was not licensed until August 1925 . By the middle of 1927 the station had moved to 1270 kHz. Broadcasting had moved to 1200 kHz by the middle of 1930.
In 1936 the station was sold to secular interests, when it was purchased by Brush-Moore Newspapers, then owners of Canton's newspaper, The Repository. The station was sold in 1939 to a business group consisting of the Vodrey family of East Liverpool and the Boyd family of Portsmouth. The families organized ownership of the station under the name of the Ohio Broadcasting Company. They obtained approval to increase power to 250 watts daytime, while maintaining 100 watts at night. The station had no network affiliation until 1940 or 1941 when it became a Mutual affiliate. It became an ABC affiliate later in the 1940s . WHBC would remain with ABC Radio until June 22, 2009, when it switched to Fox News Radio.
On March 29, 1941, when most stations in the U.S. changed frequencies due to the NARBA, WHBC moved from 1200 to 1230 kHz. It moved to its present frequency of 1480 kHz on June 4, 1944, when WGAR AM in Cleveland moved from 1480 to 1220. The station obtained an FM license in 1948 and established WHBC-FM on 94.1 MHz which still operates using those call letters.
On September 26, 1967, the ownership was reorganized as WHBC, Inc., which changed its name to Beaverkettle Company on September 13, 1972. The Vodreys purchased WFIR in Roanoke, Virginia in 1969; they sold the station eight years later. In June 2000, the family-owned Beaverkettle Company sold WHBC and WHBC-FM to NextMedia for more than 42 million dollars.
,
ending 61 years of Vodrey family ownership of the stations.
On March 26, 2007, WHBC ended its long-running Full Service format in favor of a full-time news/talk format, eliminating its remaining oldies-formatted dayparts. The station also broadcasts a show resurrected a staple from the '70s called Tradio, where listeners can call in and sell items for sale.
The station is also an affiliate for the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Cleveland Browns and the Cleveland Indians as well as The Ohio State University football and basketball.
WHBC-AM was one of the first, if not the first, radio station to stream live play-by-play coverage of the Massillon Tigers and Canton McKinley high school football game over the Internet during the 1997 football season. People from all parts of the United States and parts of Europe were able to listen to the game live via the Internet.[1]
References
- ↑ In Tune Magazine, Spring 1998, Volume 3, Issue 1
External links
- Query the FCC's AM station database for WHBC
- Radio-Locator Information on WHBC
- Query Nielsen Audio's AM station database for WHBC
- Aerial photo of WHBC's daytime transmitter from Google Local
- Aerial photo of WHBC's nighttime transmitter from Google Local
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Coordinates: 40°53′51″N 81°19′10″W / 40.89750°N 81.31944°W