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WJYM

Coordinates:41°31′57″N83°33′55″W / 41.53250°N 83.56528°W /41.53250; -83.56528
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Radio station in Bowling Green, Ohio
WJYM
Broadcast areaToledo metropolitan area
Frequency730kHz
BrandingSon Life Radio
Programming
FormatChristian radio
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
December 1954; 70 years ago (1954-12)
Call sign meaning
JYMmy Swaggart Ministries (owner)
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
ClassD
Power1,000watts (day)
359 watts (night)
Translator(s)106.9MHz W295DB (Bowling Green)
Links
Public license information
Websitehttp://sonlifetv.com

WJYM (730kHz) is anAMradio stationlicensed toBowling Green, Ohio, and serving theToledo metropolitan area. It broadcasts aChristian radioformat, and is owned by theministry of notedTelevangelistJimmy Swaggart. The studios andtransmitter are on Fremont Pike (U.S. Route 20 -U.S. Route 23) near Lime City Road inLime City, Ohio.

By day, WJYM is powered at 1,000watts. But730 AM is a Mexican andCanadianclear channel frequency. So to avoid interference, at night WJYM reduces power to 359 watts. It uses adirectional antenna with a four-tower array.[1] Programming is also heard on 250-wattFM translatorW295DB at 106.9MHz.

History

[edit]

Beginnings as WHRW

[edit]

The station firstsigned on the air in December 1954; 70 years ago (1954-12).[2] The originalcall sign wasWHRW, selected as the initials of its then-owner and founder, Howard R. Ward. It was adaytimer with a power of 250 watts using two towers and required to go off the air at sunset. Ward served as the president and general manager. By the end of the 1950s, the station was given permission to increase its power to 1,000 watts, but still days only. The studios were at the transmitter facility.

Ward was famous forstunting including a fight he had withGeneral Telephone (GTE) concerning a teletype circuit which they could not provide to his station in rural Bowling Green. Ward purchased an old truck and painted "WTLG Carrier Pigeon News Service" on the side. He made a ceremony each day of driving it through the streets of Bowling Green to supposedly return his birds for dispatch of news releases out to his station from downtown. The local papers and wire services picked up on the story which embarrassed GTE. When GTE still would not budge he announced that he was giving away a free savings bond to the 10th caller to his station. He did not answer the phones during the contest and successfully locked up the GTE system in Bowling Green several times until the company obtained an injunction against him.

On July 1, 1961, Ward sold WHRW to H. Max Good.

As WMGS

[edit]

After WHRW was sold to Good, the studios and offices were moved to the Waldorf Hotel in Toledo, as the recent power increase afforded the station with full market signal penetration. The relocation to Toledo did not last long and the station returned to the Bowling Green area, taking space along Main Street. The call letters were then changed toWMGS, to reflect the positioning statement "with more good sounds", though some station insiders referred to "Max Good's Station" as the more accurate translation.

The station wassilent until it moved to the present location in Lime City. It returned to the air with 1,000 watts, days only, using four towers. The Program Director was George Mishler who also hosted middays. The morningdrive timeDJ was Roy Blair, and the afternoon host was Jim Hamilton. The music wasmiddle of the road (MOR). When the format changed tocountry music, George Mishler went to work for theVoice of America (VOA) inWashington, D.C. He ultimately became a manager of Special English programming. Jim Hamilton headed for Chicago, and Roy Blair went to Bowling Green State University to complete his B.A. in English. During this time, Roy announced for WFOB AM/FM, Fostoria and began work at WSPD AM after graduation. After WSPD AM, Roy was next heard on WJBK-TV 2, Detroit.

Under the country format, the DJs including Jim Bonnett as "Big Jim", who also was the station manager until 1966; Roger Price as "Pistol Pete" and program director from 1962 to 1966, Johnny Dauro as "Lonesome John" and manager from 1966 to 1970; Roy Blair as "Cousin Roy", George Lubgate as "Tiny Tim"; Ron Kitchen as "Ron the Dude" and program director in 1966; Lowell Thomas (Not the famous newscaster) as "L.T."; Bob Zrake as "Buffalo Bob"; Jerry Kiefer as program director in 1972; Earl Sharninghouse as "Rick Allen" and program director and Chief engineer from 1972 to 1973; Ken Robey as "Ken Roberts"; Dennis Rutherford as Chief engineer and part-time air talent in 1973; Klaus Helfers as "J.P. Jones"; and The Reverend Max Good, who preached daily.

As WJYM

[edit]

On October 14, 1976, WMGS was sold to the Jimmy Swaggart Evangelistic Association, and became WJYM "Son Life Radio." The call letters are evocative of the name "Jim", after owner Jimmy Swaggart. For many years, the station operated locally with a full staff of approximately 12. In the mid 1990s, WJYM carriedBowling Green State University football and basketball games.

By 1980, the station's on-air operations moved to its transmitter facility along Fremont Pike in Rossford, where they remained for the rest of the 20th Century. Advances made in hard-disk computer-basedbroadcast automation and the Telecommunications Act of 1996 was passed, which relieved many stations of the main studio rule that required a studio and management presence within close proximity of the community of license. At that point, on-air functions were moved to the ministry's headquarters inBaton Rouge, Louisiana. Though station signage remains outside the transmitter facility, it is, for the most part, unattended. Except for some computerized local announcements, WJYM is basically asimulcast ofWJFM, theflagship station for Jimmy Swaggart Ministries.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Radio-Translator.com/WJYM
  2. ^Broadcasting Yearbook 1957 page 205,Broadcasting & Cable

External links

[edit]
Radio stations in theGreater Toledo area
AM
FM
LPFM
Translators
Digital
NOAA
Call signs
Internet
Defunct
Other nearby regions
Ann Arbor
Cleveland
Detroit
Mid-Ohio
 Canada
Southwestern Ontario
See also
List of radio stations in Ohio

Notes
1. Operating under a "Shared Time" agreement on the same frequency.

41°31′57″N83°33′55″W / 41.53250°N 83.56528°W /41.53250; -83.56528

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