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Broadcast area | Central Massachusetts |
Frequency | 580kHz |
Branding | NewsRadio 580/94.9 WTAG |
Programming | |
Format | News/talk |
Affiliations | |
Ownership | |
Owner |
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WSRS | |
History | |
First air date | May 1, 1924; 100 years ago (1924-05-01) |
Former call signs |
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Call sign meaning | Worcester Telegram and Gazette (former owner) |
Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 35230 |
Class | B |
Power | 5,000 watts |
Transmitter coordinates | 42°20′13.33″N71°49′13.26″W / 42.3370361°N 71.8203500°W /42.3370361; -71.8203500 |
Translator(s) | 94.9 W235AV (Tatnuck) |
Repeater(s) | 96.1 WSRS-HD2 (Worcester) |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Webcast | Listen live (viaiHeartRadio) |
Website | wtag |
WTAG (580AM) is a radio station inWorcester, Massachusetts. It is owned byiHeartMedia and airs anews/talk format. WTAG's studios are inPaxton and it broadcasts from atransmitter inHolden, Massachusetts. The transmitter operates at 5,000 watts day and night. WTAG programming issimulcast onFMtranslator W235AV at 94.9 MHz, licensed toTatnuck.[2]
WTAG's weekday program schedule includes two local shows: Jim Polito andJordan Levy. Polito's program is regionallysyndicated toWHYN inSpringfield,WHJJ inProvidence, Rhode Island,WXKS in Boston,[3] andWXTK onCape Cod.[4] WTAG also airs nationally syndicated talk shows fromPremiere Networks, iHeartMedia's programming subsidiary:The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show,Sean Hannity,America Now with Buck Sexton andCoast to Coast AM withGeorge Noory;Glenn Beck Radio Program fromTheBlaze Network is also aired. Weekends feature shows on money, law, house repair, gardening and restaurants, as well as repeats from some weekday shows. WTAG is aFox News Radio affiliate.
WTAG's history began on May 1, 1924, when the C. T. Sherer Co., aWorcester department store, received thelicense for WDBH. WDBH began operation May 24, 1924, with a power of 100 watts on afrequency of 268 meters (1120 kHz). The call letters was assigned by theCommerce Department as the next available block of sequential letters. The station used a play on words and represented that they stood for "We Do Business Honestly".
The call letters were changed to WCTS in March 1925. Its power went up to 500 watts in April 1925. WCTS joined theWEAF network run byAT&T about the same time.
The station was purchased by Theodore Ellis, then the owner of theWorcester Telegram & Gazette, on September 23, 1925. The call letters were changed to WTAG in October 1925 and have not changed since. Ellis sold the newspapers and radio station in December 1925 toHarry Stoddard and George F. Booth (1960 recipient of theYankee Quill Award). Their families would own the station until 1987.
A studio was constructed on the fourth floor of the newspaper building at 18 Franklin Street. Broadcasting began there in May 1926. The transmitter was still at Sherer's department store on Front Street. The transmitter was a Western Electric IB and the antenna an inverted L.
In July 1926 thewavelength was changed to 545.1 meters (550 kHz). It remained there until June 15, 1927, when the wavelength was changed to 516.9 meters (580 kHz). It has remained on 580 kHz ever since.
WTAG was a charter member of theNBC Radio Network. It carried their first broadcast November 15, 1926.
From 1927 until 1934 the station ran various power levels on 580 kHz, finally ending up with 500 watts from a T antenna at 20 Franklin Street, the T&G building. An RCA 1-B transmitter was put on the air in 1931 and was used occasionally until the mid-1960s.
Limited by the downtown location, a site was located that would allow for construction of towers. A farm on Shrewsbury Street in Holden, about 5 miles (8.0 km) north of the center of Worcester, was purchased in 1934. Construction of a new transmitting facility was begun in 1935. On February 2, 1937, WTAG began transmitting with a power of 1000 watts using a three towerdirectional antenna system. This transmitter site has been in continuous use since that time. The transmitter used was an RCA 1-D which was kept until 1977.
On September 21, 1938, the1938 New England hurricane leveled all three towers between 5:00 and 5:20 pm. WTAG operated from the 20 Franklin Street location until May 19, 1939, when the replacement of all three towers was completed. The replacement towers, self-supported and 375 feet (114 m) tall built by theBlaw-Knox company, are still in use today.
WTAG's master control and studios were substantially renovated in 1939. The acoustics of the studio were much improved and theater seating allowed for an audience for live programming. The custom RCAmixing console was one of the largest built by RCA for a radio station. WTAG had its own orchestra and originated many music and dramatic shows from studio A.
The station's daytime power was increased to 5,000 watts on April 9, 1940. Nighttime operation with 5,000 watts began January 2, 1942. Two additional Blaw-Knox towers were added to allow 5 kW directional night time operation. The five towers at the Holden site survived the1953 Worcester tornado. However, one of the towers was lost toHurricane Carol in 1954. The nighttime directional pattern was reworked to use the four remaining towers. The fallen one was never replaced. Those four towers are still in use today.
WTAG's affiliation with NBC ended on April 5, 1943, when the station joinedCBS, replacingWORC (which moved to theBlue Network); the Worcester area would thereafter receive NBC's programming viaWBZ in Boston and WBZA in Springfield.[5] On December 31, 1958, WTAG announced that it would leaveCBS Radio in June 1959 over the station's opposition to the network's "Program Consolidation Plan";[6] it was the third station to announce its departure from CBS (afterWJR in Detroit andWSAN inAllentown, Pennsylvania)[6] out of an eventual 20 stations,[7] and had been one of eight stations to oppose the plan upon its announcement in October 1958.[8] WTAG would operate as an independent until July 1, 1963, when it rejoined NBC Radio.[9]
The station was the radio home of theBoston Red Sox in the Worcester area for forty years, from 1967 to 2006. The Red Sox' Worcester affiliation moved toWVEI andWCRN in 2007.
In 1987, after selling theTelegram & Gazette to theowners of theSan Francisco Chronicle, the Stoddard and Booth families sold WTAG to the Knight Quality Group for $2.8 million.[10] The sale put WTAG under the same ownership asWSRS;[11] that station had, as WTAG-FM, itself been sold by theTelegram & Gazette to Knight Quality in 1963.[12] By 1989, WTAG was one of only four original NBC affiliates to still be affiliated with the radio network.[13]
Knight Quality Stations announced the sale of its eight New England radio stations, including WTAG and WSRS, to Capstar Broadcasting Partners in April 1997;[14] upon assuming control in January 1998, the stations were operated by Capstar's Atlantic Star Communications subsidiary.[15] Capstar and Chancellor Media announced in August 1998 that they would merge (Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst was a major shareholder in both companies);[16] upon the merger's completion in July 1999, the combined company was named AMFM Inc.[17] AMFM was in turn acquired by Clear Channel Communications (forerunner to iHeartMedia) in a deal announced on October 4, 1999,[18] and completed in August 2000.[19]
WTAG, which had rejoined CBS in 1993, ended its 14-year affiliation with the network and joined Fox News Radio in February 2007. Over 100 other Clear Channel stations had already been affiliated with Fox News Radio since 2005.[20]
In 1945, WTAG received theAlfred I. duPont Award "for outstanding public service in encouraging, promoting and developing American ideals of freedom, and for loyal, devoted service to the nation and to the community" and thePeabody Award "for outstanding contribution to the welfare of the community it serves".[21]
Call sign | Frequency | City of license | FID | ERP (W) | HAAT | Class | Transmitter coordinates | FCC info |
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W235AV | 94.9 FM | Tatnuck, Massachusetts | 138657 | 230 | 232.1 m (761 ft) | D | 42°18′34.3″N71°54′11.3″W / 42.309528°N 71.903139°W /42.309528; -71.903139 (W235AV) | LMS |