WCBR

American radio station From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WCBR (1110 AM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Richmond, Kentucky, United States, and serves the Lexington-Fayette metropolitan area. Owned by W.C.B.R. Radio, Inc., the station carries a Christian radio format with southern gospel music.[2]

BrandingChristian Broadcast Radio
Quick facts Broadcast area, Frequency ...
WCBR
Broadcast areaLexington-Fayette metropolitan area
Frequency1110 kHz
BrandingChristian Broadcast Radio
Programming
FormatChristian radio and southern gospel
AffiliationsTownhall News
Ownership
OwnerW.C.B.R. Radio, Inc.
History
First air date
March 7, 1970 (1970-03-07)
Call sign meaning
Original owner traded as "Christian Broadcasters"
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID70617
ClassD
Power340 watts (days only)
Transmitter coordinates
37°45′2.3″N 84°12′21.7″W
Translator93.7 W229CP (Richmond)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live
Websitewcbrradio.com
Close

WCBR only operates during the daytime hours;[3] its programming is relayed over low-power translator W229CP (93.7 FM) in Richmond, which operates around the clock.[4]

History

The owner, a minister, would ask each week [if] I needed my check or if I wanted to give it to the Lord. And I’d say, "I think I need the check more than the Lord does."

Gerry House, on working at WCBR[5]

On October 7, 1969, the Federal Communications Commission granted a construction permit to Lewis P. Young, trading as Christian Broadcasters, for a new daytime-only radio station in Richmond;[6] Young was a pastor at Richmond's Gardenside Christian Church.[7] From studios at Second Street and Irvine, WCBR began broadcasting on March 7, 1970; despite the licensee name, the station was secular and an ABC network affiliate.[8] In late 1971, Young sold half of the station to J. T. Parker Jr., owner of station WGOC in Kingsport, Tennessee.[7] Parker also obtained a construction permit for an FM station in Richmond, which signed on May 12, 1972, as WCBR-FM 101.7, a full-time simulcaster of the AM station, airing country music.[9] Gerry House, who later went on to radio and a songwriting career in Nashville, worked at the station as his second radio job, moving to Richmond to be with his girlfriend.[5]

Parker bought out the remaining 50 percent in WCBR in 1975[6] and then sold some interest in the WCBR stations to three local investors, including the station manager, George W. Robbins.[10] Four years later, Parker sold his remaining 50 percent in the station and the sister FM, which became a separately programmed operation as WBZF in 1976,[11] to David Lee Humes and Mark Anthony Cole, the pair's engineer and advertising consultant, for $271,000.[12] WCBR maintained a country format for most of the 1970s and early 1980s, but by the late 1980s, it had shifted to adult contemporary using programming from Satellite Music Networks,[13] and in the early 1990s, the station was a full-service adult standards outlet.[14]

WCBR adopted its present format of Southern gospel music as well as Christian teaching programs in September 1994, after two months of simulcasting the oldies on the FM frequency.[15] Humes would become the sole owner in 2008, after Robbins died.[16] WCBR itself would return to FM in 2016 when Humes bought a translator, then located in Morill to move it to Richmond to be paired with the AM station.[17]

References

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