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Wikipedia

WDZ

WDZ (1050 AM) is a commercial radio station, licensed to Decatur, Illinois. It broadcasts a sports radio format and calls itself "Fox Sports 1050." It is owned by the Neuhoff Corporation, which also owns four other local radio stations, WCZQ, WDZQ, WSOY and WSOY-FM. Studios and offices are located on North Water Street. It is one of the oldest radio stations in Illinois, and one of the few that still carry a three-letter call sign along with WGN and WLS Chicago.

WDZ
Broadcast areaMacon County, Illinois
Frequency1050 kHz
BrandingFox Sports 1050 AM Decatur
Programming
FormatSports
AffiliationsFox Sports Radio
Chicago Cubs Radio Network
Chicago Bears Radio Network
Millikin Big Blue football
Ownership
Owner
  • Neuhoff Corp.
  • (Neuhoff Media Decatur, LLC)
WCZQ, WDZQ, WSOY, WSOY-FM
History
First air date
March 17, 1921; 102 years ago (1921-03-17) (as 9JR in Tuscola, Illinois)[1]
April 5, 1922 (1922-04-05) (as WDZ)[2]
Call sign meaning
none (randomly assigned)
Technical information
Facility ID53348
ClassB
Power1,000 watts day
250 watts night
Transmitter coordinates
39°48′54″N 89°00′09″W / 39.81500°N 89.00250°W / 39.81500; -89.00250
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitenowdecatur.com/fox-sports-1050-am-home/

WDZ operates on 1050 kHz, a clear channel frequency reserved for Mexico. By day, WDZ is powered at 1,000 watts non-directional. But it must reduce power to 250 watts at night so it doesn't interfere with other stations on the frequency. WDZ is diplexed (i.e., shares the vertical radiator) with co-owned 1340 WSOY. The transmitter site is on St. Louis Bridge Road at Wesley Road in Decatur.[3]

Programming edit

WDZ is a network affiliate of Fox Sports Radio. It also airs Chicago Cubs baseball and Chicago Bears football, as well as local high school football games and Millikin University football.

History edit

9JR edit

Although WDZ was first licensed as a broadcasting station in early 1922, this was actually a relicensing and continuation of operations begun under an amateur station license, 9JR,[4] issued to James L. Bush a year earlier. Some WDZ publicity calls itself the oldest radio station in Illinois, starting as an experimental agricultural station in 1917 (although WBBM in Chicago traces its history to 1911). However evidence is lacking for a pre-1921 establishment date. Clyde E. Wiley later claimed that, assuming a 1921 start, WDZ was "the second broadcasting station in the country, (some say third, but what difference does it make now?)".[5]

James Bush was a commodity broker who operated the James Bush Grain Company in Tuscola, Illinois. At the start of the 1920s the company received price quotations by private telegraph wire from the Chicago Board of Trade. Clyde E. Wiley was hired as a telegraph operator to receive the reports, which were then individually telephoned to various local grain elevators that might be interested in selling their holding. Wiley also had extensive experience as a radio operator,[5] and was aware of recent advances in vacuum-tube radio technology that made audio transmissions practical. He proposed that the company establish a station to simultaneously distribute grain price information to all interested parties, and thus avoid the complexity and cost of individual telephone calls. Bush agreed with this idea, and a new organization, The Tuscola Radio Supply Station, was formed to conduct the broadcasts as well as sell and install radio receivers.[6] The first transmitter, installed by Wiley, had a power rating of 10 watts.[7]

The new service debuted on March 17, 1921,[8][1] and it is thought that this was the first radio station to provide this kind of service. Initially there were only two customers: elevators at Dorans, near Mattoon, and on the Illinois Central Railroad branch line in Decatur.[7] Curtis Marsh, then a 14-year-old office boy, later reported that he was drafted to make the announcements. The first organized programming consisted of five- to ten-minute blocks every half-hour, each consisting of a phonograph record that was played to aid tuning the receivers, followed by a gong sounded as an alert signal, then the market reports. After this the station remained silent until the start of the next report.[8]

A review by Clyde E. Wiley in The Grain Dealers Journal that appeared at the end of 1921 explained the new service as: "Mr. Bush, in furnishing the conditions to us, has in mind only the reduction of telephone tolls, labor and so forth. He has no means of knowing when a person receives the market through us and gives his grain business to another firm. Our service is like newspaper service in that respect. Naturally, however, he expects that most of the people receiving markets through us will at least give him the benefit of some of their trade, and regards the system as an up-to-date advertising feature. The Tuscola Radio Supply Station will be glad at any time to take up the matter of installing similar systems at other points."[6]

In late 1921 there were an estimated six county elevators and banks that had installed radios to receive the quote broadcasts. One participant calculated that there was a one-time cost of approximately $258 to install a high quality receiver, which then could pick up the half-hourly reports at no additional cost. This compared favorably to the $18 per month that Western Union charged for its more limited telegraphed grain and live-stock report services. In addition, the radio broadcasts were used by the Bush company to confirm executed sales for its clients, using a code number to insure confidentiality.[9] After the service gained popularity, Western Union and Postal Telegraph tried to have James Bush expelled from the Chicago Board of Trade, on the grounds that he was infringing on what they claimed were their exclusive rights to distribute prices. But, after a review, the Board sided with Bush.[7]

The station soon added some general entertainment programming. A September 10, 1921 letter from Clyde E. Wiley to an electrical supplier reported that "Twice each week we broadcast phonograph music, and in each case the big unit is run for one hour without stop."[10] In November, the station's market report schedule was reported to start at 9:30 a.m., running subsequent half hours after that until the final report at 1:00 p.m.[11]

WDZ edit

 
Tuscola Radio Supply Station advertisement (1922)[12]

Beginning in late 1912, radio communication in the United States was regulated by the Department of Commerce. Initially there were no formal standards for which stations could make broadcasts intended for the general public, and after World War One stations under a variety of license classes, most commonly Amateur and Experimental, began making regularly scheduled programs on a limited basis. In order to provide common standards for the service, the Commerce Department issued a regulation effective December 1, 1921 that stated that broadcasting stations would now have to hold a Limited Commercial license that authorized operation on two designated broadcasting wavelengths: 360 meters (833 kHz) for "entertainment", and 485 meters (619 kHz) for "market and weather reports".[13] On April 5, 1922 a broadcasting station license with the randomly assigned call letters WDZ was issued to James L. Bush, for operation on 360 meters.[2] In 1923 the number of available operating frequencies was greatly expanded, and WDZ was reassigned to broadcast on 1080 kHz,[14] although its power initially remained at 10 watts.[15]

Following the establishment of the Federal Radio Commission (FRC), stations were initially issued a series of temporary authorizations starting on May 3, 1927.[16] In addition, they were informed that if they wanted to continue operating, they needed to file a formal license application by January 15, 1928, as the first step in determining whether they met the new "public interest, convenience, or necessity" standard.[17] On May 25, 1928, the FRC issued General Order 32, which notified 164 stations, including WDZ, that "From an examination of your application for future license it does not find that public interest, convenience, or necessity would be served by granting it."[18] However, the station successfully convinced the commission that it should remain licensed.

On November 11, 1928, the FRC made a major reallocation of transmitting frequencies under the provisions of its General Order 40, and WDZ was shifted to 1070 kHz, sharing this assignment with WCAZ in Carthage, Illinois. Moreover, this was a "clear channel" frequency, and WDZ and WCAZ were limited to daytime-only operation in order to eliminate any potential interference to the nighttime signal of the frequency's primary occupant, WTAM in Cleveland, Ohio.[19] In 1937 WDZ moved to 1020 kHz and raised its power from 100 to 250 watts. It no longer had to share transmitting hours with WCAZ, but was still restricted to daylight hours, in order to protect the frequency's "clear channel" station, KYW in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. WDZ's power was increased to 1,000 watts in 1939 with a new 252-foot (77 m) tower.

During this time, WDZ aired remote broadcasts that were unique for a rural station. The station started the use of remote broadcasting equipment which included a truck called the "WDZ White Relay Truck",[20] equipped with a 100-watt transmitter to relay broadcasts from area locations, and some two-watt, battery operated transmitters that could be worn on the backs of assistants when a program originated from remote sites.[21]

 
Rhythm Riders: L to R 'skinny' Masseneli, John Samuel Cox, Cecil Wright, posing with WDZ truck, circa 1939.

The Federal Communications Commission took over regulation of U.S. radio stations in 1934. In 1941 the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA) resulted in another major reallocation of transmitting frequencies, and WDZ was moved to 1050 kHz, where it has remained ever since. In 1949, WDZ moved from Tuscola to Decatur, although a remote studio was maintained in Tuscola until 1958.[8] This relocation allowed for the eventual allocation of a station on 1080 kHz, WNWI in Oak Lawn, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago.

Under the 1941 NARBA agreement, 1050 kHz was designated a Mexican clear channel frequency, assigned to XEG in Monterrey. American stations operating on Mexican clear channel frequencies were restricted to 1,000 watts, daytime-only, until the "Rio" treaty took effect in the late 1980s. Afterward, it was a simple matter for WDZ to add night operations with the maximum power permitted, 250 watts. Anything more than 1,000 watts days and 250 watts nights very likely would require installation of an expensive directional antenna system.

On March 31, 2008, the station switched from an Urban Adult Contemporary music format branded as "Magic 1050" to an all-sports format as part of the Fox Sports Radio network. Within a year the station switched programming from Fox to ESPN Radio.[citation needed]

On January 4, 2021, WDZ changed affiliations back to Fox Sports Radio as Fox Sports 1050 AM Decatur.

WDZ and its sister stations 105.5 WCZQ in Monticello and 95.1 WDZQ, 1340 WSOY, and 102.9 WSOY-FM in Decatur, were sold to Neuhoff Media in February 2009.[22]

Smiley Burnette edit

Smiley Burnette started his entertainment career on WDZ in 1929. He was hired after he came to the station to do an advertising spot for the furniture store where he worked. Burnette ran all aspects of the radio station from being the disc jockey and music director to doing janitorial work. He was known to read the comics from the day's newspaper using different voices and sound effects, as much of his audience were children.

Smiley (real name Lester) got his nickname from a character in Mark Twain's "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County", which he was reading on the air. He initially used "Smiley" as a name for a character in a new children's program he was creating for the station but it later became his nickname, as did the name "Frog". He then left WDZ to work with Gene Autry on Chicago's WLS in December 1933.[23] Two decades later Smiley's wife, Dallas wrote: "Smiley's first employers were Mr. and Mrs. James L. Bush, owners of a grain office in Tuscola and then owners of WDZ, third oldest radio station in the country. Mommie and Uncle Jim, as Smiley and I call them, are like a second set of parents to us and we visit them whenever possible in Tuscola or in Florida in the winter or Wisconsin in the summer."[24]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Radio stations 40 or more years old in 1962" (WDZ Decatur, Ill. entry), Broadcasting magazine, May 14, 1962, page 126.
  2. ^ a b "New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, May 1, 1922, page 5. Limited Commercial license, serial #606, issued April 5, 1922 to James L. Bush for a three month period for operation on the 360 meter wavelength.
  3. ^ Radio-Locator.com/WDZ
  4. ^ "Ninth District", Amateur Radio Stations of the United States (June 30, 1921 edition), page 191. The "9" in 9JR's call sign indicated that the station was located in the ninth Radio Inspection district, while the fact that "J" fell in the range A-W meant that it was operating under a standard amateur license.
  5. ^ a b "I like it—HERE!" by Clyde E. Wiley, The (Decatur, Illinois) Staley Journal, September 1946, pages 12-17 (staleymuseum.com)
  6. ^ a b "Broadcasting Market Information by Radiotelephone" by Clyde E. Wiley, The Grain Dealers Journal, December 25, 1921, page 846.
  7. ^ a b c "Modern Grain Price Broadcasting Originated in Tuscola Man's Office", Decatur (Illinois) Herald, June 4, 1953, page 24.
  8. ^ a b c "Grain elevator audience crucial to early radio" by Robert Lee Zimmer (AP), Jacksonville (Illinois) Journal Courier, July 16, 1978, page 35.
  9. ^ "Receiving Market Quotations by Wireless Telephone", The Grain Dealers Journal, December 25, 1921, page 846.
  10. ^ The Ray-Di-Co Organization (advertisement), QST magazine, November 1921, page 124.
  11. ^ "Install Wireless", Decatur (Illinois) Herald, November 20, 1921, page 20.
  12. ^ Tuscola Radio Supply Station (advertisement), Decatur (Illinois) Review, August 27, 1922, page 20.
  13. ^ "Amendments to Regulations", Radio Service Bulletin, January 3, 1922, page 10.
  14. ^ "Alterations and Corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, June 1, 1923, page 11.
  15. ^ "Alterations and Corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, September 1, 1923, page 9.
  16. ^ "List of broadcasting stations issued temporary permits", Radio Service Bulletin, April 30, 1927, pages 6-14.
  17. ^ "Extension of Broadcasting Station Licenses", Radio Service Bulletin, December 31, 1927, page 7.
  18. ^ "Appendix F (2): Letter to and list of stations included in General Order No. 32, issued May 25, 1928", Second Annual Report of the Federal Radio Commission for the Year Ended June 30, 1928, Together With Supplemental Report for the Period From July 1, 1928 to September 30, 1928, pages 146-149.
  19. ^ "Broadcasting Stations", Commercial and Government Radio Stations of the United States (June 30, 1928 edition), page 169.
  20. ^ Perry, Stephen D. (2001) "Securing Programming on Live Local Radio: WDZ Reaches Rural Illinois 1929-1939", Journal of Radio & Audio Media, 8: 2, 347 — 371
  21. ^ Cassens, G. (1936, March 8). Letter to Lynnita Sommer, Museum Director. Correspondence file, WDZ Collection, Douglas County Museum, Tuscola, Illinois.
  22. ^ Consummation Notice (Form 905) (application #101297640), FCC file number BAL-20081219ADP, 24 February 2009. Retrieved 2010-11-03.
  23. ^ "Smiley Burnette", Roanoke Rapids (North Carolina) Herald, February 14, 1946, Section B, page 4,
  24. ^ The Smiley Burnettes' Cook Book by Dallas and Smiley Burnette, 1953, pages 14-15.

External links edit

  • WDZ Official website
  • WDZ in the FCC AM station database
  • WDZ in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
  • FCC History cards for WDZ (covering 1927-1979)
  • WDZ Radio 'The Little Station from Tuscola' Station history by Howard B. Taylor, Douglasville, Georgia (learningabe.info)
  • Smiley Burnette History — Smiley Burnette official web site (smileyburnette.org)

websphere, developer, zseries, system, 1050, commercial, radio, station, licensed, decatur, illinois, broadcasts, sports, radio, format, calls, itself, sports, 1050, owned, neuhoff, corporation, which, also, owns, four, other, local, radio, stations, wczq, wso. For the WebSphere Developer for zSeries WDz see IBM System z WDZ 1050 AM is a commercial radio station licensed to Decatur Illinois It broadcasts a sports radio format and calls itself Fox Sports 1050 It is owned by the Neuhoff Corporation which also owns four other local radio stations WCZQ WDZQ WSOY and WSOY FM Studios and offices are located on North Water Street It is one of the oldest radio stations in Illinois and one of the few that still carry a three letter call sign along with WGN and WLS Chicago WDZDecatur IllinoisBroadcast areaMacon County IllinoisFrequency1050 kHzBrandingFox Sports 1050 AM DecaturProgrammingFormatSportsAffiliationsFox Sports RadioChicago Cubs Radio NetworkChicago Bears Radio NetworkMillikin Big Blue footballOwnershipOwnerNeuhoff Corp Neuhoff Media Decatur LLC Sister stationsWCZQ WDZQ WSOY WSOY FMHistoryFirst air dateMarch 17 1921 102 years ago 1921 03 17 as 9JR in Tuscola Illinois 1 April 5 1922 1922 04 05 as WDZ 2 Call sign meaningnone randomly assigned Technical informationFacility ID53348ClassBPower1 000 watts day250 watts nightTransmitter coordinates39 48 54 N 89 00 09 W 39 81500 N 89 00250 W 39 81500 89 00250LinksWebcastListen LiveWebsitenowdecatur wbr com wbr fox sports 1050 am home wbr WDZ operates on 1050 kHz a clear channel frequency reserved for Mexico By day WDZ is powered at 1 000 watts non directional But it must reduce power to 250 watts at night so it doesn t interfere with other stations on the frequency WDZ is diplexed i e shares the vertical radiator with co owned 1340 WSOY The transmitter site is on St Louis Bridge Road at Wesley Road in Decatur 3 Contents 1 Programming 2 History 2 1 9JR 2 2 WDZ 2 3 Smiley Burnette 3 References 4 External linksProgramming editWDZ is a network affiliate of Fox Sports Radio It also airs Chicago Cubs baseball and Chicago Bears football as well as local high school football games and Millikin University football History edit9JR edit Although WDZ was first licensed as a broadcasting station in early 1922 this was actually a relicensing and continuation of operations begun under an amateur station license 9JR 4 issued to James L Bush a year earlier Some WDZ publicity calls itself the oldest radio station in Illinois starting as an experimental agricultural station in 1917 although WBBM in Chicago traces its history to 1911 However evidence is lacking for a pre 1921 establishment date Clyde E Wiley later claimed that assuming a 1921 start WDZ was the second broadcasting station in the country some say third but what difference does it make now 5 James Bush was a commodity broker who operated the James Bush Grain Company in Tuscola Illinois At the start of the 1920s the company received price quotations by private telegraph wire from the Chicago Board of Trade Clyde E Wiley was hired as a telegraph operator to receive the reports which were then individually telephoned to various local grain elevators that might be interested in selling their holding Wiley also had extensive experience as a radio operator 5 and was aware of recent advances in vacuum tube radio technology that made audio transmissions practical He proposed that the company establish a station to simultaneously distribute grain price information to all interested parties and thus avoid the complexity and cost of individual telephone calls Bush agreed with this idea and a new organization The Tuscola Radio Supply Station was formed to conduct the broadcasts as well as sell and install radio receivers 6 The first transmitter installed by Wiley had a power rating of 10 watts 7 The new service debuted on March 17 1921 8 1 and it is thought that this was the first radio station to provide this kind of service Initially there were only two customers elevators at Dorans near Mattoon and on the Illinois Central Railroad branch line in Decatur 7 Curtis Marsh then a 14 year old office boy later reported that he was drafted to make the announcements The first organized programming consisted of five to ten minute blocks every half hour each consisting of a phonograph record that was played to aid tuning the receivers followed by a gong sounded as an alert signal then the market reports After this the station remained silent until the start of the next report 8 A review by Clyde E Wiley in The Grain Dealers Journal that appeared at the end of 1921 explained the new service as Mr Bush in furnishing the conditions to us has in mind only the reduction of telephone tolls labor and so forth He has no means of knowing when a person receives the market through us and gives his grain business to another firm Our service is like newspaper service in that respect Naturally however he expects that most of the people receiving markets through us will at least give him the benefit of some of their trade and regards the system as an up to date advertising feature The Tuscola Radio Supply Station will be glad at any time to take up the matter of installing similar systems at other points 6 In late 1921 there were an estimated six county elevators and banks that had installed radios to receive the quote broadcasts One participant calculated that there was a one time cost of approximately 258 to install a high quality receiver which then could pick up the half hourly reports at no additional cost This compared favorably to the 18 per month that Western Union charged for its more limited telegraphed grain and live stock report services In addition the radio broadcasts were used by the Bush company to confirm executed sales for its clients using a code number to insure confidentiality 9 After the service gained popularity Western Union and Postal Telegraph tried to have James Bush expelled from the Chicago Board of Trade on the grounds that he was infringing on what they claimed were their exclusive rights to distribute prices But after a review the Board sided with Bush 7 The station soon added some general entertainment programming A September 10 1921 letter from Clyde E Wiley to an electrical supplier reported that Twice each week we broadcast phonograph music and in each case the big unit is run for one hour without stop 10 In November the station s market report schedule was reported to start at 9 30 a m running subsequent half hours after that until the final report at 1 00 p m 11 WDZ edit nbsp Tuscola Radio Supply Station advertisement 1922 12 Beginning in late 1912 radio communication in the United States was regulated by the Department of Commerce Initially there were no formal standards for which stations could make broadcasts intended for the general public and after World War One stations under a variety of license classes most commonly Amateur and Experimental began making regularly scheduled programs on a limited basis In order to provide common standards for the service the Commerce Department issued a regulation effective December 1 1921 that stated that broadcasting stations would now have to hold a Limited Commercial license that authorized operation on two designated broadcasting wavelengths 360 meters 833 kHz for entertainment and 485 meters 619 kHz for market and weather reports 13 On April 5 1922 a broadcasting station license with the randomly assigned call letters WDZ was issued to James L Bush for operation on 360 meters 2 In 1923 the number of available operating frequencies was greatly expanded and WDZ was reassigned to broadcast on 1080 kHz 14 although its power initially remained at 10 watts 15 Following the establishment of the Federal Radio Commission FRC stations were initially issued a series of temporary authorizations starting on May 3 1927 16 In addition they were informed that if they wanted to continue operating they needed to file a formal license application by January 15 1928 as the first step in determining whether they met the new public interest convenience or necessity standard 17 On May 25 1928 the FRC issued General Order 32 which notified 164 stations including WDZ that From an examination of your application for future license it does not find that public interest convenience or necessity would be served by granting it 18 However the station successfully convinced the commission that it should remain licensed On November 11 1928 the FRC made a major reallocation of transmitting frequencies under the provisions of its General Order 40 and WDZ was shifted to 1070 kHz sharing this assignment with WCAZ in Carthage Illinois Moreover this was a clear channel frequency and WDZ and WCAZ were limited to daytime only operation in order to eliminate any potential interference to the nighttime signal of the frequency s primary occupant WTAM in Cleveland Ohio 19 In 1937 WDZ moved to 1020 kHz and raised its power from 100 to 250 watts It no longer had to share transmitting hours with WCAZ but was still restricted to daylight hours in order to protect the frequency s clear channel station KYW in Philadelphia Pennsylvania WDZ s power was increased to 1 000 watts in 1939 with a new 252 foot 77 m tower During this time WDZ aired remote broadcasts that were unique for a rural station The station started the use of remote broadcasting equipment which included a truck called the WDZ White Relay Truck 20 equipped with a 100 watt transmitter to relay broadcasts from area locations and some two watt battery operated transmitters that could be worn on the backs of assistants when a program originated from remote sites 21 nbsp Rhythm Riders L to R skinny Masseneli John Samuel Cox Cecil Wright posing with WDZ truck circa 1939 The Federal Communications Commission took over regulation of U S radio stations in 1934 In 1941 the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement NARBA resulted in another major reallocation of transmitting frequencies and WDZ was moved to 1050 kHz where it has remained ever since In 1949 WDZ moved from Tuscola to Decatur although a remote studio was maintained in Tuscola until 1958 8 This relocation allowed for the eventual allocation of a station on 1080 kHz WNWI in Oak Lawn Illinois a suburb of Chicago Under the 1941 NARBA agreement 1050 kHz was designated a Mexican clear channel frequency assigned to XEG in Monterrey American stations operating on Mexican clear channel frequencies were restricted to 1 000 watts daytime only until the Rio treaty took effect in the late 1980s Afterward it was a simple matter for WDZ to add night operations with the maximum power permitted 250 watts Anything more than 1 000 watts days and 250 watts nights very likely would require installation of an expensive directional antenna system On March 31 2008 the station switched from an Urban Adult Contemporary music format branded as Magic 1050 to an all sports format as part of the Fox Sports Radio network Within a year the station switched programming from Fox to ESPN Radio citation needed On January 4 2021 WDZ changed affiliations back to Fox Sports Radio as Fox Sports 1050 AM Decatur WDZ and its sister stations 105 5 WCZQ in Monticello and 95 1 WDZQ 1340 WSOY and 102 9 WSOY FM in Decatur were sold to Neuhoff Media in February 2009 22 Smiley Burnette edit Smiley Burnette started his entertainment career on WDZ in 1929 He was hired after he came to the station to do an advertising spot for the furniture store where he worked Burnette ran all aspects of the radio station from being the disc jockey and music director to doing janitorial work He was known to read the comics from the day s newspaper using different voices and sound effects as much of his audience were children Smiley real name Lester got his nickname from a character in Mark Twain s The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County which he was reading on the air He initially used Smiley as a name for a character in a new children s program he was creating for the station but it later became his nickname as did the name Frog He then left WDZ to work with Gene Autry on Chicago s WLS in December 1933 23 Two decades later Smiley s wife Dallas wrote Smiley s first employers were Mr and Mrs James L Bush owners of a grain office in Tuscola and then owners of WDZ third oldest radio station in the country Mommie and Uncle Jim as Smiley and I call them are like a second set of parents to us and we visit them whenever possible in Tuscola or in Florida in the winter or Wisconsin in the summer 24 References edit a b Radio stations 40 or more years old in 1962 WDZ Decatur Ill entry Broadcasting magazine May 14 1962 page 126 a b New Stations Radio Service Bulletin May 1 1922 page 5 Limited Commercial license serial 606 issued April 5 1922 to James L Bush for a three month period for operation on the 360 meter wavelength Radio Locator com WDZ Ninth District Amateur Radio Stations of the United States June 30 1921 edition page 191 The 9 in 9JR s call sign indicated that the station was located in the ninth Radio Inspection district while the fact that J fell in the range A W meant that it was operating under a standard amateur license a b I like it HERE by Clyde E Wiley The Decatur Illinois Staley Journal September 1946 pages 12 17 staleymuseum com a b Broadcasting Market Information by Radiotelephone by Clyde E Wiley The Grain Dealers Journal December 25 1921 page 846 a b c Modern Grain Price Broadcasting Originated in Tuscola Man s Office Decatur Illinois Herald June 4 1953 page 24 a b c Grain elevator audience crucial to early radio by Robert Lee Zimmer AP Jacksonville Illinois Journal Courier July 16 1978 page 35 Receiving Market Quotations by Wireless Telephone The Grain Dealers Journal December 25 1921 page 846 The Ray Di Co Organization advertisement QST magazine November 1921 page 124 Install Wireless Decatur Illinois Herald November 20 1921 page 20 Tuscola Radio Supply Station advertisement Decatur Illinois Review August 27 1922 page 20 Amendments to Regulations Radio Service Bulletin January 3 1922 page 10 Alterations and Corrections Radio Service Bulletin June 1 1923 page 11 Alterations and Corrections Radio Service Bulletin September 1 1923 page 9 List of broadcasting stations issued temporary permits Radio Service Bulletin April 30 1927 pages 6 14 Extension of Broadcasting Station Licenses Radio Service Bulletin December 31 1927 page 7 Appendix F 2 Letter to and list of stations included in General Order No 32 issued May 25 1928 Second Annual Report of the Federal Radio Commission for the Year Ended June 30 1928 Together With Supplemental Report for the Period From July 1 1928 to September 30 1928 pages 146 149 Broadcasting Stations Commercial and Government Radio Stations of the United States June 30 1928 edition page 169 Perry Stephen D 2001 Securing Programming on Live Local Radio WDZ Reaches Rural Illinois 1929 1939 Journal of Radio amp Audio Media 8 2 347 371 Cassens G 1936 March 8 Letter to Lynnita Sommer Museum Director Correspondence file WDZ Collection Douglas County Museum Tuscola Illinois Consummation Notice Form 905 application 101297640 FCC file number BAL 20081219ADP 24 February 2009 Retrieved 2010 11 03 Smiley Burnette Roanoke Rapids North Carolina Herald February 14 1946 Section B page 4 The Smiley Burnettes Cook Book by Dallas and Smiley Burnette 1953 pages 14 15 External links editWDZ Official website WDZ in the FCC AM station database WDZ in Nielsen Audio s AM station database FCC History cards for WDZ covering 1927 1979 WDZ Radio The Little Station from Tuscola Station history by Howard B Taylor Douglasville Georgia learningabe info Smiley Burnette History Smiley Burnette official web site smileyburnette org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WDZ amp oldid 1214019640, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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