KWG (1230
AM) is a
radio station licensed to
Relevant Radio, Inc. in
Stockton, California
Stockton is a city in and the county seat of San Joaquin County, California, San Joaquin County in the Central Valley (California), Central Valley of the U.S. state of California. Stockton was founded by Carlos Maria Weber in 1849 after he acquir ...
. It carries that company's
Catholic talk radio programming.
History
KWG is one of the oldest broadcasting stations in the United States. It was initially licensed to the Portable Wireless Telephone Company
on December 7, 1921, as the second formally licensed broadcasting station west of the Mississippi River. In addition, it traces its history to an earlier amateur station operated by Paul Oard.
Oard was the principal engineer for Oard Radio Laboratories, a small radio equipment company owned by George Turner and located at 1218 North Union Street in Stockton. The company's apparatus was sold through the Atlantic-Pacific Radio Supplies Company of San Francisco.
In the spring of 1921, Oard installed a receiver in an automobile, and as part of the demonstrations picked up music transmitted by his amateur station, 6FI. Shortly thereafter, arrangements were made with the ''Stockton Record'' newspaper to make regular broadcasts over 6FI. A debut program was presented at 8:00 p.m. on November 22, 1921, which featured contralto
Ernestine Schumann-Heink singing "At Parting" and "The Rosary".
During this broadcast it was also announced that Oard Radio Laboratories had been renamed the Portable Wireless Telephone Company.
["Schumann Heink on Ether to Far Audiences"](_blank)
''The Music News'', May 26, 1922, page 15. (This report misidentifies the radio station as "6F1" instead of "6FI", and "Card" instead of "Oard" Radio Laboratories.)
In late 1921, radio stations in the United States were regulated by the Department of Commerce. Initially, there were no formal regulations specifying which stations could make broadcasts intended for the general public, and 6FI was one of a number of amateur and experimental stations in California making regular broadcasts. However, 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".
On December 7, 1921, a broadcasting station license with the randomly assigned call letters KWG was issued to Portable Wireless Telephone Company, for operation on 360 meters. This authorization marked the second formally recognized broadcasting station in the West; at the time the December 1, 1921, regulations were adopted, a small number of stations already held licenses that met the new standards, including
KQL
KQL was a radio station, located in Los Angeles, California, that was licensed to Arno A. Kluge from October 13, 1921 to June 9, 1922. This was the first broadcasting station licensed in the state of California, and one of the first in the United S ...
, licensed to Arno A. Kluge in Los Angeles.
KWG adopted the slogan "Voice of the San Joaquin Valley". The station's studios were originally located on the third floor of the ''Record'' building, with an antenna constructed on the roof. In 1924 the ''Record'' ended its affiliation with KWG, and the station moved to the Hotel Stockton. In 1927 it moved to the basement of the Medico-Dental Building, where it stayed until 1936.
On November 11, 1928, under the provisions of a sweeping reallocation resulting from the
Federal Radio Commission's implementation of
General Order 40, KWG was assigned to a "local" transmitting frequency, 1200 kHz.
George Turner sold KWG in the spring of 1930 to the McClatchy system of radio stations and newspapers.
The station installed a T-type transmitting antenna at the corner of Weber Avenue and E Street in Stockton, which went into service in 1931. The antenna was strung between two wooden poles placed at either end of the transmission building, and connected to the transmitter by a line that ran through a hole in the building's roof. KWG one of the last broadcast stations to employ this type of antenna; it remained in use until the 1990s, when it was replaced by a single guyed-wire tower located next to the transmitter building.
In December 1936, the station moved into new studios located atop the Wolf Hotel in San Joaquin City, which were described as "the last word in acoustical engineering and design". On March 29, 1941, under the provisions of the
North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement
The North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA, es, Convenio Regional Norteamericano de Radiodifusión) refers to a series of international treaties that defined technical standards for AM band (mediumwave) radio stations. These agreem ...
, KWG, along with most of the other stations transmitting on 1200 kHz, was reassigned to 1230 kHz, where the station has been ever since.
In 1956, the station moved to 411 East Market Street.
Barnes Enterprises, led by
Johnny Jacobs, the off-screen announcer for various
Chuck Barris Productions game shows, owned KWG between 1978 and early 1981. In February 1981, Best Radio Incorporated of
San Bernardino purchased KWG, along with then-KSRT 100.9 MHz FM (now
KMIX), licensed to
Tracy, California. KWG then began its "Delta Country" format. Just under 18 months later KWG became an "oldies" station, and was very successful well into the 1990s.
IHR Educational Broadcasting
IHR Educational Broadcasting dba Immaculate Heart Radio operates a network of radio stations in the Western United States, airing Roman Catholic religious programming. The network provides a 24-hour a day schedule consisting of call-in ta ...
purchased KWG from The (Susan) Carson Group Inc. on October 18, 1999, reportedly for $300,000, and began carrying the inspirational "Catholic Talk Radio" programming. A 2013 review noted the station had eliminated local programming and "no longer has a business office or studio in Stockton".
"AM Radio Heartbeat Faint But Still Kicking"
by Michael Fitzgerald, September 13, 2013 (radionet.com) KWG switched to Relevant Radio programming on June 30, 2017, when IHR Educational Broadcasting consummated a merger with Starboard Media Foundation.
References
External links
FCC History Cards for KWG
(covering 1927–1980)
{{Relevant Radio
WG
Towers in California
Radio stations established in 1921
Relevant Radio stations
WG
Radio stations licensed before 1923 and still broadcasting