WOC (AM)

WOC (1420 AM) is a commercial radio station, licensed to Davenport, Iowa, and serving the Quad Cities of Iowa and Illinois. WOC is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. It broadcasts a Talk radio format, under the slogan "The Quad Cities News Leader." Its studios are located at 3535 East Kimberly Road in Davenport (along with co-owned KCQQ, KMXG, KUUL, WFXN and WLLR-FM). Its transmitter is located at an antenna farm in Bettendorf, Iowa, near the campus of Scott Community College. (WOC is the only remaining AM station at this site, as all the other transmitters are for FM radio or television.) WOC broadcasts with 5,000 watts with a directional signal to avoid interfering with other stations on 1420 kHz.

WOC
CityDavenport, Iowa
Broadcast areaQuad Cities
Frequency1420 kHz
BrandingWOC Talkradio 1420 AM
SloganThe Quad Cities News Leader
Programming
FormatNews/Talk
AffiliationsPremiere Networks
Westwood One Network
TheBlaze Network
Fox News Radio
Ownership
OwneriHeartMedia, Inc.
(iHM Licenses, LLC)
KCQQ, KMXG, KUUL, WFXN, WLLR-FM
History
First air date
February 18, 1922 (experimental under various call signs from 1907-1922)
Call sign meaning
Randomly assigned, but station later adopted the slogan World (also Wonders) Of Chiropractic
Technical information
Facility ID60360
ClassB
Power5,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
41°33′0″N 90°28′37″W
Links
WebcastListen Live!
Websitewoc1420.iheart.com

WOC's most famous former employee was future U.S. President Ronald "Dutch" Reagan, who got his start in radio there in 1932, broadcasting football games, after having played football at Eureka College in nearby Eureka, Illinois.

Programming

WOC broadcasts both local and nationally syndicated talk shows, most of which come from Premiere Networks, a subsidiary of iHeartMedia. Weekdays begin at 5 a.m. with This Morning with Gordon Deal, followed at 5:30 a.m. with AM Quad Cities hosted by Kirk Marske. At 9 a.m. WOC carries Glenn Beck followed at 11 a.m. by Rush Limbaugh. At 2 p.m. it's The Guy Benson Show followed by Simon Conway at 4 p.m. At 6 p.m. Sean Hannity is heard, followed by Joe Pags at 9 p.m. Overnight, it's Coast to Coast AM with George Noory.

Weekends feature shows on money, home repair, computers and law. Syndicated programming includes Kim Komando, Handel on the Law, At Home with Gary Sullivan, Our American Stories, and Jill on Money. Some weekday shows are repeated and some hours are paid brokered programming. Fox News Radio supplies national news at the beginning of each hour. The station also carries University of Iowa sports.

Pre-history

Advertisement for radio equipment sold by the Young & McCombs department store in Rock Island, which featured a photograph of the Best Building where the store was located. (March 1920)[1]

WOC's pre-history was complex, with roots extending back to the earliest days of radio.

Robert K. Karlowa had an longtime interest in radiotelegraphy, starting in 1907,[2] and by early 1913 was "the chief operator of the Tri-Cities Wireless club",[3] which met on the sixth floor of the Best Building in Rock Island, Illinois. In mid-1915, he and Ray E. Hall, representing the Tri-City Radio Laboratory, were issued an Experimental license for station 9XR,[4] which also operated from the Best Building. This station used a spark transmitter and could only transmit Morse code, so it was never used for entertainment broadcasts. Moreover, effective April 6, 1917, with the entrance of the United States into World War One, all civilian stations were ordered to shut down for the duration of the war, and 9XR permanently disappeared.

The civilian ban on radio stations was lifted in October 1919, and the introduction of vacuum-tube radio transmitters now made audio broadcasts possible. Karlowa's subsequent activities were divided between two separate stations. Karlowa himself was issued a standard amateur license, with call sign 9BC, for his home in Davenport, Iowa. On December 3, 1919[5] he began broadcasting a series[6] of radio concerts.

A second standard amateur license, 9BY, was issued in the name of the Young & McCombs co-operative store, located in the Best Building in Rock Island, Illinois,[7] where Karlowa was the head of the radio department. This station would feature an even more extensive selection of programs. It was announced that, starting about September 1, 1920, 9BY was planning to inaugurate concerts to be broadcast on Thursday evenings.[8] A few weeks later, on election day, November 2, the station was reported to be planning to broadcast election results,[9] and later that month it was reported that 9BY's weekly broadcasts featured promotional phonograph records provided by the Pathé Frères Phonograph Company.[10]

In early 1921, Karlowa formed the Karlowa Radio Corporation, which bought the Young & Combs radio department assets,[11] and took over operation of 9BY, still located in the Best Building in Rock Island. The station maintained its Thursday evening concert schedule.[12]

WOC history

WOC's history is also complex. Effective December 1, 1921, the U.S. government adopted a regulation requiring that stations making broadcasts intended for the public now had to hold a Limited Commercial license. On February 18, 1922 the Karlowa Radio Corporation was issued a new license, for a broadcasting station with the randomly assigned call letters of WOC, still located in the Rock Island Best Building. Karlowa continued to operate the station for a short time, but the costs had become too great. In March he sold WOC to Col. B. J. Palmer, and on May 9, 1922 a new license was issued for the Palmer School of Chiropractic (later the Palmer College of Chiropractic) in Davenport, Iowa, the start of a family connection that lasted almost 75 years.

The station equipment was moved to a small studio on Palmer's Brady Street campus. WOC initially broadcast on the common Entertainment wavelength of 360 meters (833 kilohertz), and on October 14 was authorized to also broadcast weather reports on 485 meters (619 kilohertz). In October it was upgraded to a state-of-the-art 500 watt Western Electric transmitter,[13] which allowed WOC to move to the more exclusive "Class B" wavelength of 400 meters (750 kilohertz). In May 1923, 620 kilohertz was reserved as a Class B frequency assignment for qualified stations in "Davenport/Des Moines, Iowa", and WOC was authorized to move to this new frequency.

In 1924, the American Telephone & Telegraph Company was in the process of forming a radio network, with its flagship at WEAF in New York City. While in the planning stages, WOC was identified as one of 21 stations thought to be "especially desirable because of coverage and reliable technical performance".[14] On July 4, 1925 the station participated in the network's "National Defense Test Day" program.[15] In September 1927, WOC became a charter member of the new NBC radio network.

The Federal Radio Commission's General Order 40 reallocated frequencies in 1928, and WOC was reassigned to share time on 1000 kilohertz with the Banker's Life station in Des Moines, Iowa, WHO. In late 1929, the Central Broadcasting Company was formed with B.J. Palmer as chairman. This company purchased both WOC and WHO, which were then synchronized to simultaneously broadcast identical programs on their shared frequency, each using a 5 kilowatt transmitter.

Advertisement for consolidated WOC-WHO (1933)[16]

In April 1932, a 50 kilowatt transmitter, located near Mitchellville, Iowa and close to Des Moines, went into service, and the separate transmitters were replaced by this single transmitter, with the two stations now combined under a dual identity as WOC-WHO.[17] That same year Ronald Reagan got his first broadcasting job at WOC as a sportscaster.[18] He returned to WOC in 1988, when WOC and FM sister station WLLR-FM dedicated their new studios on East Kimberly Road.

WOC was restored as a station separate from WHO in November 1934, when the Palmer School purchased station KICK in Carter Lake, Iowa, which was moved to Davenport, and its call sign changed to WOC. (Because of this, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) records generally list WOC's "first license date" as December 1, 1923, which was when KICK received its initial license.)[19] In early 1935 the station was assigned to a "local" frequency of 1370 kilohertz, and by 1937 it was operating with 250 watts daytime and 100 watts at night. In 1941, WOC briefly moved to a second local frequency, 1450 kilohertz, and the next year was upgraded to a "regional" frequency, 1420 kilohertz, its current dial position, with a power boost to 5 kilowatts.

WOC's FM station, WOC-FM, signed on the air in October 1948 at 103.7 MHz. The FM station has changed formats three times, currently with a country music format as WLLR-FM, and is the highest-rated station in the Quad Cities market. WOC-TV, the first television station in Iowa, began broadcasting on October 31, 1949; it became KWQC-TV after the Palmer family split its radio and television holdings in 1986. The AM frequency, meanwhile, has undergone several format changes since the end of the Golden Age of Radio. Its current news/talk radio format started in 1979.

In 1986 WOC and its FM sister station were purchased from Palmer Communications, Inc. by Vickie Anne Palmer and her then husband, J. Douglas Miller. In 1989 Mr. Miller entered the motion picture business as a producer and Ms. Palmer took over complete control of the properties, then known as Signal Hill Communications, Inc., until it was sold in 1996. The station was purchased by Clear Channel Communications, now iHeartMedia, in 2000.

WOC is the oldest surviving broadcasting station in the middle Mississippi Valley. Other reported firsts include:[20]

  • Broadcasting from both houses of the Iowa Legislature.
  • On-air and studio personnel required to keep logs of such things as electrical consumption and on-air programming (to the second). The programming log also helped the station begin programs on an absolute "minute-and-second" schedule.
  • Use of a fader panel, allowing use of several microphones in the studio at one time.

References

  1. "Young & McCombs" (advertisement), Radio Amateur News, March 1920, page 517.
  2. Education's Own Stations (Palmer School of Chiropractic section) by S. E. Frost, Jr., 1937, page 315.
  3. "Karlowa Gives Scientific Talk", Rock Island Argus, February 10, 1913, page 12.
  4. "New Stations: Special Land Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, May 1915, page 4. (The "9" in 9XR's call sign identified the station as being located in the ninth Radio Inspection district, while the "X" indicated that it was operating under an experimental license.)
  5. "1919—The Year the Big Drought Struck Davenport", Davenport Democrat and Leader, July 17, 1924, page 45.
  6. "Concerts by Wireless Telephone Fad in Iowa", Washington (D.C.) Herald, March 2, 1920, page 3.
  7. Radio Manufacturers of the 1920s: Volume 3—RCA to Zenith (Tri-City section) by Alan Douglas, 1991, page 187.
  8. "Strays", QST, September 1920, page 44.
  9. "Radio Amateurs to Get Returns", Decatur Review, November 1, 1920, page 14.
  10. "Pathe Special Offer Popular", Music Trade Review, November 20, 1920, page 60.
  11. Douglas, page 187.
  12. "9BY, Rock Island, Ills.", QST, March 1921, page 42.
  13. "Western Electric Broadcasting Stations in the U. S.", Radio Broadcast, January 1923, page 256.
  14. Commercial Broadcasting Pioneer: The WEAF Experiment 1922-1926 by William Peck Banning, 1946, page 231.
  15. Ibid., page 276.
  16. "WOC-WHO" (advertisement), Broadcasting, April 1933, page 5.
  17. Frost, page 316.
  18. "Former President Had A Passion for Sports" by William Gildea, Washington Post, June 6, 2004, page E01.
  19. KICK originated as KFLZ, first licensed to the Atlantic Automobile Company in Atlantic, Iowa on December 1, 1923.
  20. Davenport's WOC AM-FM-TV by David T. Cooper, 2010, page 8.

Further reading

  • Stein, Jeff. "Making Waves: The People and Places of Iowa Broadcasting." WDG Communications Inc., Cedar Rapids, 2004. ISBN 0-9718323-1-5
  • "Scott County Heritage," Scott County Heritage Book Committee, Taylor Publishing, Dallas, 1991.
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