Boston Radio:: 1920-2010
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About this ebook
Donna L. Halper
Donna L. Halper is a Boston-based author, professor, and media historian with expertise in the history of broadcasting. Using rare photographs from her own collection and from some of Boston’s best-known air personalities, she tells the story of the stations and announcers Bostonians have loved for decades.
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Boston Radio: - Donna L. Halper
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INTRODUCTION
In our Internet-oriented world, most people take radio for granted. It has become just one of many ways to get music, news, and sports. Today not many Americans rely on one favorite station, nor do many children have a favorite disc jockey, which is the complete opposite of when I was growing up. From the time I was a kid, when my mother introduced me to WHDH—her favorite station and the home of Ken and Bill, Bob and Ray, Bob Clayton, and Fred B. Cole—radio provided the sound track of my life. The disc jockeys were like friends to me; some of my favorites were Arnie Ginsburg on WMEX, Bruce Bradley and Jefferson Kaye on WBZ, Wild Man Steve on WILD, and Uncle T on what was then WTBS, which is WMBR today. I collected Top 40 surveys and eagerly read magazine articles about my favorite stations. And I dreamed that one day I would have a radio career of my own.
These days radio still has plenty of fans; however, it is not the magical medium
that it once was. And yet, for those of us who grew up with it, radio does possess a certain magic. Those who are new to our city quickly find that local radio is an important part of being a Bostonian. Doomsayers may predict radio’s demise, but the neighborhood kids are listening to their favorite stations just as I did. And while much about the broadcasting industry has changed, Boston’s tradition of great stations and great personalities continues even now.
Most people believe that WBZ, which is the oldest surviving station in Massachusetts (and still uses its original call letters), was Boston’s first station. But in reality, it was the second. It was, however, the first station to receive the newly created commercial license
from the Department of Commerce. WBZ went on the air in mid-September 1921, with a live broadcast from the Eastern States Exposition. But WBZ was not a Boston station during its early years. Back then, it was located 90 miles away, in the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing plant in Springfield. Despite its good signal, many listeners in the eastern part of the state could not receive WBZ very well, and many of the big-name entertainers who performed in Boston were unable, or unwilling, to make the trip out to Springfield. That is why WBZ finally opened a Boston station in late February 1924; it received the call letters WBZA, with studios in the Hotel Brunswick.
But in 1921, as Bostonians adjusted the dials of their radios, they were not listening for WBZ. Most likely what they heard was Greater Boston’s first and only station, 1XE, with studios in Medford Hillside about 4 miles from Boston. 1XE had been broadcasting sporadically since late 1919. Although it was located on the campus of Tufts College, it was not a college station; 1XE was owned by the American Radio and Research Corporation (AMRAD), which had been founded by two Tufts graduates, Harold Power and Joseph Prentiss. In addition to 1XE, there were two other pioneering stations that began broadcasting in 1920—8MK in Detroit (today known as WWJ) went on the air in late August, and KDKA in Pittsburgh made its official debut on November 2.
In those early days, stations were called radiophones,
and radio was still referred to as wireless.
And much like people today with their iPods, radio listeners back then needed headphones to hear what was being sent through the ether.
A fan of broadcasting was a radio bug,
and Boston had plenty of them. Most early listeners were also ham radio hobbyists who knew Morse code, were able to build their own sets, and enjoyed trying to pull in distant stations, which was a game called radio golf,
and also known as DX’ing.
During radio’s first several years, stations had no formats. They used block programming, which is 10 or 15 minutes of one kind of program, followed by 10 or 15 minutes of something entirely different. But most listeners did not mind the lack of consistency because radio was changing their lives in very positive ways. Unlike the newspapers, radio was immediate, so for the first time, anyone could find out about an event as it was happening. And thanks to radio, entertainment became more widely available. It did not matter if listeners were rich or poor, rural or urban; anyone could enjoy the broadcasts without leaving the comfort of home.
In early February 1922, Greater Boston’s only station was still 1XE, and it was now known as WGI, or the AMRAD station. WGI was the first station in the region to offer a daily newscast, beginning in mid-February. It was also the first to broadcast police reports of stolen cars, read by the station’s pioneering female announcer, Eunice Randall. A talented draftslady
who did technical drawings for AMRAD, Eunice was the first female announcer in Massachusetts and one of the first in the United States. WGI was the first home of Big Brother
Bob Emery, who went on to a long career as a children’s show host, first in radio and then television. Among the entertainers who became local celebrities by performing at WGI were bandleader Joe Rines and vocal duo Hum and Strum (Tom Currier and Max Zides). And by April 1922, a number of Tufts College professors began broadcasting lectures on subjects ranging from engineering to history to literature, making it one of the earliest experiments in education by radio.
But although WGI was innovative, it had a small budget and no more than 100 watts. Radio stations were expensive to run without a major corporate backer, and airing commercials to help defray the cost was not yet a common practice. In fact, Herbert Hoover, then head of the Department of Commerce, said he wanted radio to remain noncommercial. When WGI tried to broadcast a car commercial in April 1922, the Department of Commerce told the station never to do that again. Yet despite the expense, new radio stations were coming on the air all over the country, including new stations in Boston.
In late July 1922, a major change occurred when a new station made its debut from studios in the Shepard Department Store in downtown Boston. Its call letters were WNAC, which is still around today and known as WRKO. But when it first went on the air, it was often called the Shepard Station.
The station was financially supported by wealthy entrepreneur and local business executive