Wikipedia

WMBL (AM)

WMBL
CityMorehead City, North Carolina
Frequency740 kHz
Ownership
OwnerClear Channel Communications
(Citicasters Licenses, Inc.)
History
First air date
July 29, 1947[1]
Last air date
February 2000
Former call signs
WFTH (1980–1981)[2]
Technical information
Facility ID73253
Power1,000 watts (day)
14 watts (night)
Transmitter coordinates
34°44′9.6″N 76°48′54″W / 34.736000°N 76.81500°W

WMBL (740 AM) was a radio station in Morehead City, North Carolina. Its call letters stood for Where Morehead Beaufort Link.[3]

The station went on the air in 1947. The entry for WMBL in a booklet from August 1957 to commemorate Morehead City's centennial states: the "radio station is heard from Maine to Florida, and has been heard all the way to Nebraska. Particularly, this is true during hurricane season, when friends and relatives at distant points want information on conditions in this locale."[4]

WMBL was one of the few stations to play beach music in the 1950s and 1960s. A listener of the station noted that an afternoon deejay of that time, Bobbie Dennis, "was bold enough to play records by The Drifters, Clyde McPhatter and Big Joe Turner, to name a few."[5]

A FM station using the WMBL call letters went on the air in October 1972 at 95.9 FM, later moving to 96.3). In 1986, the stations were acquired by Great American Media (now Curtis Media Group); they were part of the Great American Media group until the early 1990s.[6]

WMBL-FM changed its call letters to WMBJ on October 13, 1981, according to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) records. On June 4, 1986, the station adopted its current call sign, WRHT-FM.[7]

WMBL broadcast a popular standards format at "Unforgettable 740" in its last few years. The station was bought by a subsidiary of Clear Channel Worldwide and permanently taken silent in February 2000 to allow for WSCC, 730 in Charleston, SC, to make an upgrade.

References

  1. ^ "WMBL" (PDF). Broadcasting Yearbook. 1968. p. B-120 (268). Retrieved July 8, 2020.
  2. ^ FCC History Cards for WMBL
  3. ^ "Call Letter Origins". Radio History on the Web.
  4. ^ Program for Morehead City Centennial, archived by North Carolina History and Fiction Digital Library
  5. ^ Comments on Site for Fans of Beach Music and Shag
  6. ^ Historical information on Curtis Media Group's corporate site
  7. ^ Call Sign History in FCC database

External links

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