KQYX

KQYX ("1450 The Dove") is a gospel formatted AM radio station licensed to Galena, Kansas and serving the Joplin, Missouri area. It is currently owned by American Media Investment.[1] Dating back to its initial broadcasts in 1927 under its original call sign of WMBH, KQYX is the longest continually operating station in the Joplin area.

KQYX
CityGalena, Kansas
Broadcast areaJoplin, Missouri
Frequency1450 kHz
Branding92.9 - 1450 The Dove
Programming
FormatGospel
Ownership
OwnerAmerican Media Investments, Inc.
History
First air date1927
Former call signsWMBH (1927-2001)
Technical information
Facility ID5268
ClassC
Power940 watts
Transmitter coordinates37°4′10″N 94°32′49″W
Translator(s)K225CS (92.9 MHz, Joplin)
Links
Website1450thedove.com

FM Translator

An FM translator simulcasts the AM station; this affords listeners the ability to listen on FM with its improved high fidelity sound. The translator may also improve the station's coverage.

Broadcast translators of KQYX
Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseFacility
ID
ERP
(W)
ClassFCC info
K225CS92.9Joplin, Missouri200592250DFCC

History

The station (then known as WMBH) moved to Joplin in 1927[2]

KQYX was first licensed on January 10, 1927[3] as a portable broadcasting station, with the sequentially assigned call letters WMBH, to Edwin Dudley Aber of Chicago, Illinois.[4] Portable stations could be transported from place-to-place on movable platforms such as trucks. They were generally hired out for a few weeks at a time to theaters, mostly located in small midwestern towns that didn't have their own radio stations, to be used for special programs broadcast to the local community. However, if WMBH ever actually toured as a portable its career was brief, because by early June it was reported to be in Joplin,[5] and a government notification reported that it was "no longer portable".[6] After settling in the station adopted the slogan "Where Memories Bring Happiness" based on its call sign.[7]

WMBH's initial studio was located in the Keystone Hotel, with the transmitter at 1334 Roosevelt. In August 1932 Aber transferred ownership of the station to W. M. Robertson. In January 1942, the station spent $5,000 to double its space to 2,000 square feet, moving into new quarters in the lobby of the Frisco Building.

In 1946, WMBH-FM (now KIXQ) went on the air, broadcasting a variety of informative and entertaining programs including the long-running "Quality Hour of Music."[8]

On July 25, 2001 the station engaged in a two-way call letter and format swap, with AM 1450 WMBH receiving the KQYX call letters and a talk radio format, and AM 1560 KQYX becoming WMBH.[9] In early 2009, the community of license was changed from Joplin to nearby Galena, Kansas.[10]

In 2010, KQYX switched to sports as "1450 the Score", using FOX Sports Radio as a source, and became an affiliate of the Oklahoma City Thunder professional basketball team. On February 3, 2014 it adopted its current gospel format, branded as "1450 The Dove".[11]

gollark: How horrible.
gollark: 10 days? 10 entire days?!
gollark: I'm going to try starting a new PB2ish server on my dedicated... server... if I can buy more RAM soonish.
gollark: I am undead.
gollark: I could make my own stupider one called PotatoRegistry.

References

  1. "KQYX Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC), audio division.
  2. Chic Howard broadcast (advertisement), Joplin (Missouri) News Herald, September 7, 1927, page 7.
  3. "Date First Licensed", FCC History Cards for KQYX.
  4. "New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, January 31, 1927, page 4.
  5. "Picher Locals: Pupils to Broadcast", Miami (Oklahoma) Daily News-Record, June 5, 1927, page 13.
  6. "Alterations and Corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, July 30, 1927, page 5.
  7. "Official Radio Call Book and Log" (WMBH entry), Radio Digest, March 1, 1928, page 82.
  8. Missouri Digital Heritage: WMBH Radio (sos.mo.gov)
  9. WMBH/KQYX History (kcradio.robzerwekh.com)
  10. "Actions of 01/12/2009: AM Station Applications For License to Cover Granted", Report No. 46903: Broadcast Actions, January 15, 2009 (FCC.gov)
  11. "Dove Flies Into Joplin", by Lance Venta, February 1, 2014 (radioinsight.com)
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