WDSP

WDSP (1280 AM) is licensed to DeFuniak Springs, Florida, United States, the station serves the Walton County, area, playing a commercial-free format of independent music. The station is currently owned by The SportzMax, Inc.[1]

WDSP
CityDeFuniak Springs, Florida
Broadcast areaFt. Walton Beach area
Frequency1280 kHz
BrandingAM 1280
Programming
FormatIndependent music
Ownership
OwnerThe SportzMax, Inc.
History
First air date1956
Call sign meaningW-DeFuniak SPrings
Technical information
Facility ID60812
ClassD
Power5,000 watts (day)
46 watts (night)
Transmitter coordinates30°42′41.00″N 86°6′25.00″W

History

WDSP was founded in 1956 by W.D. "Cooter" Douglass and his wife, Marie.[2] After spending several years broadcasting as WGTX, the station was reassigned the WDSP call letters by the Federal Communications Commission on February 25, 2006.[3]

LaVernie (Vern) Foster Jr., was hired by Mr. & Mrs. Douglas as manager of WDSP in 1957. The studios were at 30 South 8th Street, the current location of Peck Cawthon Insurance Agency.

After serving in World War II in the United States Army Air Corps, in the Chemical Corps, Vern Foster attended Trade School in Gadsden, Alabama where he received his certification in Broadcast Radio. He initially worked at WELR in Roanoke, Alabama as an announcer and technician.

After moving to Florida to manage WDSP, Vern Foster became an avid golfer and was the Club Champion at the DeFuniak Springs Golf Course on more than one occasion. He was also an accomplished fisherman, hunter and marksman.

During the cold war and threat of nuclear attack from the U.S.S.R. in the early 1960s Vern oversaw the construction of a bomb shelter/civil defense broadcast center, which was located in the back yard of his residence where the transmitter and tower for WDSP was located at the intersection of South 2nd Street and Bruce Avenue.

Vern Foster died in a single car crash on February 19, 1966 near the Forestry Service Fire Watch Tower located on Highway 90 about 3 miles east of DeFuniak Springs. Not long after his death, the radio station changed ownership and the WDSP call sign was changed to WGTX. The studio of WGTX was relocated to the bomb shelter facility in the late 1960s where it remained for years broadcasting as WGTX. The station was reassigned the WDSP callsign by the Federal Communications Commission on February 25, 2006.

WDSP is owned by Omni Broadcasting of Fort Walton Beach and is part of The Ticket Sports Network simulcasting WTKE 100.3 FM during AM & Pm drive. It also broadcasts Tim Brando, Jim Rome, Paul Finebaum and Dan Patrick. It is also a Sporting News Radio affiliate.

gollark: It's Greek-derived because of the "a" and "theo" bits.
gollark: Like how you wouldn't call a Christian "agnostic" if they did not have absolute certainty that Christianity (whatever that's defined as) is true.
gollark: It's not really to correct to think something is 100% certainly false, but if you think it's *very very likely* to be false, we generally say you "do not believe" it.
gollark: ↑
gollark: I don't think this is a reasonable distinction. I can't technically disprove the invisible spy unicorns, but I'm not an invisible-spy-unicorn-in-wall agnostic.

References

  1. "WDSP Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  2. "Destin, Fla., Resident Buys WGTX Radio Station". The Destin Log. 2006-02-20.
  3. "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database.
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