WSVE

WSVE was a radio station licensed in Jacksonville, Florida. WSVE was owned by Willis & Sons. WSVE last operated on 1280 kHz with 5,000 watts of power daytime & 133 watts nighttime.

DWSVE
CityJacksonville, Florida
Broadcast areaJacksonville, Florida
Frequency1280 kHz
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatDefunct (was Black gospel)
Ownership
OwnerRev. Levi Willis, Sr.
(Willis & Sons)
History
First air dateAugust 1948 [1]
Last air date2004
Former call signsWIVY (1948–1976)
WEXI (1976–1985)[2]
WXOJ (1985-March 14, 1987)
WSVE (March 14, 1987–June 24, 2004)
Technical information
Facility ID10519
ClassD
Power5,000 watts daytime
133 watts nighttime

History

As WIVY

WIVY started broadcasting on 1050 kilohertz in August 1948. Its initial power was 1,000 watts, daytime only. It was affiliated with MacGregor, World & Hearst's INS.[3] In 1971 it held a construction permit to move to 1280 kHz and in increase power from 1,000 watts daytime-only to 5,000 watts daytime-only.[4] It also spawned WIVY-FM/102.9 in 1965. It changed callsigns to WEXI circa 1976.

As WEXI

When WIVY changed calls to WEXI, WIVY-FM remained under its old callsign. WIVY/1280 aired a contemporary music format. It switched to all-news by 1978.[5] WEXI became WXOZ circa 1985.[6]

Willis & Sons

Bishop Levi Willis, Sr.'s Willis & Sons, Inc. bought the station on July 14, 1986. It was by then WXOZ with a children's educational format.[7] On March 14, 1987 it became WSVE.

Leaving the air

Stemming from a 1999 FCC investigation, Willis was fined over $84,000 in fines from the regulatory agency. Partially to satisfy this debt, Willis agreed to surrender the licenses of 4 stations: WSVE, WCRY, KVLA & KLRG. Of those 4 stations, KLRG is still on the air under different ownership.[8]

gollark: I kind of want a CB prize just to irritate people with what I do with its offspring.
gollark: That must be it, then.
gollark: I wonder what accounts for the differences.
gollark: There was one time when I *think* I was viewbombed maybe, and no VDing.
gollark: Clearly what we need to do is develop a cryptic and unreadable compression system for trade hub messages.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.