- WILB
Infobox Radio Station
name = WILB
area =Canton, Ohio
branding =
slogan =
airdate = 1946 as WCMW
frequency = 1060 kHz
format = Religious (Catholic)
power = 5,000watt s
class = D
owner = Living Bread Radio
website = [http://www.livingbreadradio.com/ www.livingbreadradio.com]
webcast = [http://www.barnabasroad.com/WILB.asx WILB Live Feed]
callsign_meaning = Living Bread (Branding)
affiliations = EWTN RadioWILB is an AM radio station in
Canton, Ohio , USA, that offers Catholic programming. The station broadcasts daytime only with a power of 5,000 watts on 1060 kHz. Much of the station's programming is supplied by EWTN Radio.Because WILB shares the same frequency as "
clear channel " station KYW inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania , it broadcasts only during the daytime hours. However, much of the programming webcasts 24 hours daily.History
The station was founded in 1946 by Stark Broadcasting Co. as WCMW, which established WCMW-FM at about the same time on 94.9 MHz. The FM station went off the air around 1953, and the frequency went unused until 1960 when WDBN (now
WQMX ) signed on. By 1961 the AM station had become WHOF, and it was a Top 40 outlet in the early 1960s.In 1967 the call letters were changed again, this time to WOIO. After going through several more format changes, it once again became a Top 40 station in the fall of 1976 as WQIO (using the slogan "Q-10") and was successful for the next few years in the waning days of AM Top 40 radio, drawing the highest ratings in the history of the station, and driving competitor
WINW -AM (also a daytime station) out of the format. When 106.9 FM in Canton (co-owned with WINW) changed to WOOS with an automated Top 40 format in 1978, WQIO's days as a Top 40 radio station were numbered, and by the fall of 1979 it began to head in a moreadult contemporary direction.In 1980, WQIO filed an application with the FCC to move the station from Canton to Canal Fulton, and broadcast full-time on 1070 kHz with 1,000 watts daytime and 500 watts nighttime. While this would have allowed WQIO to operate 24 hours a day, a Pittsburgh station also applied for the same frequency, and neither of the applications were granted, nor was WQIO able to acquire an FM station (it had passed on the chance to acquire 106.9, which went to WINW, and later pursued 95.9 in
New Philadelphia, Ohio with an eye towards moving its tower closer to Canton, but was unsuccessful). Faltering in the ratings, WQIO switched to a short-livedcountry music format in 1981, but soon was put up for sale.The station was purchased by Arcey Broadcasting, which changed the call letters to WRCW on June 14, 1982. The RC in the Arcey name and the call letters came from the initials of owner Ronald D. Colaner, who had joined the station in 1965 as a part-time engineer. Over the years, WRCW ran a varied mixture of talk shows and
adult contemporary music, as well as specialty programming on weekends, most notably an oldies show hosted by local personalityRicco that ran for 18 years (Ricco later landed atWDPN ) and a live Sunday-morning broadcast featuring theSouth Land Gospel Boys that had aired since the early 1960s.In 1998 Arcey tried to sell the station to Otter Communications, headed by Dan Ott of Youngstown, but the sale did not go through. The call sign was briefly changed to WTOF on December 7, 1998, but it was changed back to WRCW on February 1, 1999. After 22 years, Arcey Broadcasting finally sold the station to Living Bread Radio for $300,000 in April 2004 [http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?Category=26&ID=156184&r=1] , and it became WILB on July 1, 2004, adopting a Catholic-oriented format.
External links
*AMQ|WILB
*AML|WILB
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