WBHP
{{Use American English|date=February 2025}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}}
{{Infobox radio station
| name = WBHP
| logo =
| city = Huntsville, Alabama
| country = US
| area = Madison County, Alabama
| branding = The Big Talker 800/1230
| frequency = 1230 kHz
| translator = {{Radio Relay|102.5|W273CX|Huntsville}}
| repeater = {{Radio Relay|102.1|WDRM-HD2|Decatur}}
| founded =
| airdate = {{Start date and age|1937|5|23}}
| last_airdate = {{end date and age|2024|10|3}}
| format = News/talk
| power = 1,000 watts (unlimited)
| class = C
| facility_id = 44025
| coordinates = {{coord|34|43|9.3|N|86|35|42|W|region:US-AL_type:landmark|display=inline,title}}
| former_frequencies = 1200 kHz (1937–1941)
| callsign_meaning = Wilton "Buster" H. Pollard (former owner)
| former_callsigns =
| affiliations = Premiere Networks
| network = Fox News Radio
| owner = iHeartMedia, Inc.
| licensee = iHM Licenses, LLC
| sister_stations = {{hlist|WDRM|WHOS|WQRV|WTAK-FM}}
| webcast = {{iHeartRadio|800-wbhp-9}}
| website = {{URL|https://wbhpam.iheart.com/}}
| licensing_authority = FCC
}}
WBHP (1230 kHz, "The Big Talker") was a commercial radio station in Huntsville, Alabama, and served Madison County.{{cite web |url=http://www.arbitron.com/ |title=Station Information Profile |work=Arbitron}} The station was owned by San Antonio-based iHeartMedia and aired a news/talk format. WBHP programming was simulcast on WHOS (800 AM) in nearby Decatur, FM translator W273CX at 102.5 MHz and on the second HD Radio channel of WDRM (102.1 FM). Its studios were located in Madison, Alabama, and its AM transmitter was located southwest of downtown Huntsville.
WBHP went on the air in 1937. It was the indirect successor to a previous station, WBHS, which operated from 1932 to 1935. WBHP was a country music station until 1997, when it began an all-news format. The station went off the air in 2024 after its tower collapsed; it did not return, and surrendered its license in 2025.
History
The first construction permit for a station on 1200 kHz in Huntsville was issued in May 1931. It signed on the air on April 22, 1932, as WBHS, the first radio station in Huntsville.{{Cite web |title=Huntsville Rewound™ (AL/USA) Rocket City USA |url=http://www.huntsvillerewound.com/HSVradiohistory.htm |access-date=2022-10-04 |website=www.huntsvillerewound.com}} It was a service of The Hutchens Company, a hardware firm; the WBHS call sign stood "World's Best Hardware Store". The studios were in the Russel Erskine Hotel in downtown Huntsville. WBHS later moved to a building on Governor’s Drive.
During the Great Depression, WBHS ran into financial problems and went off the air in 1935. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) reassigned the frequency and a new station went on the air on May 23, 1937, with the call letters WBHP.Broadcasting Yearbook 1977 page C-5 This call sign stemmed from longtime previous owner Wilton "Buster" Harvey Pollard.{{cite web |title=Call Letter Origins |url=http://nelson.oldradio.com/origins.call-list.html |publisher=The Broadcast Archive |last=Nelson |first=Bob |date=2008-10-18 |access-date=2008-10-31}} In 1941, due to the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement, WBHP moved from 1200 kHz to 1230 kHz. WBHP went through several owners until its eventual acquisition by iHeartMedia, Inc. (formerly Clear Channel Communications).
From its early days until the November 1997 switch to an all-news format, WBHP broadcast country music.{{cite news |work=The Huntsville Times |title=AM stations switch to all news format |first=Dean |last=Smallwood |page=G6}}{{cite web |url=http://www.opry.com/MeetTheOpry/Members.aspx?id=58 |title=Member Facts - Ernie Ashworth |work=Grand Ole Opry official website |access-date=2007-12-27 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071017062811/http://opry.com/MeetTheOpry/Members.aspx?id=58 |archive-date = 2007-10-17}} In the 1960s the country music station put its format aside for one hour each Sunday afternoon to air classical music. The program was called "The German Hour" and catered to Wernher von Braun’s German rocket scientists and their families. More than 1500 German scientists, engineers and technicians were brought to Huntsville to work on developing rockets as part of Operation Paperclip.
In 2018, WBHP launched FM translator W273CX (102.5 FM) to simulcast the station.
On October 3, 2024, a delivery truck clipped a guy wire and toppled the WBHP transmission tower on Governors Drive, taking the station off the air.{{cite news |title=FCC Report 10/6: Commission Begins Actions On Charlottesville Area LPFM Co-Op |url=https://radioinsight.com/headlines/283486/fcc-report-10-6-commission-begins-actions-on-charlottesville-area-lpfm-co-op/ |access-date=February 16, 2025 |work=RadioInsight |date=October 6, 2024}} It never returned; iHeartMedia returned the WBHP license to the FCC in February 2025,{{cite news |last1=Venta |first1=Lance |title=FCC Report 2/16: KILT Proposes Signal Upgrade |url=https://radioinsight.com/headlines/294857/fcc-report-2-16-kilt-proposes-signal-upgrade/ |access-date=February 16, 2025 |work=RadioInsight |date=February 16, 2025}} and it was cancelled on February 25, 2025.{{cite web|url= https://enterpriseefiling.fcc.gov/dataentry/public/tv/publicFacilityDetails.html?facilityId=44025|title=License Cancelled|work=Federal Communications Commission Licensing and Management System|date=February 25, 2025|access-date=February 25, 2025}} WBHP's programming would continue on WHOS, WDRM-HD2, and W273CX;{{cite web |last1=Langham |first1=Troy G |title=Form 380 - Change Request |url=https://enterpriseefiling.fcc.gov/dataentry/public/tv/draftCopy.html?displayType=html&appKey=25076ff39549b18301954d9d919f023b&id=25076ff39549b18301954d9d919f023b&goBack=N |website=Licensing and Management System |publisher=Federal Communications Commission |access-date=March 6, 2025 |date=March 4, 2025}} on March 4, 2025, iHeartMedia filed to change WHOS's call sign to WBHP effective March 31.{{cite web |last1=Langham |first1=Troy G |title=Form 380 - Change Request |url=https://enterpriseefiling.fcc.gov/dataentry/public/tv/draftCopy.html?displayType=html&appKey=25076ff39549b18301954d9d919f023b&id=25076ff39549b18301954d9d919f023b&goBack=N |website=Licensing and Management System |publisher=Federal Communications Commission |access-date=March 6, 2025 |date=March 4, 2025}}
Programming
Weekdays on WBHP and WHOS began with Alabama's Morning News with JT, based at co-owned WERC-FM in Birmingham. The rest of the weekday schedule was made up of nationally syndicated talk shows, mostly from co-owned Premiere Networks: The Glenn Beck Radio Program, The Sean Hannity Show, The Michael Berry Show, The Jesse Kelly Show, Our American Stories with Lee Habeeb and Coast to Coast AM with George Noory.
Weekends featured shows on money, health, technology, travel and religion. Weekend syndicated programs include Rudy Maxa World Travel, The Weekend with Michael Brown, Armstrong & Getty, Rich DeMuro on Tech, The Ben Ferguson Show and Sunday Night with Bill Cunningham. Most hours began with an update from Fox News Radio.
In addition to its regularly scheduled talk programming, the station was an affiliate of the Auburn Tigers football radio network.{{cite web |publisher=The Auburn University Official Athletic Site |title=Football Affiliates |url=http://auburntigers.cstv.com/sponsorship/aub-footbl-affiliates.html |access-date=December 4, 2008}} It also carried Auburn Tigers men's basketball.{{cite web |publisher=The Auburn University Official Athletic Site |title=Basketball Affiliates |url=http://auburntigers.cstv.com/sponsorship/aub-baskbl-affiliates.html |access-date=December 4, 2008}}
WBHP and WHOS were the flagship stations for the 1999-2000 final season of the Huntsville Channel Cats and for the short-lived Huntsville Tornado for the 2000-2001 hockey season.{{cite news |work=The Huntsville Times |title=City's 'new' CHL club hits ice for exhibition |first=Darrell |last=Ponder |page=C3 |date=October 5, 2000}} Both teams played their home games at the Von Braun Center and competed in the Central Hockey League.
Awards and honors
As a country music-formatted station, WBHP on-air personality Dana Webb was nominated for and won a Country Music Association Award as "Small Market Broadcast Personality of the Year" in 1986.{{cite web |publisher=Country Music Association |title=Broadcast Awards Database: Dana Webb |url=http://www.cmaawards.com/2008/database/BroadcastDetail.aspx?artistId=1238 |access-date=January 4, 2009}}
References
{{Reflist|2}}
External links
- [https://wbhpam.iheart.com/ WBHP official website]
{{AM station data|44025|WBHP}}
{{Huntsville radio}}
Category:Defunct radio stations in the United States
Category:Radio stations established in 1937
Category:1937 establishments in Alabama
Category:Radio stations disestablished in 2025