WVAR

Radio station in Richwood, West Virginia
  • Richwood, West Virginia
Broadcast areaRichwood, West Virginia
Craigsville, West Virginia
Summersville, West VirginiaFrequency600 kHzBrandingThe Mighty 1490ProgrammingFormatClassic hitsOwnershipOwnerSummit Media Broadcasting, LLC
Sister stations
WAFD, WDBS, WKQV, WSGBHistory
First air date
November 16, 1957 (as WMNF)
Call sign meaning
West VirginiA RadioTechnical informationFacility ID54372ClassDPower1,000 watts (daytime)
55 watts (nighttime)Translator(s)92.5 W223DF (Summersville)
98.9 W255DO (Summersville)LinksWebsiteWVAR/WSGB Online

WVAR is an American radio station located in Richwood, West Virginia that plays a classic hits format.

The station also carries West Virginia University basketball and Richwood High School sports. While it simulcasts sister station WSGB full-time, WVAR breaks away for sports broadcasts.

History

As WMNF

WVAR first went on the air on November 16, 1957, and first broadcast at 1280 AM under the call letters WMNF. The original owner was Royal Broadcasting Company, of which Herman Dotson served as president and Art Grunewald as general manager. Studios were located along Cemetery Road in Richwood. By 1959, the call letters were changed to WVAR, as they remain today.

As WVAR

On January 1, 1965, WVAR was sold to R & S Broadcasting. Carl Gainer was the new company president, and Virgil Graves became General Manager. In 1968, WVAR moved from its dial position of 1280 kHz to 600 kHz. The station retained its daytime-only broadcast hours and output power of 1,000 watts.

In 1991, WVAR moved its studios and offices to 713 Main Street in Summersville, but would maintain a local presence in Richwood at 2 Rhododendron Drive, formerly known as Cemetery Road. On December 24, 1996, after more than 30 years of ownership, WVAR was sold by R & S Broadcasting to J & K Broadcasting. The ownership change also resulted in the pairing of an FM sister station, WAFD, which had gone on the air earlier that year with a southern and country gospel format.

In mid-February 2003, an ice storm that ravaged the southern part of West Virginia toppled the WVAR broadcasting antenna atop Hinkle Mountain which overlooks Richwood. In the following summer the station and its owner raised funds to erect a new antenna. The station was closed with a dark license while funds were sought to replace it.

On March 13, 2007, J & K Broadcasting, Inc. sold WVAR to Summit Media Broadcasting, LLC for $1.24 million in a transaction that included sister FM station WAFD in Webster Springs. Summit Media also owns WDBS-FM and WSGB-AM. Studios were moved to 202 Back Fork Street in Webster Springs.

On May 15, 2007, WVAR dropped its country format and began simulcasting sister WSGB-AM's oldies format as "The Mighty 1490". That October, Summit Media filed an application with the FCC to waive main studio requirements for WVAR, which would allow on-air operations to be co-located with WSGB and other stations in Summit Media's ownership group.

Two months later, another application was filed informing the FCC that Summit Media had taken the station silent due to Summit Media's inability to successfully meet FCC-required staffing needs at the Webster Springs studio. The FCC granted the application to keep the station silent in January 2008 until granting permission for the studio waiver later that year. However, Summit Media kept the station silent for another year due to technical renovations being delayed due to the lack of available workforce.

Translator

In November 2009, Summit Media filed an application to rebroadcast WVAR's signal over FM translator W251AY, licensed to Birch River. The translator, licensed to operate at 98.1 MHz, broadcasts at 250 watts at a height of 256 m above average terrain. The translator, which has been on the air since 2004, had been previously used to rebroadcast the signal of sister FM station WDBS.

External links

  • WVAR/WSBG Online
  • 1997 Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook
  • WVAR in the FCC AM station database
  • WVAR in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
  • W223DF in the FCC FM station database
  • W223DF at FCCdata.org
  • W255DO in the FCC FM station database
  • W255DO at FCCdata.org
  • v
  • t
  • e
Radio stations in the East-Central West Virginia region
By AM frequency
By FM frequencyBy callsign
West Virginia radio markets
Beckley
Bluefield
Charleston
Huntington
Morgantown–Clarksburg–Fairmont
Parkersburg
Wheeling
Other West Virginia radio regions
Cumberland, MD
East-Central
Eastern Panhandle
Elkins–Buckhannon–Weston
Kingwood
Southern
West-Central
Winchester, VA
See also
List of radio stations in West Virginia
  • v
  • t
  • e
Classic Hits radio stations in West Virginia
See also
adult contemporary
classic hits
college
country
news/talk
NPR
oldies
religious
rock
sports
top 40
urban
other radio stations in West Virginia
See also
Oldies
Classic Hits

38°13′50″N 80°32′49″W / 38.23056°N 80.54694°W / 38.23056; -80.54694