History
KHBG
In 1936, three groups applied to build a new radio station on 1210 kHz in Okmulgee, the city's first. Two represented local newspapers, the ''Record'' and ''Daily Times'', while the third was the Okmulgee Broadcasting Company. The newspapers dropped out of the running that April, with the ''Times'' stating that it felt local advertising support would be insufficient to sustain the outlet, especially if it could not broadcast at night. Taking the call letters KHBG, representing founding owner Harry B. Greaves, the new outlet signed on in the first week of October. It broadcast during the daytime only with 100 watts. Two years after putting the station on air, the founding owners of Okmulgee Broadcasting Company transferred their shares to two families with involvement on the station staff, the Buford and Ross families, in 1939. The new owners upgraded the station to broadcast with 250 watts and add nighttime service in 1939; two years later, NARBA reallocation moved it to its present 1240 kHz. The station gained its first live network hookup in 1944 when it affiliated with the Mutual Broadcasting System. A decade after dropping its bid to build a radio station, the ''Daily Times'' bought KHBG in 1948 for $125,000, after the paper's owner, Donald W. Reynolds, had filed to build a new station there. Reynolds pledged to theKOKL
On September 15, 1959, KHBG relaunched as KOKL—call letters representing both Okmulgee and Oklahoma—but retained its full-service format, playing a variety of music throughout the day. Four years later, Reynolds would make one last upgrade, being approved to increase the station's daytime power to 1,000 watts. In 1964, Reynolds sold KOKL to J. William Brauer, an advertising executive, for $85,000; the station moved to the Enterprise Building on 6th Street after separating from the ''Times''. The station's transmitter site was damaged in a 1971 brush fire. Brauer sold the station to James R. "Bob" Brewer, who also owned stations in Claremore, Frederick, Elk City and Chickasha, in 1973. A sister station on FM, KLLS (94.3 FM), signed on May 24, 1976; it became an adult contemporary outlet, and KOKL settled into a country format. The FM station was sold to a group headed by former pro football player Ben Davis in 1989; the new owner upgraded and moved it into the Tulsa market on 94.1 MHz in 1990. The station moved from the Enterprise Building to the Kress Building in 1997; during this time, it broadcast country music during the day and programming from American Family Radio during evening hours. In 2014, Bob retired, and his son Brooks purchased the station by way of Third Day Broadcasting. Music programming concentrates on artists of the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s.FM translator
KOKL is also broadcast on the following FM translator, which began broadcasting in 2018.References
External links