WCTM were the call letters assigned to an
FM radio station
Radio broadcasting is the broadcasting of audio (sound), sometimes with related metadata, by radio waves to radio receivers belonging to a public audience. In terrestrial radio broadcasting the radio waves are broadcast by a land-based rad ...
, and later an
AM station, both licensed to Eaton, Preble County, Ohio, United States.
WCTM-FM
WCTM (92.9
FM) was originally a station built by Stan Coning and three partners organized as Western Ohio Broadcasting Service, in 1959. The station's call letters came from the partners in the venture: Ralph Waring, Stan Coning, Howard Toney, and T. Somers Markle.
The first tower for the FM station was purchased from
700 WLW, and was tall. The tower was originally three separate AM tower/antennas, which had been used to keep the 500 kilowatt signal of WLW, allowed only during the 1930s and 1940s, out of Canada. The station aired an "easy listening/
beautiful music" format. The original FM station's studios, transmitter and tower were located at 505 North Barron Street in Eaton where Coning beforehand originally owned an appliance service business. For a time in the early-to-mid-1960s, WCTM was on the Cincinnati Reds Baseball Network and also aired play-by-play of area high school football and basketball games. In the 1960s, the station provided news and features from Eaton, Preble County and the surrounding area and also aired news and programming from the
Mutual Broadcasting System
The Mutual Broadcasting System (commonly referred to simply as Mutual; sometimes referred to as MBS, Mutual Radio or the Mutual Radio Network) was an American commercial radio network in operation from 1934 to 1999. In the Golden Age of Radio, ...
.
WCTM-FM, with an -FM prefix added to the callsign in 1971, was sold in November 1974 to Great Trails Broadcasting, which was then the owner of
WING
A wing is a type of fin that produces both Lift (force), lift and drag while moving through air. Wings are defined by two shape characteristics, an airfoil section and a planform (aeronautics), planform. Wing efficiency is expressed as lift-to-d ...
in Dayton,
WIZE
WIZE (1340 AM broadcasting, AM) — branded Dayton's BIN 1340 — is a commercial All-news radio, all-news radio station in Springfield, Ohio owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. as part of their Dayton, Ohio, Dayton cluster. While servicing the Dayton m ...
in Springfield and
WCOL-AM/FM in Columbus, and became WJAI. Great Trails spent a great deal of time and money moving the station's tower to better serve the Dayton market. It became WJAI, continuing the easy-listening format until 1979, when it switched to a
country music
Country (also called country and western) is a popular music, music genre originating in the southern regions of the United States, both the American South and American southwest, the Southwest. First produced in the 1920s, country music is p ...
format. The station then changed to Big Band/Nostalgia/Adult Standards in 1982 before becoming
WGTZ
WGTZ (92.9 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Eaton, Ohio and serving the Dayton and Springfield radio market. It airs an adult hits format, using the national Jack FM music service and is branded as "92-9 Jack FM." The s ...
("Z-93"), a Top 40 station, in 1984. That format switched in November 2007 to
variety hits "Fly 92.9" (a local version of the "
Jack FM
Jack FM is a radio network brand that is licensed by Sparknet Communications, with the exception of the European Union where it is licensed by Oxis Media. It plays an adult hits radio format, format, in most cases not using disc jockey, DJs.
F ...
" musical potpourri format which usually uses no air personalities)and is now branded as "92.9 Jack FM."
WCTM on AM
After the FM station was sold, Coning focused on acquiring an AM license (he had originally wanted to build an AM station, but the lack of available frequencies led him to build the FM station first). After a 12-year struggle to obtain a frequency, WCTM (1130
AM) went on the air in 1981 as a daytime-only station and picked up where the FM left off a decade earlier, playing beautiful music. The studios and transmitter were located east of Eaton in an open field behind an abandoned drive-in theater (since razed) in the rural Preble County community of Glenwood (aka "Ransom" on some online highway maps near West Alexandria, which was the station's mailing address).
Coning ran the operation by himself, using a home-built reel-to-reel automation system (a little box called a "Tel-Timer" gave the time and temperature in a computerized voice), while freelance voice-over announcers Darrel Studebaker, John Bauman (engineer) and Jim Linthicum voiced commercials, liners and announcements. The station's call letters were often said on the air to mean "We Cherish This Music".
In addition to its beautiful music format, WCTM aired farm and agricultural programming from
Ed Johnson's Agri Broadcast Network (for western Ohio farmers) and Derry Brownfield's Brownfield Network (for eastern Indiana farmers), helping to earn the station its nickname, "Radio Ranch 1130." This nickname was probably inspired by Ohio country music artist Donnie Bowser and the Radio Ranch Boys, and by
KWKH
KWKH (1130 AM) is a sports radio station licensed to Shreveport, Louisiana. The 50-kilowatt station broadcasts at 1130 kHz. Formerly owned by Clear Channel Communications and Gap Central Broadcasting, it is now owned by Townsquare Media. KWKH ...
, a country music station in Shreveport, Louisiana which also broadcast at 1130 kHz and used the "Radio Ranch" nickname.
WCTM aired local sports for a time, along with NASCAR coverage on weekends and the syndicated "Waxworks" nostalgia/big band program hosted by Gary Hannes. WCTM was also the first Ohio radio station to affiliate with Ted Turner's CNN Radio in 1983. Later, the station aired USA Radio Network news and sports. In its final years, the "beautiful music" format was often peppered with Stan Coning's soft-spoken recollections of his early life in Eaton and people he had known.
The end of WCTM
In its last few years, WCTM operated almost as a public service. Few commercials were heard, donations were accepted to help keep the station on the air, and sign-on/sign-off times were almost entirely dependent on how long Coning could remain at the station (a typical daily sign-off was around 5 P.M., with no broadcasts at all on Sundays). During this period, a friend of Coning's with the on-air name of "John Grant" hosted weekly programs and assisted with station maintenance and operations.
Due to his failing health, which had taken the station off the air for extended periods of time, Stan Coning finally sold his little station to Town & Country Broadcasting, owner of
WBZI in Xenia. WCTM signed off for the last time on June 24, 2004, an event which was covered by two Dayton TV stations. As a one-man operation with an easy-listening format, WCTM was widely regarded as the last of its kind. According to industry observer Scott Fybush, the loss of WCTM and its format marked "(the end of) the era of commercial beautiful music on American radio."
Today, the station lives on as
WEDI, simulcasting
WBZI's programming. The old WCTM-FM tower, topped with the original call letters, still stands atop a building at 505 North Barron in downtown Eaton. After several years of deteriorating health following the sale of WCTM, Stan Corning died on December 24, 2010, at approximately 86 years old at his residence and is interred next to his wife Helen (who preceded him in death in 1989) at Sugar Grove Cemetery in West Alexandria, Ohio.
Tapes of WCTM, including its final day on the air, are known to exist in the aircheck collection of
Clarke Ingram, a Pittsburgh radio executive who befriended Coning and was a fan of the station.
Source
Fybush.com Tower Site of the Week 6/25-7/5/04b
Scott Fybush
The WCTM callsig
was later used briefly in 2011 at the former WSFO, a now defunct construction permit for an FM station at 90.7 in
Barrington, New Hampshire.
Much of the classic beautiful music heard on WCTM can now be heard online (and via the
TuneIn
TuneIn is a global audio streaming service providing news, radio, sports, music, and podcasts to over 75 million monthly active users.
TuneIn is operated by the privately held company TuneIn Inc. based in San Francisco, California. The comp ...
app) at https://tunein.com/radio/BEAUTIFUL-INSTRUMENTALS-s156850/
See also
*
WGTZ
WGTZ (92.9 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Eaton, Ohio and serving the Dayton and Springfield radio market. It airs an adult hits format, using the national Jack FM music service and is branded as "92-9 Jack FM." The s ...
(originally WCTM-FM)
*
WEDI (the current incarnation of AM-1130)
*
Eaton, Ohio
Eaton is a city in and the county seat of Preble County, Ohio, United States, approximately west of Dayton. The population was 8,375 at the 2020 census, down 0.4% from the population of 8,407 at the 2010 census.
History
Eaton was founded a ...
*
List of radio stations in Ohio
References
External links
Scott Fybush's WCTM tribute pageOfficial site of Classic Country WBZI, WKFI and WEDI.(with streaming audio)Query the FCC's AM station database for WEDIWEDI technical information from Radio-Locator websiteFCC History Cards for WCTM (FM)
{{Dayton Radio
CTM
Defunct radio stations in the United States
Preble County, Ohio
Radio stations established in 1959
Radio stations disestablished in 2004
Defunct community radio stations in the United States
1959 establishments in Ohio
2004 disestablishments in Ohio
CTM
CTM