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WDAB was a Class D AM
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 ...
located in
Travelers Rest, South Carolina Travelers Rest is a city in Greenville County, South Carolina, Greenville County, South Carolina. Its population was 7,788 at the 2020 census. It is part of the Greenville-Mauldin-Easley Metropolitan Statistical Area. Travelers Rest, the northern ...
, near Greenville. The station was licensed by the
Federal Communications Commission The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is an independent agency of the United States government that regulates communications by radio, television, wire, internet, wi-fi, satellite, and cable across the United States. The FCC maintains j ...
(FCC) to broadcast on 1580
kHz The hertz (symbol: Hz) is the unit of frequency in the International System of Units (SI), often described as being equivalent to one event (or cycle) per second. The hertz is an SI derived unit whose formal expression in terms of SI base uni ...
with a transmitter power of 5,000 watts during the day, 1,000 watts during
critical hours Critical hours for radio stations is the time from sunrise to two hours after sunrise, and from two hours before sunset until sunset, local time. During this time, certain American radio stations may be operating with reduced power as a result of Se ...
and 10 watts at night.


History


WBBR

The station began broadcasting on October 12, 1964, under the call letters WBBR. The station was owned by the Piedmont Broadcasting Company, a venture of William H. Kirby and John B. Burns, ( Guide to reading History Cards) and aired a country music format from studios on Old Buncombe Road. It initially broadcast with 500 watts during the daytime only, but in 1967, WBBR was authorized to increase to 1,000 watts. Kirby then bought out Burns's stake in the company in 1970. Over the course of the 1970s, the station slowly shifted from a country format to southern gospel music, making the switch official in early 1975; after a year, owner Kirby trumpeted that the station had tripled its audience from the change in repertoire. However, the station returned in part to a country format in 1977 when it hired Rick Driver, who had been a country DJ for WFBC in Greenville, and began airing country music from 6 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. The FCC granted WBBR a construction permit to increase its power further, to 5,000 watts, and begin broadcasting during critical hours with 1,000 watts on July 30, 1979. When the increase became effective in 1980, the station ditched its musical programming, which had reverted to all-country, and instituted a religious format with the name "That Certain Sound". Kirby died in 1988.


WDAB

In 1992, WBBR changed its call letters to WDAB; the next year, it was sold to the namesake of said call letters, Dabney-Adamson Broadcasting, for $180,000. The reason the station changed call letters before it was sold was because the Kirby family had sold the WBBR call letters separately, to
Michael Bloomberg Michael Rubens Bloomberg (born February 14, 1942) is an American businessman and politician. He is the majority owner and co-founder of Bloomberg L.P., and was its CEO from 1981 to 2001 and again from 2014 to 2023. He served as the 108th mayo ...
, for use on his new business radio station in New York. Dabney-Adamson dropped the long-running religious programming for a news/talk format based on the audio of
CNN Headline News HLN is an American basic cable network. Owned by CNN Worldwide, the network primarily carries true-crime programming, recently drifting away from limited live news programming. The channel was originally launched on January 1, 1982, by Tur ...
, as well as weekend sports and cultural shows. The station ended up changing to an
adult standards Adult standards (also sometimes known as the nostalgia or Big Band format) is a North American radio format heard primarily on AM or class A FM stations. Adult standards started in the 1950s and is aimed at "mature" adults, meaning mainly tho ...
format by early 1998. That February, a weekly radio show debuted, one that would change the course of much of the rest of WDAB's history: "La Brava", a five-hour weekly block in Spanish with music and talk programs. The show quickly grew to 12 hours on Saturdays and six on Sundays, and the station was airing Spanish-language programming daily beginning in late June. In April 1999, the entire station was leased out to José Belén Robles, who owned several Hispanic food stores in the area. The founder of WDAB's original Spanish-language programming, Carlos García, soon left to convert WGVL (1440 AM) into a competing full-service outlet. On January 27, 2007, what had been "La Poderosa" flipped from a secular format to religious programming after operator Belén Robles affiliated the station with the Atlanta-based Cadena Radial de Vida, directed by pastor Julián Herrera. After just six months, the station returned to its
Regional Mexican Regional Mexican music refers collectively to the regional subgenres of the country music of Mexico and its derivatives from the Southwestern United States. Each subgenre is representative of a certain region and its popularity also varies by ...
music. After nearly two decades as a Spanish-language station, a new lessee took over WDAB in 2016 and returned it to its roots as a local station serving Travelers Rest, run by Dan Scott, the voice of
Furman University Furman University is a private university in Greenville, South Carolina, United States. Founded in 1826 and named after Baptist pastor Richard Furman, the Liberal arts college, liberal arts university is the oldest private institution of higher l ...
athletics; the station also was slated to carry 40 Furman baseball games, when in prior years only six aired on the radio. The new format would not last. WDAB went off the air for good on April 3, 2018; on November 8, 2019, the FCC canceled the station's license, for being silent more than a year.


References


External links


Facility details for Facility ID 15237 (WDAB)
in the FCC Licensing and Management System
FCC History Cards for WDAB
(covering 1960-1980 as WBBR) {{Upstate AM DAB Radio stations established in 1964 1964 establishments in South Carolina Radio stations disestablished in 2018 2018 disestablishments in South Carolina Defunct radio stations in the United States DAB DAB