Knoxville's WNOX
By Ed Hooper
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About this ebook
Ed Hooper
Author Ed Hooper, a local writer, broadcast journalist, and a seventh-generation Tennessean himself, has compiled over 200 black-and-white vintage photographs to tell the story of the early years of Knoxville.
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Knoxville's WNOX - Ed Hooper
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INTRODUCTION
Knoxville broadcasting is home to legendary stations but none more than WNOX. In November 1921, when 16-year-old Knoxville native Stuart Adcock first signed the signal on the air as an employee of the Peoples Telephone and Telegraph, WNAV-AM became the eighth station in the United States to come into existence. Radio was still a grand experiment then. There were a few stations here and there across the nation, business models for the new medium were developing, and few really knew what potential lay in the electronic signal for music, information, and community service. In 1924, the young station was burned to the ground in a fire but returned a year later again under the direction of Peoples Telephone and Telegraph, when the call letters were changed from WNAV to WNOX.
Recognizing the value of the station to the community, Adcock applied to the U.S. Department of Commerce to get the letter K
as the lead call letter in the station identification to spell KNOX
but was refused, as Department of Commerce (DOC) regulations at the time restricted call letters beginning with K
for stations west of the Mississippi and W
for stations east of the Mississippi—unless licenses were already granted with the designation. WNOX was in a unique position of being a pioneer in broadcasting and mass communication for not only Knoxville, but the entire East Tennessee region. In fact, the airwaves at the time were so uncluttered the signal could be heard as far away as New York City.
Adcock sold WNOX in 1928 for $3,000 to the Sterchi Brothers, who leased it to Virgil Evans, and he moved it from the St. James Hotel on Wall Avenue to the Andrew Johnson Hotel on Gay Street. As radios became more popular and cheaper to own, the station saw a boom in listenership. It remained under the Sterchi Brothers’ purview until 1932, when it was sold to the Liberty Life Insurance Company for $50,000. It operated out of the downtown St. James Hotel. Two years later, for $125,000, it became the second station in the nation to be purchased by Cincinnati-based Scripps Howard Radio, Inc.; they pushed the station onto the national stage.
The WNOX call letters were more than appropriate for Scripps Howard, Inc., who also owned the Knoxville News Sentinel—one of two leading newspapers in the city at the time. Radio in the beginning was a live production from the moment the microphone was turned on and quickly became a tourist attraction for people who wanted to see for themselves the magic
of broadcasting. The station’s power was increased to 10,000 watts, the signal moved to 990 AM, and the station affiliated with the national Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) network.
Dick Westergaard and company moved the station from the Andrew Johnson Hotel to an abandoned tabernacle at 110 South Gay Street, which came equipped with its own auditorium able to accommodate the curious crowds. With a region like East Tennessee, which was so untouched by American popular culture and so rich in a unique musical heritage, Westergaard cultivated the idea of giving a platform to local musicians and hired Illinois broadcaster Lowell Blanchard in 1935 to drive into the hills and find talent for the station to audition. Blanchard became a fixture. Neither had the slightest idea the station’s little programs would unknowingly give birth to an entire genre of American music and launch the careers of legendary entertainers.
The footprint of WNOX went far beyond its legendary musical programs. It was Knoxville’s ear on the world in news and events from the first day it signed on the air. The station carried Westinghouse’s World Events as an evening national news program. When Charles Lindberg’s 18-month-old baby was kidnapped in March 1932, local and national interest was such that the station ran 24 hours a day for five days straight to keep people up to date on events surrounding it. When Scripps Howard took over the station, WNOX began utilizing United Press International’s wire service. It was the first wire service to allow radio usage and allowed the station to implement a floating news
policy, which meant it would interrupt programming if necessary to announce breaking news and devoted much to public affairs in East Tennessee.
In 1954, WNOX bought the old Whittle Springs Resort property and the hotel in North Knoxville. They built an auditorium, as they had also applied for a television license for WBIR. When they lost their bid for the television station, they converted it into a radio studio instead, and the building soon became a fixture in the city. The station featured great talent but also served as a training ground for many broadcasters, including this author, and the call letters were a coveted mark on radio résumés.
Because of its incredible story, WNOX’s history has often been cherry-picked to feature only the station’s most popular elements. This is the story of the station itself.
Overcoming that cherry-picked history would not have been possible without the invaluable assistance of radio historian and announcer Your
Dave Young. The Scott County native and Knoxville broadcaster is an alumnus of both the WNOX and WIVK radio powerhouses. He entered the business as the pioneering generation was exiting and handing it to the succeeding one. Young learned from the elders and remembered the names and faces and their accomplishments. When times changed, he saw value in old station photographs of announcers and staff being discarded. Many were candid shots that showed what life was like in the world of Knoxville