It's now been 30 years since WFMS left it's long time (first??) studio at 2255 N Hawthorne Lane. I believe Martin Williams lived within a few hundred feet of the site.
That was good reading...thanks for sharing it boomerang. So that puts the "new" building at 1973. When I started in on it, it was 8 years old. By the time we were through with it in 1985, it was starting to smell, the floors creaked & I believe some were starting to sag. WFMS did a wise thing by exiting that building after only 8 years...plus the neighborhood wasn't the best. AM 1310 WTUX with the Music Of Your Life later occupied the building. I haven't been back there in many years but understand it eventually became a crack house and has since been bulldozed.boomerang said:Answering the questions about the fire on Hawthorne, I cite excerts from the 1992 book by author Philip K. Eberly titled, "Susquehanna Radio: The First Fifty Years".
"With the Williams signature finally on the dotted line and the FCC approval granted, the newly hired manager, Ron Voss, and his crew were ready to do battle in Indianapolis (Thanksgiving week 1972). The WFMS building represented the best physical facility so far of the Company's various acquisitions. Al Saunders says, "It was a nice colonial brick building - a bit cluttered, but nice. We spent some money on renovations, including the installation of an additional studio."
More improvements, however, would have to wait. At 1:53 P.M. on Friday, February 2, 1973, fire swept through WFMS, glutting the entire interior, throwing the station off the air, and setting into motion a heroic effort that was to become Susquehanna engineering's finest hour. Rhonda Hall remembers the fire starting in the storage area. (It was later determined that faulty wiring was the cause.)"
..."On Monday morning, an ad was placed in the Indianapolis newspapers. Its headline read, "WE EXPECTED A WARM WELCOME TO INDIANAPOLIS...BUT THIS IS RIDICULOUS." That same day, merely 57 hours after the fire, WFMS was back on the air."
..."Since a radio station requires special construction in terms of acoustics and electrical wiring, Company engineers opted for a custom built, modular configuration. Created by Structures of America in Elkhart, Indiana, the six units that comprised the new WFMS came together within 13 weeks."