No, not that BBC - I speak here of the Buffalo Broadcasting Company, which took a decade-long stab at monopolizing the Queen City's airwaves before the FCC changed its rules and outlawed duopolies in 1941.
After a few evenings of poking around some newly-available web resources (the newspaper archives at fultonhistory.com and the FCC's online archive of Radio Service Bulletins from the 20s and 30s, among others) and consulting with fellow historians (including Tom Langmyer, Randy Michaels and Tom Atkins), I think I have a better understanding now of the birth of WBEN, among other things.
Here's how I think it went down:
We know that the Federal Telegraph Company put WGR on the air in 1922 from its plant on Elmwood Ave (now FWS), and that I.R. Lounsberry put WMAK on the air the same year from Lockport. Those were two pieces of the puzzle. In 1926, Clinton Churchill put WKBW on the air, and there's some uncertainty about where its transmitter site was. It may have operated initially from right next door to the Tabernacle on Main Street...which would have put its antenna on the spot where "Radio Center" would sit three decades later. In any case, it soon migrated north to roughly the spot where the 990 now crosses Sweet Home Road in Amherst.
Also to the north, WKEN in Kenmore signed on sometime in the mid-20s, eventually moving to Grand Island.
In 1927, Lounsberry moved WMAK south from Lockport to serve Buffalo, building a new transmitter plant on Shawnee Road just over the North Tonawanda line.
In 1928, "General Order 40" rearranged the AM dial around the country. WGR was shifted from 990 to 550 on the dial, where it was slated to share time with WSYR in Syracuse. WMAK went from 550 to 900, slated to share time with WFBL in Syracuse. WKBW, which had been on 1380, moved to 1470, where it was slated to share time with WKEN, which was already on 1470.
Before General Order 40 took effect in November 1928, the FRC revised it, moving WSYR to 570 and moving WKEN to 1040 as a daytimer.
In 1929, WGR, WMAK, WKEN and WKBW joined forces as the BBC. Newspaper articles of the day tried to make the case that it wasn't a "merger," just a joining of forces for operational efficiency...but all four stations ended up sharing studios at the Rand Building and came under common management, too.
Around the same time, the Buffalo Evening News applied for its own station, but apparently petitioned the FRC to take over the 900 kc dial position where WMAK was operating. A court fight ensued (or at least threatened to ensue), and the outcome found the BBC shedding a signal. The News took over 900 kc and the Shawnee Road transmitter site, and thus was born WBEN in 1930.
(I'd long believed that WBEN was a continuation of the old WMAK, and should thus claim 1922 as its sign-on date, but it's becoming clear now that the only continuity between the old WMAK and the new WBEN was the frequency and transmitter site. This line of thought is reinforced by another part of the 1930 switch: the BBC changed the calls on what had been WKEN at 1040 on the dial, which became WMAK, continuing the identity of the old 900.)
By this point, WGR and WKBW were sharing the Sweet Home Road transmitter site that WKBW had built in the late twenties. I'm still not sure where on Grand Island WKEN/WMAK 1040 was located...but it didn't last long after the call change, since any vestige of WMAK on 1040 disappears from the records after 1932.
That left the BBC with just two stations, albeit big ones: WGR and WKBW. In 1941, they moved from Amherst to a new shared site in Hamburg. WKBW, which had made a minor shift from 1470 to 1480 after General Order 40, moved to 1520 when NARBA took effect on 3/29/41. WBEN, of course, went from 900 to 930 at the same time - and a few months later it abandoned Shawnee Road for Grand Island, albeit not the same site WKEN/WMAK had used.
Within a couple of years, the BBC was history, and WKBW and WGR split off to separate owners...and we all know the rest of the story, in which the old BBC lineup was reassembled (and then some) to create today's Entercom cluster of WGR/WBEN/WWKB/WWWS.
Anyone have any insight to add to this? Once I get all the pieces together, I'm planning to put something more comprehensive on my site (tracking Buffalo's other AMs as well, though their histories are far simpler) and to offer it to the Buffalo Broadcasters for their site as well.
After a few evenings of poking around some newly-available web resources (the newspaper archives at fultonhistory.com and the FCC's online archive of Radio Service Bulletins from the 20s and 30s, among others) and consulting with fellow historians (including Tom Langmyer, Randy Michaels and Tom Atkins), I think I have a better understanding now of the birth of WBEN, among other things.
Here's how I think it went down:
We know that the Federal Telegraph Company put WGR on the air in 1922 from its plant on Elmwood Ave (now FWS), and that I.R. Lounsberry put WMAK on the air the same year from Lockport. Those were two pieces of the puzzle. In 1926, Clinton Churchill put WKBW on the air, and there's some uncertainty about where its transmitter site was. It may have operated initially from right next door to the Tabernacle on Main Street...which would have put its antenna on the spot where "Radio Center" would sit three decades later. In any case, it soon migrated north to roughly the spot where the 990 now crosses Sweet Home Road in Amherst.
Also to the north, WKEN in Kenmore signed on sometime in the mid-20s, eventually moving to Grand Island.
In 1927, Lounsberry moved WMAK south from Lockport to serve Buffalo, building a new transmitter plant on Shawnee Road just over the North Tonawanda line.
In 1928, "General Order 40" rearranged the AM dial around the country. WGR was shifted from 990 to 550 on the dial, where it was slated to share time with WSYR in Syracuse. WMAK went from 550 to 900, slated to share time with WFBL in Syracuse. WKBW, which had been on 1380, moved to 1470, where it was slated to share time with WKEN, which was already on 1470.
Before General Order 40 took effect in November 1928, the FRC revised it, moving WSYR to 570 and moving WKEN to 1040 as a daytimer.
In 1929, WGR, WMAK, WKEN and WKBW joined forces as the BBC. Newspaper articles of the day tried to make the case that it wasn't a "merger," just a joining of forces for operational efficiency...but all four stations ended up sharing studios at the Rand Building and came under common management, too.
Around the same time, the Buffalo Evening News applied for its own station, but apparently petitioned the FRC to take over the 900 kc dial position where WMAK was operating. A court fight ensued (or at least threatened to ensue), and the outcome found the BBC shedding a signal. The News took over 900 kc and the Shawnee Road transmitter site, and thus was born WBEN in 1930.
(I'd long believed that WBEN was a continuation of the old WMAK, and should thus claim 1922 as its sign-on date, but it's becoming clear now that the only continuity between the old WMAK and the new WBEN was the frequency and transmitter site. This line of thought is reinforced by another part of the 1930 switch: the BBC changed the calls on what had been WKEN at 1040 on the dial, which became WMAK, continuing the identity of the old 900.)
By this point, WGR and WKBW were sharing the Sweet Home Road transmitter site that WKBW had built in the late twenties. I'm still not sure where on Grand Island WKEN/WMAK 1040 was located...but it didn't last long after the call change, since any vestige of WMAK on 1040 disappears from the records after 1932.
That left the BBC with just two stations, albeit big ones: WGR and WKBW. In 1941, they moved from Amherst to a new shared site in Hamburg. WKBW, which had made a minor shift from 1470 to 1480 after General Order 40, moved to 1520 when NARBA took effect on 3/29/41. WBEN, of course, went from 900 to 930 at the same time - and a few months later it abandoned Shawnee Road for Grand Island, albeit not the same site WKEN/WMAK had used.
Within a couple of years, the BBC was history, and WKBW and WGR split off to separate owners...and we all know the rest of the story, in which the old BBC lineup was reassembled (and then some) to create today's Entercom cluster of WGR/WBEN/WWKB/WWWS.
Anyone have any insight to add to this? Once I get all the pieces together, I'm planning to put something more comprehensive on my site (tracking Buffalo's other AMs as well, though their histories are far simpler) and to offer it to the Buffalo Broadcasters for their site as well.