Re: 1400 = Many, many call letters
> > Yes, but they had an ownership change and the call letters
>
> > were changed to WSPG "Spartanburg 1400"
>
> Going back to its 1940 debut, 1400 was the first home of the
> WORD call sign in Spartanburg. The station was built and
> owned by the late Walter Brown, of WSPA fame. After WWII,
> WORD moved to 910 kHz, with a kilowatt day & night (which
> was MUCH better than 250 watt maximum allowed on 1400). In
> late 1953, Brown sold WORD, in order to buy WSPA-AM/FM,
> which he closed on in 1954. By the way, WSPA was South
> Carolina's 1st radio station (February, 1930), and WSPA-FM
> was the state's 1st FM station (August, 1946).
>
> In 1952, the 1400 frequency reappeared in Spartanburg, as
> WJAN. Then in 1959, it became WZOO. Another change occured
> in 1962, when 1400 became WHCQ.
>
> The WKDY (KDY Country) years began in 1971, when the station
> was purchased by Capitol Broadcasting, of Charleston, WV.
> The station had its best years under the management of Paul
> Howard, having several years in the early 80's with billings
> close to a million bucks annually.
>
> After a late-80's sale, WKDY became WYYR in 1991, WMMZ in
> 1994, back to WKDY in 1998, and finally to the present WSPG
> in January of 2005.
>
> 10 call letter changes in 65 years...definitely more than
> average.
>
THANKS GUYS!

Much appreciated.