Interesting that the article says they signed on (in February) with Al Jolson singing "April Showers." You have to wonder why they picked that particular song. Unless it was on the top of the Hit Parade that week in 1922, when the Charleston was the big dance rage. Just think if they had played the Charleston first we might consider WOR to be a former "Dance Station" that never should have switched format!
The comment was made that WOR sounds only like 70 now. Actually, looking at a list of WOR's programs in the 1950s and 1960s it certainly sounds a lot younger now than it did then. Some people used to refer to it as the "little old ladies station" and they were guys who actually worked there.
Still for decades it was, by far, the top rated, and top billing, NYC radio station with the various John Gamblings holding down morning drive. Talk about "keeping it in the family" grandpa started with the shift in 1925, his son joined him in the 50s and took it over around 1959, and his son John R. is still doing it this morning. And for many of those years, it was one of the best paying gigs in New York radio.
Bamberger's Department Store has long since been acquired by Macy's and the building is now some kind of super secret telecommunications hub, with a basement rail line, and WOR continues to go on.
Give it credit, it is still also trying to be a trailblazer and make HD AM work, even if the carrier whistle gets a touch annoying.
Interesting that in radio's early days, two of the three NYC area radio stations were in Newark. WOR had its transmitters in Carteret, and WJZ, now WABC, had its transmitter in Bound Brook and both stations were trying hard to serve NYC and Philadelphia with one signal each.
Also interesting is that Bambergers started WOR to sell radios, not advertise the store. Some reports say they were selling crystal radios at $25 each, which was probably an average week's wages then. And now you can get a working FM radio in a dollar store for a dollar, but you can't get WOR on that kind of radio. Times change, but WOR still marches on with a John Gambling leading the band.