Everything about Wnyw Shortwave totally explained
WNYW, Radio New York Worldwide, was a
U.S. shortwave radio station broadcasting from
Scituate, Massachusetts, until
October 20,
1973, when Family Stations acquired it and changed the
call letters to
WYFR.
In 1931
Walter Lemmon, a radio inventor began experimental shortwave station
W1XAL in
Boston, Massachusetts. In 1935, the station began transmitting non-commercial, and educational or cultural programs.
Four days after Britain and France declared war on Germany, on
September 7,
1939, the
FCC assigned the call letters
WRUL to W1XAL. The service was operated by
British Security Coordination, based in New York.
(External Link
) WRUL stood for
World
Radio
University
Listeners, and from 1939 to 1942, radio lectures were broadcast to Europe and South America in eight languages and in the United States over an informal network of over 300 stations, including
WNYC in
New York City. Like all United States shortwave stations, WRUL was turned over under a lease agreement to the U.S. government in November 1942 for further wartime propaganda broadcasts. WRUL was allowed to resume partial independent programming in 1947 and full independent programming in 1954. The station was sold to
Metromedia in 1960.
In June of 1962, WRUL was bought by the Intemational Educational Broadcasting Corporation (today
Bonneville International) owned by
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the LDS Church). The station began using the slogan "Radio New York Worldwide" and dropped its educational/cultural programming in favor of an
adult contemporary format with
ABC Radio or
CBS Radio hourly newscasts and half-hour newscasts from its sister station,
WRFM. There were rumors that the station was being partially controlled by the
Central Intelligence Agency to broadcast
anti-communist propaganda.
On
June 1, 1966, WRUL changed its call letters to WNYW, which stood for Radio
New
York
Worldwide.
The
callsign has now been assigned to a
Fox Broadcasting Company station,
WNYW (formerly
MetroMedia station WNEW-TV and
DuMont Television Network station WABD), in
New York City.
Further Information
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