By SCOTT FYBUSH
Portions originally published Feb. 18, 2011
This week’s Site of the Week wraps up our look at the sites featured in Tower Site Calendar 2013 – and it wraps up Site of the Week for 2012, since we’ll be off next week for the holiday break.
For this installment, we’re showing you the story behind WLBL (930) in Auburndale, Wisconsin – and while central Wisconsin shivers under a blanket of snow on this cold December day in 2012, our pictures come from a visit in the sweltering summer of 2009, as we headed back to Indiana from Minnesota.
While the first part of that route was quick and direct – I-94 east from the Twin Cities through Eau Claire – we’re turning off the interstate about 25 miles east of Eau Claire to try another route across Wisconsin: US 10, which runs west-to-east across the center of the state.
We’re going this way for several reasons: first, because US 10 will eventually deposit us in our destination for the night, Appleton – and second, because the highway runs right past one of the most unusual radio studios to be found anywhere.
That magnificent example of spaced-out Sixties architecture is now the studio and office home of the three radio stations licensed to the small town of Neillsville: WCCN (1370), WCCN-FM (107.5) and WPKG (92.7). But that’s not how it began…no, this structure started out in Flushing, New York as the Wisconsin state pavilion at the 1964 World’s Fair!
Today, this building serves two purposes: the radio station’s offices are at the back of the building, and the front…well, that’s a gift shop, of all things, selling Wisconsin cheeses and other souvenirs. The gift shop is easy to visit, of course, but it takes a little bit of sweet-talking the office manager to get a quick peek at the more interesting spaces in back…
The three stations here run largely on satellite and automation, or at least that’s what they’re doing when we pop in at the end of the day. The AM station broadcasts standards, WPKG is hot AC, and WCCN-FM is “Rock 107” – with, I think, a live jock on the air in that studio with the big “WCCN” logo on the carpeted wall.
The FM stations share a site northwest of Neillsville, and we don’t make it up to that site this day, though we’ll have to come back and see it sometime.
Instead, we’re eastbound again on US 10, where the next community of any size is Marshfield – and where the one station we have time to check out is the local AM signal, 1000-watt WDLB, with a folded unipole antenna strung up on a tallish tower just north of downtown.
(The lone Marshfield-licensed FM station, WYTE 106.5, uses a site near Milladore, shared with religious WGNV 88.5; we drove right near there along US 10 but somehow missed it; maybe next time!)
So from Marshfield, we’re off again to a most historic AM site just a few miles to the southeast – the one featured in Tower Site Calendar 2013.
WLBL (930) is licensed to the small town of Auburndale, but it was designed from the beginning to serve a big chunk of central Wisconsin. It started east of here in Waupaca, where it signed on in 1923 as WPAH, operated by the Wisconsin Department of Markets to serve farmers with agricultural information and farm reports.
As so many stations did back then, WPAH moved around in its first few years, becoming WCP and operating out of studios in Stevens Point, then taking its present WLBL calls, which stand for “Wisconsin, Land of Beautiful Lakes.”
(“Fulltime” might not be the right word here, actually; as with many early “educational” stations, both WHA and WLBL were relegated to daytime-only status in the late twenties, WHA on 940 and WLBL on 900; they’d eventually move to their present spots on 970 and 930, respectively, in the 1941 NARBA shift.)
The present transmitter site in Auburndale dates to 1937, built by the state with the aim to serve as much of central Wisconsin as possible. With its 5000 daytime watts, WLBL reaches north to Wausau, east to Stevens Point and south to Wisconsin Rapids with a strong signal, and on the radios of the thirties and forties it was surely listenable as far away as Green Bay and Eau Claire.
Today, WLBL’s daytime AM reach is augmented by FMs around the state, including Wausau-based WLBL-FM on 91.9; the AM, meanwhile, has 70 watts of power at night now in addition to its daytime signal.
From Auburndale and the WLBL building, the next major city we hit heading east on US 10 is Stevens Point, but there’s no need to stop to see the stations there – we did that on Big Trip 2005, on the way south from Wausau, and you can see those pictures here.
We’re heading for sunset by this point – it’s been a long day of travel coming east from the Twin Cities – but there’s time for one more town and one more station before we get to our overnight stop in Neenah, just south of Appleton. That’s in Waupaca, about halfway between Stevens Point and the Fox Cities, the town that gave birth to what’s now WLBL.
And while that station has been gone from Waupaca for more than eight decades now, another station has called this small city home since 1956. WDUX signed on here as a 500-watt daytimer on 800, eventually boosting power to 5000 watts by day and adding 500-watt night service. WDUX-FM (92.7) came along in 1967; today, the AM runs country and the FM runs adult contemporary.
From Waupaca, we headed off to Neenah and Appleton, another market where we’d pretty much seen everything in 2005 – and you can dig back into our archives to see the installment that took us east to the Lake Michigan shoreline and the towns of Manitowoc and Two Rivers. And in the meantime, you can hear some IDs from Neillsville and Marshfield and Auburndale and Waupaca (and Wausau, too) over on our sister site, TopHour.com.
Want access to more than a dozen years’ worth of Tower Site of the Week? All our archives, fully searchable, are available to Fybush.com subscribers – and you get full access to NorthEast Radio Watch, too! Subscriptions start at just $15. Sign up here!
And don’t miss more IDs next Wednesday, over at our sister site, TopHour.com!
Next week: We take a break to get ready for some great travels to show you during 2013!