KXLY uses a non-directional antenna, from a transmitter site off South Regal Street in Spokane.[2] By day, it operates with a power of 20,000 watts, which is reduced to 5,000 watts at night to protect other stations on 920 AM from interference. Programming is also carried on 250-watt FM translator K264CH at 100.7 MHz.[3]
From 1912 to 1927, radio communication in the United States was regulated by the U.S. Department of Commerce. In the early days, there were no formal requirements for stations, most of which operated under Amateur and Experimental licenses, making broadcasts intended for the general public. To provide a common standard, the department issued a regulation effective December 1, 1921, requiring that broadcasting stations would have to hold a "Limited Commercial License" that authorized operation on two designated broadcasting wavelengths: 360 meters (833 kHz) for "entertainment", and 485 meters (619 kHz) for "market and weather reports".[6]
The first two Spokane broadcasting station authorizations were issued to the Doerr-Mitchell Electric Company on March 23, 1922. One was for station KFZ.[7] The other went to the Spokane Chronicle on April 12, 1922, for KOE.[8] Both would share time on 360 meters. Because there was only the single entertainment wavelength, stations in a given region had to develop arrangements for broadcasts on the shared 360-meter wavelength.
KFDC
In 1922, 17-year-old Edmund B. Craney was an employee at the Radio Supply Company in Spokane, which was owned by Thomas W. Symons, Jr.[9] Craney was a member of the North Central High School radio club. In the summer of 1921, physics teacher Arthur L. Smith had arranged for the school to be issued a "Technical and Training School" station license, with the call sign 7YL.[10] In addition, Craney held a license for amateur station 7AEG.[11]
Craney convinced his employer that the Radio Supply Company should operate a broadcasting station, to promote sales. The December 1, 1921, regulations that had established the broadcasting service required that station operators had to hold a "commercial second-class license or higher".[6] Craney arranged to take the training for the needed qualification.[12] On November 21, 1922, a broadcasting station license with the call sign KFDC was issued in the name of "Radio Supply Co. (E. B. Craney)."[13] It would also operate on 360 meters.
Craney reported that broadcasts originating from Radio Supply started on October 18, 1922.[12] The KFDC call letters were randomly assigned from an alphabetical roster of available call signs. The station's history makes it the oldest surviving Spokane radio station. (KHQ, now KQNT, was first licensed earlier, on February 28, 1922, but did not move to Spokane until 1925. KFIO (now KSBN), first licensed on May 22, 1923, has a slightly longer continuous history, because unlike KXLY it was never deleted and relicensed.)
Although initially licensed to broadcast on 360 meters, Craney later reported that technical issues meant that the station had difficulty maintaining its assigned wavelength.[12] In mid-1923 KFDC was reassigned to 1060 kHz.[14]
Deletion and revival as KFPY
KFDC suspended operations and was deleted on September 19, 1923.[15] However, the station was revived the next year, and was relicensed on April 23, 1924, to the Symons Investment Company, again on 1060 kHz. It got the sequentially assigned call letters of KFPY.[16] KFPY was housed in the Symons Building on 7 South Howard Street in Spokane. Beginning in 1925, audience members were welcomed to view live broadcasts, usually music programs or dramas. They took place at "The Golden Concert Studios of KFPY" on the second floor, which boasted a curtain, a stage and seating for 150. On the stage were two grand pianos and a Wurlitzer Organ. It was through these facilities that Bing Crosby, then an unknown Gonzaga University student, made his radio debut. Decades later, Crosby would partner with the station to launch KXLY-TV.[9] Other future stars who performed at the Golden Studios include Bob Crosby and Patrice Munsel.
KFPY was reported to be transmitting on 1100 kHz as of December 31, 1926.[17] In mid-1927, this was changed to 1220 kHz.[18] On November 11, 1928, under the provisions of the Federal Radio Commission's General Order 40, KFPY was assigned to 1390 kHz on a timesharing basis with KWSC in Pullman, Washington.[19] This was changed to unlimited hours on 1340 kHz in August 1929.[20] In 1935 the station moved to 890 kHz.
Craney left KFPY in 1927 to found KGIR in Butte, Montana. He returned to Spokane in 1945 to buy KFPY, which was renamed to KXLY on December 19, 1946. The new call letters reflected Craney's "XL Network", a chain of stations he also owned in Butte, Helena, Bozeman, Great Falls and Missoula, all of which had call letters beginning with "KXL".
On February 22, 1953, the radio station expanded into television with the sign-on of KXLY-TV on channel 4. Like its radio cousin, the TV station was an affiliate of the CBS network, but has been with ABC since 1976. That same year in November, Craney sold KXLY and KXLY-TV to the Northern Pacific Radio and Television Corporation, headed by Joseph Harris, Norman Eisenstein, and Richard E. Jones.
In September 1959, an FM station was added, 99.9 KXLY-FM.[22] At first, KXLY AM and FM simulcast their programming. But by the early 1960s, KXLY-FM had its own format, beautiful music. In 1961, Northern Pacific sold KXLY-AM-FM-TV to the current owners, Morgan Murphy Media.
In September 1998, the CBS Radio Network affiliation moved to 1510 KGA. KXLY picked up ABC News Radio for its network, matching its television counterpart's affiliation, which had made the switch 22 years earlier in 1976 after CBS ended its affiliation with the TV station.
On September 17, 2015, KXLY added an FM translator on 100.3 MHz. In April 2016, the translator moved to 100.7 FM.
^ abc"Radio Days" by Jim Kershner, Spokane Spokesman-Review, October 5, 1992, pages B1, B8.
^"New Stations: Special Land Stations"Radio Service Bulletin, July 1, 1921 (No. 51), Bureau of Navigation, Department of Commerce, Washington, D.C., page 4. The "7" in the call sign indicated that the station was located in the 7th Radio Inspection district, while the "Y" reflected that it was a Technical and Training School authorization.
^"Seventh District", Amateur Radio Stations of the United States (edition June 30, 1922), page 181. The fact that the "A" in 7AEG's call sign fell in the range A-W indicated that the station was operating under a standard Amateur radio license.
1Owned by SagamoreHill Broadcasting, Morgan Murphy Media operates these stations under an SSA.2Owned by Sullivan's Landing, Morgan Murphy Media operates these stations under an SSA.