Originally owned by Holiday Isles Broadcasting Company, the station signed on the air as WILZ on February 4, 1957. It was originally licensed to St. Pete Beach, with its studios at 7500 Boca Ciega Drive.[3] Its initial format was adult standards and big band music, featuring "all time favorites from 1925 to the present".[3] One of its disc jockeys in the early 1960s was Elmo Tanner, the former singer and whistler with the Ted Weems Orchestra.[4]
In 1969, Millbeck Broadcasting bought the station, maintaining the adult standards format and adding New York Mets baseball.[3] The station subsequently changed its format to Top 40 as Z16 and, in 1973, changed to an oldies format as Solid Gold 16.[3] In 1975, WILZ was bought by Gene Danzey, a former General Manager for WTMP in Tampa, who retooled the station as WRXB, the region's first black-owned station.[5]
Danzey sold the station in 1996 to Rolyn Communications, Inc.[6] A transfer was requested to Metropolitan Radio Group in 1996, but that transfer was not completed until 1999. In 2000, Gary Acker (owner of Metropolitan Radio Group) died, and control of the station passed to his estate, which was overseen by Mark Acker. In 2007, the station was sold to Walter Kotaba's Polnet Communications.
Past announcers at WRXB included Jim Murray, Rob Simone and Sister Dianne Hughes. WRXB also featured state legislator Wengay Newton (D-St. Petersburg) with a weekly community program, along with Pastor Brian Anderson's The Voice of the Village and Undignified Praise and Worship, produced by Richard Guess.[7] Other announcers included Ivan Summers and Tony King hosting TK's Midday Cafe.
On August 20, 2009, WRXB had its first major format change in more than 30 years when it switched to 24-hour urban gospel programming.[5] Gene Danzey died of respiratory failure on May 29, 2012.[5]
Effective September 26, 2019, Polnet Communications sold WRXB and translator W241DH to Sam Rogatinsky's Gulf Coast Broadcasting for $165,000. The station's call sign was simultaneously changed to WTPA. At that time, the newly renamed station began broadcasting Haitian Creole programming as Radio Nouvelle Lumiere, modeled after Rogatinsky's WPBR in West Palm Beach.
Effective August 7, 2020, the station moved its community of license from St. Pete Beach to Palm River-Clair Mel. On November 1, 2021, the WTPA call sign was moved to the former WHSR in Pompano Beach, which Rogatinsky acquired in 2021. AM 1590's new call sign became WHOT.
Notes
^This translator is currently rebroadcasting WCIE (FM) under special temporary authority until it can move to Tampa.