WLIL

WLIL
Broadcast areaKnoxville, Tennessee
Frequency730 kHz 102.7 FM
BrandingThe Legendary AM 730 and 102.7
Programming
FormatCountry
Ownership
OwnerFowlers Holdings Lllp
WIFA
History
First air date
May 27, 1950
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID73211
ClassD
ERP1,000 watts day
214 watts night
Transmitter coordinates
35°46′12.00″N 84°16′47.00″W / 35.7700000°N 84.2797222°W / 35.7700000; -84.2797222
Links
Public license information
Websitehttp://wlilcountry.com

WLIL "The Legendary AM 730" is a radio station broadcasting "East Tennessee's Country Classics." Licensed to Lenoir City, Tennessee, it serves the Knoxville, Tennessee area.

History

WLIL has been "serving east Tennessee since 1950." Arthur Wilkerson, who worked in construction, traveled a lot. One day, he was working in Louisville, Kentucky and could see inside a radio station from where he was working. Finding that interesting, he went to the station after work and sat in the audience of live broadcasts. Wilkerson pondered whether his home town of Lenoir City, Tennessee could support a radio station. In 1949, he applied for a license, and WLIL-AM went on the air at 730, a clear channel, on May 27, 1950, with 1000 watts during the day.

Although few people had FM radios, Wilkerson also applied for an FM station at 100.3. In 1956, WSM in Nashville, Tennessee closed its FM station, and Wilkerson did the same, believing that if such a big station couldn't succeed, he had no chance.

Knoxville got its first FM station in 1966, and Wilkerson realized he may have made a mistake. WLIL-FM signed on at 93.5 in 1967.

In addition to his radio station, Wilkerson owned a lumber mill and built custom homes. He served as president of the Tennessee Association of Broadcasters. He was also a pilot and he ran a restaurant.

After Wilkerson died in 1998, BP Broadcasters purchased the station.[2]

In 2006, Progressive Media, owner of WIFA, purchased WLIL from BP Broadcasters LLC.[3] BP kept the FM station, which had simulcast the AM through its entire history. Dwight Wilkerson, son of Arthur, kept WLIK in Newport, Tennessee.

Fowlers Holdings Lllp now owns WLIL. Don Fowler owns furniture stores in Tennessee and Georgia.[2]

References

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WLIL". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ a b "Serving East Tennessee since 1950". wlilcountry.com. Retrieved March 21, 2023.
  3. ^ "Deals," Broadcasting and Cable, August 14, 2006.