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WWEB

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WWEB
Broadcast areaNew Haven, Connecticut
Frequency89.9 MHz
Programming
FormatDefunct (was Variety)
Ownership
OwnerChoate Rosemary Hall Foundation
History
First air date
September 1968
Call sign meaning
Wallingford Educational Broadcasting[1]
Technical information
Facility ID10861
ClassD
ERP15 watts
HAAT−5.0 meters (−16.4 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
41°27′34″N 72°48′48″W / 41.45944°N 72.81333°W / 41.45944; -72.81333

WWEB (89.9 FM) was a high school radio station broadcasting a variety music format. Licensed to Wallingford, Connecticut, United States, the station served the New Haven area. The station was last owned by Choate Rosemary Hall Foundation.[2][3] WWEB featured student and faculty programs supplemented with the programming of WWUH from the University of Hartford.

History

WWEB's initial construction permit was applied for on November 20, 1965, and granted on November 10, 1966. The station was granted the callsign WWEB on February 14, 1967, and its license to cover was granted on April 10, 1968.[4] In the early days, the station was on the third floor north attic of the building called the Science building (now Humanities). They used a Bauer 5-pot slide board. The transmitter was on a cabinet right behind the turntables, made by Granger. The transmitter fed a 78” line up to the roof where a 2-bay horizontal V only antenna was mounted on a pole or small tower section.

WWEB was one of the first National Public Radio distribution stations, in 1971, when it operated at a maximum of 10 watts, as a Class D educational station, featuring weekly broadcasts of "Washington Week in Review" and "Firing Line" predating the later PBS television versions.

Its license was cancelled on April 4, 2022 for failing to file a renewal application.

References

  1. ^ "Call Letter Origins". Radio History on the Web.
  2. ^ "WWEB Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  3. ^ "WWEB Station Information Profile". Arbitron.
  4. ^ FCC history cards for WWEB; retrieved April 8, 2018.