City | Marshall, Texas |
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Broadcast area | |
Branding | AM: ESPN Radio 1450 FM: 103.9 Classic Country |
Slogan | The Heart Beat of East Texas |
Frequency | AM: 1450 kHz FM: 103.9 MHz |
Translator(s) | 96.9 K245BW (Marshall, relays AM) |
First air date | AM: 1947 FM: 1993 |
Format | AM: Sports FM: Classic Country |
Power | AM: 650 watts |
ERP | FM: 1,850 watts |
HAAT | FM: 129 meters |
Class | AM: C FM: A |
Facility ID | AM: 72450 FM: 72451 |
Transmitter coordinates | 32°33′50″N 94°21′4″W / 32.56389°N 94.35111°WCoordinates: 32°33′50″N 94°21′4″W / 32.56389°N 94.35111°W |
Former callsigns | FM: KZEY-FM (1980-1994) |
Affiliations | AM: ESPN Radio FM: ABC Radio |
Owner | Hanszen Broadcast Group, Inc. |
Website | easttexastoday.com |
KMHT (1450 AM) and KMHT-FM (103.9 FM) are radio stations broadcasting a sports format on AM and a classic country on FM. Licensed to Marshall in Harrison County, Texas, United States, the stations serve the Longview-Marshall area. The stations are currently owned by Hanszen Broadcast Group, Inc.
The station also broadcasts Marshall High School athletics as well as ETBU athletics, TSN (Texas State Network), Texas Rangers, Houston Astros, Dallas Cowboys, Houston Texans, Dallas Mavericks, the University of Texas Longhorn Athletics, and Texas A&M athletics. Other area high school athletics that KMHT covers include Harleton, Karnack, and Waskom.
A group of local veterans returned to Marshall from World War II and took advantage of their right to first preferences of frequencies after the radio frequency freeze was lifted at the end of the war. In 1961, after 14 years of operation, KMHT AM was granted FCC permission to raise the daytime power from 250 watts to 1,000 watts. Shortly thereafter, the FCC approved the operation of 1000 Watts around the clock. A later move to a new transmitter site required lowering the power to 650 watts.
In the late 1990s, KMHT was given to Wiley College, a historically black four-year liberal arts institution affiliated with the United Methodist Church, by then owner professional boxer George Foreman.
Wiley College later sold the stations to Jerry Russell, a former member of the Tyler City Council. Russell wanted to use KMHT-FM as a repeater for his AM 690 KZEY (which has since gone silent), so KMHT-FM became KZEY-FM.