City | New York, New York |
---|---|
Broadcast area | New York metropolitan area |
Branding | Family Radio |
Slogan | The sound of the new life |
Frequency | 1560 kHz |
First air date | March 26, 1929 (as experimental television station W2XR) |
Format | Christian Radio |
Power | 50,000 watts |
Class | A |
Facility ID | 29024 |
Transmitter coordinates | 40°43′0″N 73°55′4″W / 40.71667°N 73.91778°WCoordinates: 40°43′0″N 73°55′4″W / 40.71667°N 73.91778°W |
Callsign meaning | Where Faith Means Everything |
Former callsigns | W2XR (1929–1936) WQXR (1936–1992) WQEW (1992–2015) |
Former frequencies | 2100 kHz (1929–1934) 1550 kHz (1934–1941) |
Affiliations | Family Radio (2015–) |
Owner |
Family Radio (Family Stations, Inc.) |
Sister stations | WFME-FM, WNYJ-TV |
Website | familyradio |
WFME (1560 AM) is a religious-formatted broadcast radio station located in New York City; it operates as a Class A station on a clear channel frequency with 50,000 watts (50 kilowatts) of power. The station is owned and operated by Family Radio, a Christian radio ministry based in Oakland, California. The station's studios and offices are located in West Orange, New Jersey, and its transmitters are based in the Maspeth section of the New York City borough of Queens.
WFME began operations as W2XR, an experimental television station, owned by inventor John V. L. Hogan, operating at 2100 kHz, which went on the air on March 26, 1929. Hogan was a radio engineer who owned many patents, and wanted a permit for an experimental station. To avoid interference, the frequency granted in 1934 by the Federal Radio Commission was considerably above the normal broadcasting range, which at that time ended at 1500 kilocycles. Hogan's permit was one of four construction permits; the others, all granted on the same day, were W1XBS Waterbury and W9XBY Kansas City, both on 1530 kHz, and W6XAI Bakersfield, which shared 1550 kHz with W2XR. W2XR was licensed as an "experimental broadcast station" on June 29, 1934. But Hogan was also a connoisseur of music, and he drew on his own record collection to provide the sound for his experiments, which typically lasted for an hour in the evening. W2XR began to broadcast classical music recordings on 1550 kHz. His television broadcasts came to naught, but Hogan began to hear from unknown individuals who encouraged him to continue broadcasting music.