It was back in March 1986 that an application for a new shortwave station was lodged with the FCC on behalf of FM station WJCR which is located in a country area some 65 miles south of Louisville in Kentucky. The radio station property, with its 200 acres of land, is situated adjacent to the Molin River a little west of the small town of Millerstown, some 9 miles west of Upton.
Six years later on March 15, 1992,
the first test broadcasts went on the air from the new shortwave WJCR on 7490
kHz at a temporarily reduced power. This
was a gala occasion for station owner Don Powell with more than a hundred supporters
coming in for the event.
Two years later (1994), WJCR
shortwave was on the air with three used 50 kW RCA transmitters, each converted
from medium wave by the Armstrong Transmitter Corporation in Marcellus New
York. There were just two shortwave
antenna systems in use, both rhombics, for coverage of the Americas, Africa and
Europe; thus only two transmitters were on the air at any one time. A fourth RCA 50 kW medium wave transmitter was
also installed in the transmitter building, though conversion to shortwave was
never completed.
Four years later (1998), WJCR bought
two 100 kW Continental transmitters from the recently silent VOA shortwave
station at Bethany Ohio and these 20 year old units replaced all four of the
converted RCA units.
The shortwave station was sold to
Bob Rogers at FM station WJIE in Louisville in April 2002, and they began
programming the shortwave transmitters by subcarrier at 9:00 am on April
28. However, the WJIE usage of the shortwave
station was intermittent and irregular, and even a year later, it was stated
that the paper work for the change of shortwave callsign from WJCR to WJIE had
not been completed. Just a few of the
previous WJCR QSL cards were issued to verify the programming relay from
WJIE.
Three years later (2005) shortwave
WJCR-(WJIE?) was declared silent, and ownership was transferred to new owners
with a new callsign WPBN. However, with
the aged transmitters deteriorating, it was probable that they were never activated
under this new callsign.
At the time of the last known visit
to shortwave station WJCR-WJIE-WPBN by an international radio monitor some
years ago, the silent electronic
equipment was still in place, though it was no longer considered to be
of any use in international radio broadcasting.
Let’s cross over to Africa now and we pick up the story of
three shortwave stations that were at one stage in active usage, though they
were subsequently abandoned. These three
stations were located on the west coast of Africa in Liberia and Sao Tome.
ELWA QSL (Gayle Van Horn Collection) |
One year later (1955) the first
shortwave transmitter was taken into regular service, a 10 kW Gates unit Model
HF10A. Then during the next dozen years,
an additional three shortwave transmitters
were installed, 1 @ 10 kW and 2 @ 50 kW.
In the meantime, the American
government took out a lease for a VOA relay station on 1300 acres of land near
Careysburg, some 10 miles distant from both the city of Monrovia and from the
now already established ELWA. While the
station was under construction, a transportable station with 3 shortwave
transmitters at 50 kW each was flown in from the United States and taken into
service in 1959.
At its full level of operation, VOA
Monrovia contained 2 Gates transmitters at 50 kW and 6 GE transmitters at 250
kW. Once the main station was
operational, the transportable station was removed and reinstalled at the large
VOA station at Point Poro in the Philippines.
In August 1990 during the civil war
insurrection, both ELWA Monrovia and VOA Careysburg were attacked and
destroyed. Foreign staff had already
been evacuated.
Some 4,000 Africans fled onto the
VOA compound, hoping for protection from the murderous onslaughts. The most massive destruction at the VOA
station occurred on September 17 (1990), when the station was attacked and
looted, and in reality, just totally destroyed.
Meanwhile over at the ELWA compound,
many Africans there also fled onto the property as refugees seeking
protection. However, insurgent militia
took over the station and forced the remaining local staff to broadcast a
(false) message stating that the government had been overthrown. As a result, government forces attacked the
station with artillery shells.
Even though ELWA was virtually
totally destroyed in the 1990 insurgency, yet the station was partially rebuilt
three years later with a 10 kW Collins transmitter that had been rebuilt by
Armstrong Electronics in New York and that was on air at only 5 kW. Subsequently, a more than 44 year old 50 kW
from the original KGEI in San Francisco was also installed at ELWA.
However give one more year (1996),
and insurgents again attacked the station, once more totally destroying it.
Now in the meantime, the Voice of
America sought a new and safe location for the installation of another new shortwave station, and a
location on a peninsula just 3 miles south of the coastal city Sao Thome, on
the island of Sao Thome was offered to them.
Interestingly, this location was itself at the time an abandoned
shortwave station which had previously been in use by Radio Nacional for a
period of some sixty years.
At the time of the initial VOA
inspection in 1992, the 10 kW shortwave transmitter (4807.5 kHz) was still in
location, though it was obviously no longer usable. Radio broadcasts from this new VOA station on
Sao Thome Island began in May 1993.
Now what about the two damaged and
destroyed shortwave stations located
near Monrovia in Liberia? The ex-VOA
station is now in use as an American military base for the training of local
army personnel in Liberia. The main
highway to the military encampment, Camp Sandee S. Ware, is no more than a
sloppy mud track through an undeveloped country area.
The ELWA station was twice destroyed
(1990 & 1996) and twice somewhat temporarily abandoned. However to their credit, the station has
again been rebuilt and it is now on the air shortwave with a 1 kW transmitter
on 6050 kHz, together with a modern hospital facility and a village of modern
staff housing.