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KULP

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KULP
Broadcast areaEl Campo, Texas
Bay City, Texas
Wharton, Texas
Frequency1390 kHz
Branding"The Texas Legend Live & Local"
Programming
FormatCountry music
Ownership
OwnerWharton County Radio, Inc.
History
First air date
1390: April 13, 1948 (76 years ago) (1948-04-13)
106.7: July 25, 2007 (17 years ago) (2007-07-25) (as 99.1 K256AT Nacogdoches, Texas)
Call sign meaning
Reflects the nickname of Louis "Culp" Krueger; original majority owner
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID1390: 3710
106.7: 156954
Class1390: D
106.7: D
Power1390: 500 watts day
180 watts night
ERP106.7: 250 watts
HAAT106.7: 70 meters
Transmitter coordinates
29°12′32.4″N 95°15′50.4″W / 29.209000°N 95.264000°W / 29.209000; -95.264000
Translator(s)106.7 MHz K294DD (El Campo)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen Live
Websitehttp://www.kulpradio.com/

KULP (1390 AM, 106.7 FM) is a radio station, paired with an AM revitalization FM relay translator, licensed to El Campo, Texas. The station airs a country music format and is owned by Wharton County Radio, Inc.[2]

History

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Early years of KULP radio

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With $4,000 in the bank, Louis Thurmond “Culp” Krueger filed an Application for a New Standard Broadcast Station Construction Permit with the Federal Communications Commission on January 8, 1947.

Joining Culp in realizing his dream of giving the Rice Belt its first local radio station were Lafayette Lionel Duckett, Charles Coppage Ingram, J. Edward Johnson and Ross Bohannon. Together they formed Wharton County Broadcasting Company.

Since Culp owned 60% of the company, all that needed to be done was to change the letter “C” to a “K” (required by the FCC), and KULP was born.

On Tuesday April 13, 1948, at 7am KULP signed on the air at 1390kHZ with five minutes of music followed by a five-minute newscast read by Bill Lamb. Max Westerholm's farm program ran until 7:30 a.m. when the “Lucky 1390” program featuring popular music and requests took to the air waves.

The “Polka Parade” followed the “Lucky 1390” program at 8am and ran until 9am Monday through Friday. The Polka Parade featured local and area Czech Polka Bands. In the very early days it was not uncommon to have a band just "show up" and play live in the studio.

Long before "America's Most Wanted," KULP Radio gave Sheriff "Buckshot" Lane an early morning 15-minute "program" six days a week, where he would tell individuals with warrants to turn themselves in. Many did. You would hear Buckshot say "It's 7am, 56 degrees and John Johnson, if you're listening, don't make me come get you!"

KULP remained under the ownership of Wharton County Broadcasting until 1967 when the FCC granted an application to assign the radio station license to Bar-B Broadcasting, headed by Fred Barbee owner of the El Campo Leader-News newspaper.

KULP today

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In 2000, KULP was purchased by Wharton County Radio Inc.

On January 12, 2017, a deal between Wharton County Radio, Inc. and E-string Wireless, LTD. was consummated. Through the purchase, Wharton County Radio acquired an FM translator, then licensed as K256AT on channel 256 (99.1 MHz) in Nacogdoches, for KULP through the AM Revitalization Plan issued by the Federal Communications Commission. A Minor Modification to K256AT was granted on November 15, 2016, which allowed the translator to move from Nacogdoches to a site off of Oliva St., near Friendship Park in El Campo. The translator would also move to channel 294 (106.7 MHz), as it can not remain on its current operating channel due to short spacing issues with co-operating channel KODA on Senior Road in Missouri City.

A license for the translator to operate from its new facilities as K294DD was issued on April 19, 2017.

References

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  1. ^ 1390: 3710
    106.7: 156954 "Facility Technical Data for KULP"
    . Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
    {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  2. ^ KULP fcc.gov. Accessed December 20, 2013
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