Ninety years ago today, OSU’s first radio station, WEAO aired its first broadcast. At the beginning of that broadcast on April 24, 1922, then-OSU President William Oxley Thompson gave some remarks – the first words aired on the station – and they were heard by people up to 120 miles away, which far exceeded the university’s expectations since the station broadcast at about 100 watts.
It was a major leap from the turn of the century when OSU’s department of electrical engineering began experimenting with wireless telegraphy. By 1913 the university had an experiment station, capable of local broadcasts, which was particularly useful during the flood that struck central Ohio that year.
In June 1922, OSU’s station received its permanent license and the call letters WEAO, making it the first full-fledged radio station in central Ohio. (The call letters stood for “Willing, Energetic, Athletic Ohio.”) In 1924 the station began covering OSU football games, play by play. In 1925 the station became an independent entity, separate from the electrical engineering department. Its letters were changed to WOSU in 1933, and it received a 1000-watt transmitter in 1948.
Some things have stayed the same: Students have been employed since the station’s beginnings. It has also never sold advertising: to this day it is funded from public donations and University, and state and local funds. For more information about WOSU’s history, or its current programming, see: http://wosu.org/about-wosu/history/.







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