This is the Biography section of
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| The main Shepard Store in downtown Boston; a rare 1928 photo of the original home of WNAC: John Shepard 3rd moved WNAC to the Hotel Buckminster in 1929-30 due to establishing the Yankee Network and needing more room... but from 1922 through much of 1929, people could come to the well-known department store, do some shopping and then watch a radio broadcast. (photo courtesy of the Boston Public Library, used with permission) |
WBIS-- "Boston's Information Service"-- (yet another station owned by the Shepard Department Stores) is on the air at 302.8m/ 990 kHz; its hours are very limited, and it also broadcasts shopping news, as well as some phonograph records (obtained from the record department of the Shepard Store). WBIS replaces WASN. (June, 1927)
WAGS, a low-power station (only 5 watts) in Somerville goes on the air at 1200 kHz; its owners will ultimately move it to Lexington where it will become WLEX (October 1927) -- the owner of WAGS, and later co-owner of Boston's first TV station, W1XAY, is Jesse Smith Dodge. “Jack” Dodge began as an announcer on WGI, and then went to WNAC as a engineer, a position he held simultaneously with working for WNAC... clearly, Shepard knew about and was supportive of Dodge's venture.
John Shepard, who had shared some WNAC programming with his Providence station WEAN since the early 20s, expands that link into the Yankee Network, adding WNBH, New Bedford, as his first affiliate station. There will soon be affiliates all over New England. (May 25, 1930)
WLEX joins Shepard's Yankee Network on Jan. 20, 1931; by April 20, Shepard owns the station, which becomes WAAB, operating out of the same Boston studios as WNAC. Meanwhile, Shepard promotes Claire Crawford to Assistant Sales Manager of the Yankee Network, the first woman in New England to hold a management position of this level.
In March 1934, frustrated by a lack of co-operation between the local newspapers and his station, Shepard, aided by Leland Bickford, starts his own news service for his affiliates. It is called the Yankee News Network, and in a slap at newspapers, the slogan the network uses is "News while it is news." Shepard's efforts on behalf of his radio reporters result in broadcast journalists getting the same access and press credentials that only newspaper reporters had gotten previously.
In 1937 (August 18th), Shepard is granted a construction permit to put the first FM station in Massachusetts on the air. It is licensed to Paxton (near Worcester). Shepard had met and become impressed with Armstrong, and threw his support 100% behind FM, even to the point of starting an organization of FM Broadcasters. W1XOJ goes on the air on May 27, 1939, with 2000 watts. To get the programming from the Boston studios of the Yankee Network out to Paxton, a low power relay station (W1XOK, with 250 watts) is also put on the air. On April 29, 1941, W1XOJ becomes known as W43B. Also in late December of 1937, to devote more time to his broadcasting ventures, Shepard had closed the Boston Shepard Store; the Providence store remained open.
In November of 1939, a dispute with a disgruntled former employee (Lawrence Flynn) leads to Flynn forming his own company (Mayflower Broadcasting) and trying to get the FCC to award him WAAB's license. His efforts fail, but the FCC decision in the case, called the "Mayflower Decision" will forbid radio from editorializing or taking stands on issues; that ruling won't be reversed until the late 40s.
On September 30, 1942, WAAB is officially moved from Boston to Worcester. (Shepard had tried for years-- unsuccessfully-- to get a station in western Massachusetts; he had even tried to move WLEX out there, but to no avail...) WAAB's building will eventually be home to the FM station, WGTR (see next item). In March, with great fanfare, the Shepard stations plus the Yankee Network had moved to state-of-the-art new studios on Brookline Avenue, near their former location, the Hotel Buckminster.
In November of 1943, W43B becomes WGTR (General Tire Company), after the General Tire Company purchases a controlling interest in the Yankee Network. Shepard remains with the corporation in an executive capacity till 1949.
John Shepard died in mid June of 1950. His brother Robert continued to run the Providence Shepard store till 1970 when he sold it; the store was closed in 1974. The Shepard family maintained a charitable trust for many years; among its gifts was a 1972 donation of $7000 to WERS-FM at Emerson College. Shepard's wife Mabel died at the family home in Brookline in 1992; she was 102. TheYankee Network, which Shepard founded, did its last broadcast on February 26, 1967.
--- Donna Halper is a famous lecturer and broadcast consultant
based in Quincy, MA. Her love of radio history is evident in the way she
captures the essence of her subjects.
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