WRWR was built in 1961 by Port Clinton newspaper publisher Robert W. Reider, who was candidate in 1956 for Ohio governor. It signed on October 4, 1961 using the assigned frequency of 94.5 MHz. with an effective radiated power of 6,700 watts and an antenna height of 193 feet. The station’s studio and transmitter were located at 2104 East State Road, at the southeastern side of Port Clinton, in a small, one-story, flat-roofed building 32 feet wide and 24 feet long.
August 17, 1961: Federal Communications Commission grants a construction permit to RWR Inc. for a radio station to be built in Port Clinton, Ohio.
August 23, 1961: Ground is broken for the radio station’s studio and transmitter building at 2104 State Road, Port Clinton. Frank W. Swartz, program director of WFRO-AM in Fremont, Ohio, is named the new station’s first program director.
August 29, 1961: Call letters WRWR are formally given to the station by the Federal Communications Commission.
September 6, 1961: Shelby H. Bristow, 20-year radio veteran, chief engineer of WTTF, Tiffin, Ohio, is named WRWR’s first chief engineer.
September 19, 1961: WRWR’s 193-foot tower arrives from California and is erected in one day.
September 21, 1961: WRWR tests transmitting equipment.
October 3, 1961: WRWR completes equipment tests and is given Federal Communications Commission permission to begin broadcasts on Wednesday, October 4, 1961.
October 4, 1961: WRWR signs on at 7:00 A.M., concluding its first broadcast day at 7:00 P.M.
Robert W. Reider chose WRWR’s call letters. Reider’s Ohio Radio, Incorporated, operated four stations in Ohio:
- WRWR (Port Clinton)
- WLKR (Norwalk)
- WAWR (Bowling Green, named for his wife, Annette Wendt Reider) (later WKIQ and now WRQN)
- WKTN (Kenton)
WRWR went on the air as a monaural (single audio channel) station, but converted to multiplex stereo on its first anniversary, making it a fairly early FM stereo station.
Robert W. Reider died suddenly on March 4, 1976. His very capable wife, Annette W. Reider, took over as Ohio Radio president. The station referred to itself as “Radio Active R-94” around this time. It also used the slogan “We Reach With Radio” to promote its advertising services.
WRWR played an important role keeping Ottawa County residents informed during the Blizzard of 1978, which struck the area very hard on January 26th. The storm stranded WRWR’s morning personalities at the station for several days. They stayed on the air commercial-free, broadcasting messages to and from citizens and local governments between temporary power outages.
Annette Reider and her business associates sold off Ohio Radio Inc. properties between 1976 and 1979. On July 31, 1979, WRWR, Inc., a subsidiary of Triplett Broadcasting, took over. Triplett Broadcasting, a family-run corporation headed by brothers Wendell and Robert Triplett of Bellefontaine, Ohio, operated several radio stations in Ohio in a manner similar to the Reider family.
WRWR becomes WOSE
On May 21, 1980, Triplett changed WRWR’s call letters to WOSE, covering Ottawa, Sandusky, and Erie counties. The station increased power using the original WRWR antenna tower, became a CBS radio network affiliate, began operating 24 hours per day, and started playing only country music in 1981. This seems to have been a limited success, for the station and its parent company’s other radio stations went through bankruptcy the same year. WOSE switched back to Top-40 hits in approximately fall 1983.
Also around 1983, WOSE moved its transmitter to a new site about 0.7 miles southwest of Port Clinton, off Fremont Road (at 41°30’27.7″N 82°57’37.7″W), increasing coverage to Sandusky and Toledo. Around 1985 or 1986, the station moved its studio and office to 202 West Market Street in Sandusky, attempting to tap that area’s advertising revenue more effectively.
WOSE becomes WXKR
Under financial stress, on February 26, 1990, Triplett Broadcasting sold WOSE ownership and control to Venice Broadcasting, Inc. doing business as Venice Broadcasting Corporation, which changed WOSE’s call letters to WXKR June 18, 1990, and its format to classic rock, catering to the Toledo market. Venice Michel, wife of Don Michel, owner of the Port Clinton McDonald’s restaurant franchise, owned and operated Venice Broadcasting along with her husband.
Jim Lorenzen, later part of BAS Broadcasting of Ohio, the WOSE/WXKR general manager, undertook the market research that pointed the station to Toledo and the format to classic rock.
Venice Broadcasting, during 1990, moved the studio to Northwood, Ohio (a Toledo suburb) and in 1992, the transmitter to a new site about 1.75 miles northeast of Elmore, Ohio, (at 41°30’03.1″N 83°16’16.1″W), featuring a bi-directional antenna favoring a northwest/southeast direction. The new antenna allowed the station to provide a “city grade” signal both to its city of license (Port Clinton) and its city of interest (Toledo).
Since then, the format of the station has remained classic rock. In 1997, Venice Broadcasting sold WXKR to Cumulus Licensing Corporation, a subsidiary of Cumulus Broadcasting, one of the largest national radio broadcasting companies, thus ending its local ownership and operation.
WXKR operates a website. The transmitter remains at the same location near Elmore.
The call letters WRWR were unused by radio stations from early 1990 until 2010, when a station in Warner Robins, Georgia adopted them.
1353419In 2008, Ottawa County resident Greg Peiffer and his wife, Linda, sought to start a new local radio station, but were unable to obtain a traditional over-the-air broadcast license. Undeterred, they created WPCR Radio, an internet streaming audio site that fulfills the same function and is popular with local residents. WPCR also offers some on-demand content from their website.