WGL is a radio station licensed to serve Fort Wayne, Indiana, and owned by the Adams Radio Group. The station is temporarily rebroadcasting WWFW. One of the oldest surviving radio stations in the Fort Wayne metropolitan area, WGL temporarily suspended operations on March 22, 2020 due to a loss of advertising revenue related to the COVID-19 pandemic; prior to that, WGL carried a sports radio format and served as the market affiliate for Fox Sports Radio. The station's studios and transmitter site are located in Fort Wayne's Southeast Waynedale neighborhood in a facility also used by other Adams Radio Group stations in the market.
History
WGL was first licensed, with the sequentially issued call letters WHBJ, on March 3, 1925 to the Lauer Auto Company at 2109 South Calhoun Street. It was Fort Wayne's third broadcasting station, preceded by the United Radio Corporation's WFAS in 1922, and the Strand Theater's WDBV in 1924, although both of these stations had left the airwaves by the time WHBJ debuted. In 1926 Chester W. Keen took over WHBJ and changed the call letters to WCWK to reflect his initials. In 1925 WOWO had been established by the Main Auto Supply Co., with studios above the company's downtown factory, and in 1928 Keen sold WCWK to WOWO owner Fred Zieg. WCWK's call letters were changed to WGL, taking a callsign previously used by the current WADO in New York City. WOWO and WGL were owned by the Zieg family until WOWO's sale to Westinghouse in 1936. Westinghouse sold WGL to the Farnsworth Television and Radio Corporation in 1945. On September 24, 1947, the station's power was increased from 250 to 1,000 Watts. Subsequently it was purchased by the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel. The call letters of WGL were reinterpreted as "Wayne's Great Lady", referring to Helene Foelliger, who had markedly improved circulation of the News-Sentinel since becoming publisher less than a decade earlier, when she became the youngest, as well as one of the first female, publishers of a major newspaper. William Kunkle, publisher of the morning Journal-Gazette, followed by establishing WKJG in 1947, but while WKJG established a television station in 1953, WGL had no television license. WGL is known for being the first station in Fort Wayne to carry a talk format and one of the initial stations to carry The Rush Limbaugh Show, which moved to WOWO in 1996. In February 1998, WGL changed its format to sports; most of its programming came from "One-On-One Sports" As a result, they dropped G. Gordon Liddy, Tom Leykis, Art Bell, and local host Rusty Humphries. Between September 1998 and August 2000, WGL aired ESPN Radio, claiming it from rival WOWO. By August 2000, ESPN's affiliation moved to rival WONO, WOWO's sister station. At this point, the format returned to talk, featuring the programs of such hosts as Liddy, Bill O'Reilly, and Jim Rome. Several years later, the format again switched to sports talk under the Fox Sports 1250 banner, with the notable exception of Dave Macy's morning program, which covered news, politics, and culture as well as sports. WGL was sold to Travis Broadcasting Corp. in December 2001, for $7.5 million. WGL was purchased, along with its sister stations by Summit City Radio Group in July 2004. Currently, it broadcasts adult standards, having picked up the format in 2003. WGL aired the syndicated Adult Standards format from Dial Global until April 2007, when the station went to a standards/soft AC hybrid with a combination of local DJs and local automation. The station soon returned to airing the Dial Global format with a local morning show. Weekday programming on The River consisted of Dial Global's America's Best Music format from midnight to noon and then from 6 p.m. to midnight, Dave Ramsey from noon to 3 p.m., and local talk host Pat White from 3 to 6 p.m. WGL's programming was simulcast full-time on WGL-FM until 12:00PM on April 1, 2010, when the FM station broke away to air a Soft AC format as "V102.9". The simulcast returned on June 3, 2013, when both WGL and WGL-FM switched to an oldies format. Former WLYV and WQHK-FMdisc jockey Rick Hughes served as the station's morning host; Pat White's show was retained on the simulcast, while Dave Ramsey was dropped from the WGL lineup. In March 2014, Adams Radio Group, LLC entered an agreement to purchase Summit City's cluster. Days later, Adams announced they would purchase Oasis Radio Group's stations. To meet ownership limits, Adams retained WNHT, WGL and WXKE, as well as Oasis Radio Group's WJFX and WBTU, and sold off WHPP to Fort Wayne Catholic Radio and WGL-FM to Calvary Radio Network; WLYV and two translators were acquired by Adams from Calvary in the process. The transaction, at a price of $6.4 million, was consummated on June 2, 2014; WGL switched to Fox Sports Radio programming the following day. On March 22, 2020, due to a significant decline in advertising revenue attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic, Adams Radio Group suspended operations for WGL. A statement on WGL's website read in part that Adams was intending to devote all efforts to their "larger signal stations"; paperwork filed with the FCC indicated that Adams would review options for a resumption of operations for WGL. Three weeks later, Adams announced a sale of WGL and the construction permit for low-power FM translator W233CS to Brian R. Walsh—owner of WIOE and Warsaw-market WIOE-FM —for $50,000.