The Beaumont Enterprise is a newspaper of Hearst Communications , headquartered in Beaumont, Texas . It has been in operation since 1880.
35-498: John W. Leonard founded the initial Enterprise as a weekly newspaper in 1880. It became a daily under editor W.W. McLeod in 1896 or 1897, to compete with crosstown rival Beaumont Journal (founded 1889). In 1907, William P. Hobby became manager and part owner of the Enterprise and bought the paper outright in 1920, while Governor of Texas . One of his co-owners was general manager/associate publisher James Mapes. According to
70-510: A full service station featuring news, music, sports and entertainment. KPRC was also the flagship station for the Houston Astros baseball team from its 1962 founding to 1980 and again from 1990 to 1995. Having been an MOR music station since the 1960s, KPRC became a full-time news and talk station in 1977. The station was owned by the family of Houston Post-Dispatch founder William P. Hobby before being sold to Sunbelt Broadcasting,
105-471: A talk radio format and is owned by iHeartMedia . KPRC broadcasts mostly conservative talk radio shows and originates Walton & Johnson and The Jesse Kelly Show and most hours begin with Fox News Radio . Additionally, KPRC broadcasts University of Houston sports. KPRC first signed on in 1925 as the radio station of the Houston Post-Dispatch . For much of its history, KPRC was
140-927: A Saturday show on KPRC in the late 1920s singing original country ballads. KPRC co-founded the Texas Quality Network (TQN) in 1934 with three of the other top radio stations in Texas: WBAP in Fort Worth , WFAA in Dallas , and WOAI in San Antonio . Connecting the four stations by telephone line, TQN enabled them to make simultaneous broadcasts of the same program. The four stations also provided over 100 kW of power combined at night. TQN featured sports and music programs sponsored by various local businesses, for instance football games sponsored by Humble Oil and The Light Crust Doughboys ,
175-527: A combined $ 26.8 million, ending nearly 70 years of local ownership for KPRC. Following the 1995 Houston Astros season , KPRC lost the Astros broadcasting rights in January 1996 to KILT , a sports station then owned by Westinghouse Broadcasting . Among the Astros' stated reasons for the change of affiliation were a perceived stronger signal from KILT and the sports format allowing for more promotion of
210-428: A company partially owned by future lieutenant governor Dan Patrick , in 1992. Sunbelt then sold KPRC to Clear Channel Communications (now iHeartMedia ) in 1995. In 1923, Houston Post-Dispatch owner Ross S. Sterling met Alfred P. Daniel, a radio instructor at a Houston YMCA whose students included Sterling's son Ross Sterling Jr. The elder Sterling and Daniel discussed starting a new radio station affiliated with
245-731: A country music show. By 1935, KPRC became a member of the NBC Radio Network . KPRC increased its power tenfold to 5 kW in 1936. Then in 1937, KPRC and KTRH co-installed what was the second transmitter in the world that could send waves from two stations at the same time. KPRC moved to its current frequency of 950 kHz on May 22, 1941, under the terms of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA). The Houston Post later expanded into FM radio and television, starting with founding KPRC-FM in 1946. In 1950,
280-692: A full term. In 1924, Hobby lost the Democratic primary to Miriam A. Ferguson , wife of "Pa" Ferguson and she was elected to the governorship. Hobby returned to publishing, and in 1924 was chosen as president of the Houston Post . He later served as chairman of the board of the Houston Post Company, which had also acquired radio and TV stations. Born in 1878 in Moscow , Texas, Hobby attended local public schools. He started working at
315-751: A major media market. After the 1980 season , KPRC lost the Astros broadcasting rights to KENR in 1981 . In 1983, the Hobby family corporation was renamed H&C Communications , and it sold the Houston Post to the Toronto Sun Publishing Corporation . After decades of being affiliated with NBC, KPRC changed to the CBS Radio Network in February 1988. Ten years after the last game broadcast on KPRC,
350-471: A new $ 3.2 million, 86,000 square foot facility on March 22, 1972. Former U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson visited the dedication ceremony that day. In the spring 1976 Arbitron survey, KPRC ranked tenth in the Houston/Galveston market with an average 15,100 listeners per week. Having reduced music programming in recent years, KPRC changed its programming in 1976 to have talk shows during
385-765: A new afternoon drive host. In another programming change, Ian Punnett replaced Cunningham as 8 p.m. host around February 2001. Baker moved to sister station KTRH effective November 15, 2004. On July 30, 2007, KPRC became the new flagship station for the Walton & Johnson morning show, which moved from Cumulus Media 's Houston rock station KIOL . Beginning August 2007, KPRC rebranded as "The 9-5-0 Radio Mojo", with Chris Baker returning to supplement his other show on KTRH and nationally syndicated shows including The Dave Ramsey Show , Mancow , and The Phil Hendrie Show . Also in 2007, KPRC began carrying news updates from Fox News Radio . On March 17, 2013, KPRC dropped
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#1732797499871420-526: A reference to the cotton trade. Broadcasting from the "Skyline Studios" at the 22-story Houston Post-Dispatch building in downtown Houston, KPRC featured daily live music and a daily children's storytelling show hosted by Lewis, Uncle Judd's Kiddies' Hour . In 1927, it interrupted its scheduled programming to give out dispatches for the Houston Police Department . That year, KPRC moved from 1010 to 920 kHz. Tex Ritter had
455-686: A sports talk show co-hosted by Houston Chronicle columnist Ed Fowler and play-by-play announcer John O'Reilly, Sports Page . Then in March 1994, Patrick hired former Houston mayor Kathy Whitmire , a Democrat , to host a nightly show. Patrick commented: "Whitmire will lend some balance. She's a liberal-to-moderate Democrat, and I think to have a female liberal Democrat on the air will be neat." That show would be short lived. In July, Whitmire accepted an offer to become president and CEO of Junior Achievement effective September 6. Sunbelt, in turn, sold KPRC and KSEV to Clear Channel Communications in 1995 for
490-556: The Glenn Beck Radio Program and Coast to Coast AM . On weekends, KPRC has mostly brokered time programs purchased by local businesses. KPRC also broadcasts local sports, specifically Houston Cougars football and Houston Cougars men's basketball games from the University of Houston and Texas Longhorns men's basketball from the University of Texas at Austin . The station's studios are located near
525-589: The Ambassador of the United States to the Court of St James's . His grandson, Paul Hobby, narrowly lost the election for comptroller of Texas in the 1998 general election. Republican Carole Keeton Strayhorn won that election. Several public facilities were named for him: KPRC (AM) KPRC ( 950 kHz ) is a broadcast radio station in the United States licensed to Houston, Texas , KPRC has
560-795: The Houston Post purchased KLEE-TV and renamed it KPRC-TV . Construction began in 1952 for a new $ 400,000 facility for operating the KPRC AM, FM, and TV stations. The Houston Post sold KPRC-FM in 1958. In the 1960s and much of the 1970s, KPRC had a middle of the road (MOR) music format. A 1966 advertisement claimed that the station had the largest news staff of any Houston radio station and 20 billboards that had lights connected by telephone lines to its newsroom. The billboard lights shined when KPRC had news broadcasts. During Hurricane Carla in September 1961, KPRC AM and TV broadcast live coverage for 113 straight hours, starting three days before
595-573: The Journal circulation and eventually Hobby bought the Journal . Jefferson-Pilot bought the Enterprise and Journal in 1970. Operating separately under the same company for many years, the Enterprise and Journal merged in 1983. The Hearst Corporation acquired the Enterprise from the Jefferson-Pilot insurance company's publications arm in 1984. William P. Hobby William Pettus Hobby (March 26, 1878 – June 7, 1964)
630-602: The Post-Dispatch . William P. Hobby , president and publisher of the Post-Dispatch , asked Sterling to launch the radio station. Before a 500 watt Westinghouse Electric transmitter arrived in Houston, Sterling Jr. died. In 1925, when the World Advertising Convention was to be held in Houston featuring U.S. Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover , Daniel again talked to Sterling Sr. about
665-518: The 1960s included University of Houston basketball , Rice University basketball , and Southwest Conference football. Billboard magazine's Radio Response Ratings survey in April 1965 found that KPRC had the highest ratings among stations that played pop standards albums, in all time slots from morning to late evening. The strong ratings continued into 1966, when KPRC began adding comedy shows and jazz music. The KPRC TV and AM stations moved to
700-455: The Astros radio network added Conroe station KJOJ . Beginning around December 1998, KPRC hired former Apollo 7 astronaut Walter Cunningham to host a nightly 8 p.m. show, Liftoff to Logic . On August 29, 2000, Patrick resigned from KPRC after seven years as general manager and talk show host. KPRC subsequently added The Dr. Laura Program . In March 2001, KPRC re-branded as "Talk Radio 950 KPRC". That month, Chris Baker joined as
735-684: The Houston Astros signed a new contract with KPRC in November 1990 following a mutual agreement with previous station KTRH to end their contract one year early. In October 1992, H&C Communications announced the sale of KPRC AM to Sunbelt Broadcasting Company for $ 3.5 million, with the sale being finalized in February 1993. With that acquisition, former KHOU sports director Dan Patrick became general manager and part-owner of both KPRC and sister station KSEV . He had his own talk show on KPRC until 2000. KPRC had been declining in
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#1732797499871770-744: The Radio Mojo brand and became known as "KPRC AM 950, Houston's More Stimulating Talk Radio". On July 28, 2014, KPRC signed a contract to broadcast University of Houston football and men's basketball . KPRC and the University of Houston renewed their contract in August 2020. Most hours begin with national news from Fox News Radio . On weekdays, KPRC broadcasts locally and nationally produced talk shows. Two nationally syndicated shows, Walton & Johnson and The Jesse Kelly Show , originate from KPRC. National programming on weekdays includes
805-656: The Rangers killed up to 5,000 people, mostly ethnic Mexicans, from 1914 to 1919. After leaving the governorship, Hobby returned to the Beaumont Enterprise. In 1924, he was invited to become the president of the Houston Post . In August 1955, Hobby became chairman of the board of the Houston Post Company. By then, the company also owned the radio station, KPRC , and the television station, KPRC-TV . His wife, Oveta Culp Hobby (see below), served as president and editor. In 1931, Hobby married Oveta Culp . She later
840-634: The Texas Rangers along the border. They conducted hearings for two weeks and had 83 witnesses. Among the incidents recounted was the Porvenir Massacre of January 1918 in West Texas in which militia and Texas Rangers summarily killed 15 Mexican-American men and boys near their farming village. The legislature passed a bill to regulate the Rangers and to professionalize the service, and their numbers were reduced. Historians estimate that
875-506: The Texas State Historical Association, the Enterprise "attained national stature" under Mapes' leadership — He came to the newspaper in 1908 and rose to ownership by 1931. In 1918, Waco-based newspapermen Charles E. Marsh and E.S. Fentress purchased the crosstown competitor Beaumont Journal . Buying two other nearby papers (the weekly Port Arthur News and the daily Orange Leader ), the pair boosted
910-668: The age of 17 as a circulation clerk for the Houston Post in 1895. Several years later, he was promoted to business writer in August 1901. In 1907, he left the Post to become manager and part owner of the Beaumont Enterprise . He acquired the entire paper shortly thereafter. Hobby decided to enter politics and joined the Democratic Party. In 1914, he ran for and was elected Lieutenant Governor of Texas . After Governor James Edward Ferguson , known as "Pa" Ferguson,
945-402: The day and music in evenings. Beginning in 1977, KPRC dropped music and changed to a news/talk station. KPRC showed improvement in the spring 1977 Arbitron ratings from a year ago, this time averaging 17,200 listeners per week and ranking eighth in Houston/Galveston. In 1979, KPRC hired Anita Martini as sports director. She was reportedly the first woman to become a radio sports director in
980-630: The hurricane reached land; KPRC AM was the flagship station among nearly 40 affiliates of the Gulf Coast Hurricane Warning Network. In 1962, KPRC broadcast the inaugural season of the Houston Colt .45s , a new Major League Baseball team. When the Colt .45s became the Houston Astros in 1965, KPRC continued broadcasting the games, with Gene Elston and Loel Passe hired as announcers. Other sports programming in
1015-514: The radio station idea. Sterling agreed, and the radio station was created in three weeks. On May 9, 1925, their radio station KPRC signed-on on 1010 kHz with 500 watts of power, with Daniel as the station's first announcer and program director. Guests on the opening broadcast included William P. Hobby, Texas poet laureate Judd Mortimer Lewis, and the First Garrison Band of Mexico. The call signs stood for "Kotton Port Rail Center",
1050-543: The ratings leading up to the purchase by Sunbelt, ranked 16th in the Houston/Galveston market in fall 1992. Following the sale closing, in an effort to make the two stations more competitive against KTRH , Patrick announced changes to the KPRC and KSEV schedules to focus on conservative talk radio effective April 5, 1993. Branded as "Supertalk Radio", both stations would simulcast The Rush Limbaugh Show ; KPRC also added commentary segments by Paul Harvey and Jim Hightower and
1085-553: The southern border of Texas was a place of frequent conflict, as revolutionaries from the Mexican Revolution (1910–1920) entered the United States to attack farms, irrigation systems, and railroads. The Texas Rangers , militias, and US troops patrolled the border, and atrocities were committed by both sides. In early 1919, a Joint Committee of the Texas Senate and House conducted hearings to investigate actions by
The Beaumont Enterprise - Misplaced Pages Continue
1120-592: The team, in contrast to KPRC moving some games to KSEV when there were conflicts with regularly scheduled talk shows like Rush Limbaugh . However, Patrick disputed the Astros' claim about KILT having a stronger signal due to both stations having 5 kW of power. Eventually, the Houston Chronicle reported in April 1996 that due to listener complaints about poor reception of KILT in Montgomery County (specifically The Woodlands and Conroe ),
1155-418: Was an American politician, journalist, and publisher. He was the publisher/owner of the Beaumont Enterprise when he entered politics and the Democratic Party. Elected in 1914 as Lieutenant Governor of Texas, in 1917 he succeeded to become 27th Governor of the U.S. state of Texas , after James Edward "Pa" Ferguson was impeached and forced to resign. In 1918, Hobby won the office in his own right, serving
1190-514: Was appointed as the first Secretary of the US Department of Health, Education and Welfare (its name was changed after a later reorganization). Hobby served as a member on the Board of Directors of Texas Technological College . His son William P. Hobby Jr. also served as lieutenant governor of Texas from 1973 to 1991. His daughter, Jessica, was married to Henry E. Catto Jr. , who became
1225-412: Was impeached and forced to resign from office in a corruption case in 1917, Hobby succeeded him at 39 and was then the youngest governor in state history. Ferguson was prohibited from serving in state electoral office again. Hobby soundly defeated Ferguson in the 1918 Democratic primary and won the general election, governorship in his own right, and served a full term to 1921. During his years of service,
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