Radio Station KTOH becomes Kauai’s First Broadcast Station
“That sounds like a stupid idea,” was the sentiment of many folks on Kauai when
The Garden Island in 1938 announced plans to construct a broadcast radio
station.
Some people laughed “Who’s going to listen; nobody has a radio.”
Others observed, “We already have two stations in Honolulu. Why do we need
more?” The last two statements were somewhat correct.
In 1938 not many
people on Kaua’i owned a radio set. The Honolulu stations, KGU and KGMB, did
offer a wide variety of programs from before sunrise to late in the
evening.Reception from Honolulu wasn’t always dependable during the day but at
night the O’ahu signals came in loud and clear.
At that time, owners of
radios on Kaua’i primarily were business people and government employees who
lived in single-family homes. But the bulk of the population living in
plantation camps and rural farming areas had none. If they wanted to listen
they’d have to visit a neighbor who could afford such a luxury.
In the face
of widespread cynicism over establishing a local station, some residents
championed it as a great idea for bringing entertainment and the latest news
right inside a person’s home rather than having to wait for the weekly Garden
Island or walk to the nearest town to see a newsreel and movie.
A few sharp
businessmen agreed with the publishing company’s board of directors. A radio
station on this island would provide much wider coverage for marketing their
goods. That, simply, was the compelling reason the decision had been made.
Charlie Fern, publisher of The Garden Island, convinced his board of directors
that owning the island’s radio station would give the company control of
virtually all advertising.
In 1939, near Lihue town, a small site was
cleared in a cane field on the road to Ahukini harbor. Today, Jack Harter’s
Helicopters’ office is on the spot where the 150-tall antenna stood.People
marveled at the sight of a communications tower reaching as high as a
fifteen-story building.
Merchants began adding more radio sets to their
inventories and featuring them in advertising. Many styles of table and console
models became available but only two kinds of portable radios existed.
Installation of the KTOH transmitter began on April 16, 1940. Power was
limited to 250 watts during the day and 100 watts after sunset. For a location
like Hawai’i and for certain frequencies, the Federal Communications Commission
restricted nighttime power. This was to make sure signals from stations in the
U.S. didn’t interfere with each other. Our having maximum power of 250 watts
was pretty good in those days. Broadcast stations now radiate in the thousands
and tens of thousands of watts.
On April 20, four days after the crew began
installing equipment, a two-week test program of music and station call letters
went on the air from 1 to 6 a.m. Because it was nighttime, reception was good.
Over the next few weeks letters came from all around the Pacific as well as
from a few limited pockets in North America.
The first report came on the
first night. Kaua’i’s Senator Charlie Rice had set his alarm clock for 1:30
a.m. Senator Rice telephoned KTOH saying that when he twisted the radio dials,
lo and behold, he could hear Hawaiian music,
When the month of May, 1940
arrived, the small staff was engrossed in developing three inaugural programs:
English, Japanese and Ilocano, as well as the future regular daily
schedule.
Station manager Dean Stewart, a kama’aina who came from a radio
station career in Honolulu; Mainlander Bob Glen was responsible for engineering
the project along with Kauai’s ingenious technician Jack Wada; Bill Parsons, a
former isle resident; and I were announcer/engineers coming from stations in
San Francisco.
To these four station members was added a one-person office
staff, Lorraine Fountain, daughter of school teacher Eva and police sergeant
Eddie Fountain.
All the selling of commercials, engineering, announcing,
programming, script and commercial development, coverage of remote events, and
the administrative work was carried out by this busy team of five early
settlers in the land of broadcast radio.
Working on the creation of the
Japanese-language program were two Garden Islanders, Chitoko Isonaga and
Shoichi Hamura. During the day they sold advertising and then for an hour each
evening, except Saturday, they brought music from the homeland along with news
and events of local interest for Japanese listeners.
Preparing for the
twice-daily Filipino program were Abe Albayalde and Leonora Currameng, editor
and assistant editor of the island’s weekly printed Filipino News. Their two
half-hour shows, in Ilocano, were broadcast at pau hana, 4:00 p.m., and early
evening at 7:30 p.m.;
Both foreign language programs showcased local ethnic
entertainers.
The big day, May 10, 1940 arrived. The world’s attention was
focused on Europe where the Nazis on that day invaded France, Belgium and
Holland and on England where Winston Churchill was named to replace Prime
Minister Neville Chamberlain.
Here on Kaua’i (probably because they hadn’t
yet heard the world news), residents gathered around radios concentrating on
hearing the first sound of their very own radio station. It was Bob Glen’s
voice saying, “This is radio station KTOH, Kauai Territory of Hawaii,
broadcasting on an assigned carrier frequency of 1500 kilocycles by authority
of the Federal Communications Commission.”
Then, for three hours, island
musicians and singers entertained in the main studio that opened onto an
outdoor covered auditorium. Some seventy-five guests had been invited but there
were many more than the 100 fold ding chairs could seat. This important event
was a formal occasion with men wearing white dinner jackets and ladies dressed
in holokus.
Annie and Benny Holt’s Kekaha Hawaiians along with the Kekaha
Parents Club brought greetings from Kauai’s Westside. There were Hawaiian songs
by Nora Chang and Margaret Kilauano’s Leinaala Glee Club as well as the Lei
Ilima Club led by Nick Koani and Keawe Aipolani.
Musical greetings from
around the island continued with Billy Waialeale’s Aloha Hawaiians from the
Koloa side. Joe Rapozo’s Lihue Hawaiian Serenaders, Sam Peahu’s Transco
Hawaiian Serenaders, Henry Sheldon’s Kapaa Chorus, and the Latter Day Saints
Choir directed by Louise Sheldon represented the Eastside. From the North Shore
came Jacob Maka’s Hanalei Singers. And Eddie Kanoho’s C.C.C. Rangers traveled
all the way down from Kokee to make the grand opening an island-wide
celebration.
During the moments that musical groups were exchanging places
in the main studio, KTOH staff members were introduced. Politicians, plantation
managers, private businessmen, County and Territorial officials, and other
dignitaries welcomed the new era in communication.
Beloved kamaaina, Dora
Isenberg, paid tribute to those who had brought a vital service and family
entertainment to the residents of the island. Kauai’s chief librarian Thelma
Hadley, whose father, K.C. Hopper, had once saved The Garden Island newspaper
from bankruptcy, was honored. A.H. Case, secretary of the publishing company
described the steps, beginning in 1936, that led to the creation of the fourth
radio station in all of the Territory of Hawaii. (Besides the two in Honolulu,
Station KHBC was on the air in Hilo.)
Regular daily broadcasts began the
next morning. On the next two evenings, grand inaugural festivities introduced
KTOH Radio to Japanese and Filip ino audiences.
The KTOH evening world news
was picked up each afternoon in Morse code from a United Press Mainland
short-wave transmission. The rapid stream of dots and dashes was deciphered by
radio operators Herman Loebel and Frank Westlake at the wireless station atop
Mount Ka Lepa above Hanamaulu. J.C. Plews, Garden Island Motors manager, an
avid short-wave listener, often called in to KTOH with news of significant
world events, sometimes hours before United Press and the Honolulu radio
stations carried story.
Within a week after going on the air, the station
gave its first on-site coverage of a crisis. A cloudburst hanging motionless
over the East Side for half a day brought the heaviest rainfall ever recorded.
Lihue Mauka Camp 9 recorded 24.43 inches of rain pouring down from stationary
dark, black clouds. Rivers in the Lihue and Kapaa areas reached heights never
before seen.
KTOH covered the disaster using the telephone from M.S.
Carvalho Store in Kapaia. The telephone line from the store was patched in to
the station’s control panel. Reporters struggled through the torrential rain
getting stones to relate to radio listeners.
Breathlessly they described
rushing water over Wailua. Falls Road near Kapaia rising from three inches to
three feet in a matter of minutes. Houses were lifted and floated away from
foundations. An automobile and boat had a collision. A car, from which three
men had jumped at the last minute, was swept to the edge of a precipice where
it teetered and fell. The flash flood bulldozed its way through a road leaving
a gorge 150-feet and 75-feet deep
The destruction was a catastrophe for
many Kauaians. For radio listeners in other parts of the island the broadcast
was a live news event with excitement that a newspaper story can’t
reproduce.
In future years the drama of flash floods in Waimea, Hanapepe
and the North Shore also were brought directly into homes through KTOH’s use of
a homemade, tiny leather-bound amplifier. The box was built so that a
normal-sounding microphone could be used to send the audio to KTOH rather than
a poor-quality telephone instrument.
This little magic box took us all
around the island. We’d broadcast political rallies, Board of Supervisors’
meetings, store grand openings, and the twice-weekly departures of the
interisland steamer from Nawiliwili. Here on the pier, as musicians sang
Hawaiian music, travelers were interviewed about why they were making a trip to
Honolulu.
There was live coverage of all kinds of sports played at
plantation and high school gymnasiums and athletic fields: football, boxing,
wrestling, basketball, and baseball.
Horse racing on July 4 always brought
huge crowds to the Wailua Racetrack. Now the events were being enjoyed by those
not able to attend. At our first Independence Day racing coverage, one horse in
the Kauai Derby, the main event, didn’t take off with the rest of the local
thoroughbreds. When it was over, the jockey explained to KTOH fans that he was
asleep when the starting signal was given.
At Hanapepe Baseball Park one
Sunday, Charlie Fern and I arrived early-his job to make ready the team lineups
and mine to set up equipment and drum up color stories to fill the time between
innings. We spent the entire afternoon describing this important game play by
play. Only nobody heard it. The connection to the telephone line had come loose
and we hadn’t noticed it.
The phone circuit we used in those days was
one-way traffic only. Before going on the air with a remote program, the phone
line was connected to the little amplifier and we’d hear whatever KTOH was
broadcasting. Then we’d wait for the cue: “We now take you to the Hanapepe
ballpark where Charlie Fern and Mike Ashman are waiting to bring you…etc.” The
engineer at the studio would throw a switch and then it was our turn-we were on
the air.
This time however, one of my connections had jiggled loose shortly
after we started and frustrated sports fans were treated to several hours of
phonograph records while waiting for the play-by-play report to begin. The
studio announcer had no idea what went wrong and didn’t know what to say
except, “Stand by.”
All during the year there were dance band remotes at
plantation and high school gyms on Saturday nights. People were interviewed at
community carnivals and the E.K. Fernandez Circuses.
On June 28, 1940, the
first prominent international entertainer on Kauai since 1924 gave a onenight
concert at the Roxy Theater ‘in Kapaa. She was the celebrated Metropolitan
Opera star Marian Anderson. This wasn’t just a rinky-dink affair. Tickets for
the program, sponsored by the East and West Kauai Lion’s Clubs, went for
$4.40-a monumental price at a theater where movies were enjoyed for 450.