Showing posts with label Miami Beach in the 1940s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miami Beach in the 1940s. Show all posts

Monday, July 15, 2013

Miami's radio 610, WIOD: Wonderful Isle of Dreams once home to Larry King and ...


WIOD towers 1926 Bicayne Bay
Florida State Archives/Fishbaugh

By Jane Feehan

WIOD launched its first radio broadcast Jan. 19, 1926. The station, tagged with call letters WIOD for “Wonderful Isle of Dreams” by Miami Beach developer Carl Fisher, was built atop one of his man-made islands near the Nautilus Hotel (4300 Alton Road). It operated in one of the first buildings in the U.S. designed primarily for radio broadcast use.

According to author Ann Armbruster (The Life and Times of Miami Beach, Alfred A. Knopf: 1995), Jesse Jay, son of Webb Jay, inventor of the auto vacuum tank, founded WIOD. It was the first 1,000-watt station in Florida.   During its early days WIOD offered about two hours of programming and most of it was orchestra music or church services. By 1928 the station was an NBC affiliate.

WIOD studios moved to downtown Miami in the early 1930s to the News Tower. It was purchased by Metropolis Publishing Company, owner of the Miami News in 1936 and advertised with the slogan, “Your free ticket to the finest radio is at 610 on your radio dial.”

By 1941*, WIOD was operating 18 ½ hours daily from the 79th Street Causeway.  Programming included entertainers Bob Hope, Jack Benny, Fibber McGee and Molly, Eddie Cantor, other big names of the era and featured soap opera A Guiding Light five days a week. The station increased to 5,000 watts of power in February that year with great fanfare throughout South Florida; that ramp up in wattage made WIOD the most powerful radio station in the state. The station, deemed by management a “symbol of progress,”  broadcasted with the assistance of two 320-foot steel towers over the waters of Biscayne Bay (salt water is said to improve signal strength).

From 1959 to 1962, the call letters of 610 were changed to WCKR by then-owner Cox-Knight Broadcasting. TV station WSVN also owned 610 later during the 1960s and played rock music, an unsuccessful format in a fiercely competitive market. It transitioned back to call letters WIOD during the 70s and was the venue that helped launch TV personality Larry King’s national career. Other broadcast notables of the 70s and 80s included Big Wilson and Neil Rogers.

In 1981, WIOD’s power was increased with special temporary authority to 10,000 watts to overcome interference by a station in Cuba. Permission to broadcast at that power is renewed each year.
Today, iHeartMedia, Inc. owns WIOD. Its studio operates in Miramar and its transmitter tower lies near Biscayne Bay at North Bay Village. News Talk 610 operates 24/7, a big leap in scheduling from those short days of 1926. Copyright © 2013. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan.

*Some facts about radio in the 1940s: More than half the radios in the world were owned by Americans; 85 percent of Americans owned a radio; a nationally syndicated radio show would have as many as 10 million listeners.
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Other Sources:
Kleinberg, Howard. Miami Beach, a History. Miami: Centennial Press, 1995.
Miami News, Feb. 22, 1941.
Wikipedia

Tags: Miami Beach in the 1920s, WIOD, WCKR, Miami radio, historical researcher, film researcher


Monday, June 17, 2013

Adazzle: Miami area restaurants and hotels of the 1940s, 50s and 60s

Miami Beach 1955
Florida State Archives/Florida Memory/Barron

By Jane Feehan


Newspaper ads of past decades reveal a host of restaurants and hotel dining and entertainment venues  that placed Miami and Miami Beach on the map during the 1940s, 50s and 60s.  An ordinance was in effect during the 1940s that prohibited hotel entertainment in order to pump up night club business. That changed when Sam Cohen, president of the company that owned the Sherry Frontenac Hotel (opened in 1948), booked an entertainer at its Pompadour Room. Cohen was fined $100 but the law was changed in 1950. Hotels then became the draw for big name entertainment and many nightclubs faded away.

Here’s a list by decade of some of the most popular spots (Joe's Stone Crab spans most of Miami Beach's history, remains open):

1940s
Copa Cobanna – Dade Boulevard, Miami Beach
Latin Quarter (Lou Walters) – Palm Island
Lou Walters’ Terrace
Paddock – 7th and Washington, Miami Beach
Beachcomber Hotel – Dade Boulevard, east of Venetian Causeway
Robin Hood Restaurant
Old Forge Patio Restaurant-Miami Beach
Hickory House - Miami Beach
Versailles – Collins and 34th, Miami Beach
Dubrow’s Lincoln Cafeteria - Miami Beach
Ciro’s – Dade Boulevard, Miami Beach
Colonial Inn – Hallandale (See more on this, search labels)
Joe’s Stone Crab - still there on South Beach
Wolfie’s (1943) – Collins and 21st Miami Beach
Embers – Miami Beach (40s. 50s, 60s)
Parham’s – 73rd and Collins
Pickin’ Chicken – 22nd and Co
Blackamor Room – 20th and Collins
  
1950s
Hotel President Madison – Plantation Room
Joe’s Broadway Delicatessen – Washington Avenue, Miami Beach
Fountainebleau and Eden Roc
Seven Seas Restaurant
Wolfie’s – Lincoln Road, Miami Beach
Pumpernik’s
Chandler’s - Miami Beach
Park Avenue – Miami Beach
Rocky Graziano's
Gray’s Inn – Dade Boulevard, Miami Beach
Americana Hotel – Carioca Lounge, Gaucho Steak House, Bal Masque Room
Carillon Hotel – Café Le Can Can
Eden Roc Hotel – Harry’s American Bar, Mona Lisa Room
Fontainebleau Hotel – La Ronde Room
Raimondos
Red Coach Grill
Riccio's - mob hangout
Wolfie's at Lincoln Road

1960s
Diplomat – Tack Room
South Pacific (near Hollywood Dog Track), also there in the 60s
Cap’t Nicks – 160th and Biscayne, Miami
Embers
Gallagher’s – 126th and Biscayne, Miami
Kenilworth Hotel – Emerald Room, Miami Beach
Tony’s Fish Market – 79th Street Causeway
Chinarama – 163rd Street
Seville Hotel - Downstairs Room, 29th and Collins
Nick & Arthur's
Luau Polynesian Restaurant – 79th Street
Raimondo's - Miami Beach
Rascal House - 173rd Street
Roney Plaza – Café Jardin Suisse – 23rd and Collins
Remo’s - 173rd Street
Famous – 671 Washington Avenue
Fu Manchu – 71st Street
Bahama Steak House – NW 36, near Jai Lai
Playboy Club - Miami (see lables for more history on this)
Mike Gordon’s Seafood – 79th Street Causeway
Castaways Motel – Wreck Bar
Capra's - 69th Street
Franklin’s – 71st Street

Any favs not mentioned?  Post a comment!


TAGS: Famous hotels and restaurants in Miami Beach, Miami Beach restaurants in the 1960s, Miami history, Jane Feehan


Thursday, May 2, 2013

Army not taking over Miami Beach ... for now - 1942

Miami Beach, barrier island
 By Jane Feehan

Miami Beach officials and residents held their breath after Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941; they thought the city was in for a tough time. But weeks later, tourists trekked to the winter playground, filling up hotel rooms.

And so did the military.

Military training operations were brought to Miami Beach early in 1942.  Headquarters and drill grounds for the Army Air Force Officers Training School were established at the municipal golf course – then known as the Bayshore Golf Course. The Army first appropriated the Boulevard Hotel as quarters for arriving soldiers in February, 1942. The Nautilus Hotel was soon used as a hospital.
  
March 1, 1942, the New York Times reported that the “Army was not taking over Miami Beach.” Lieut. Col. James S. Stowell, commander of the training school, announced  the army would appropriate five hotels and bring in 950 soldiers – “at least for now.”  Soldiers would stay for a three-month training course before receiving their commissions.

Soldiers came by the thousands. Tourists cheerfully moved to other accommodations. Beaches, including the one at Bal Harbour, were used as rifle ranges. By 1943, 188 hotels, 109 apartment houses and 18 private homes had been appropriated by the military. About 13,000 students were graduated from the officer training school in Miami Beach; the last class to go through was in June 1943.  Soldiers engaged their own rooms in hotels with military contracts. Food was not arranged for through a military mess until late in operations – adding to area business revenues.

Business boomed. Miami Beach continued to draw entertainers and property sales soared, setting the stage for the major expansion of the 1950s.

Sources:
New York Times, March 1, 1942
Kleinberg, Howard. Miami Beach: A History. Miami: Centennial Press (1996).
Ibiblio.org



Tags: Miami Beach history, Miami Beach during the 1940s, Miami Beach during World War II, WWII in Miami Beach, Florida film researcher, historical researcher