WDWS is powered at 1,000 watts around the clock using a non-directional antenna. The transmitter is on South Neil Street (U.S. Route 45) at West Windsor Road.[2] WDWS provides at least secondary coverage to much of east-central Illinois, as far west as Decatur and Bloomington-Normal, due to the area's excellent ground conductivity. Programming is also heard on 250-watt FM translatorW230CW at 93.9 MHz.[3]
WDWS signed on the air on January 24, 1937; 87 years ago (1937-01-24). It was the area's first commercial radio station. (WILL580 AM, the non-commercial radio station of the University of Illinois, dates its start to the 1920s.)
David W. Stevick, publisher of The News-Gazette, had applied for a license in 1935, and his wife Helen and daughter Marajen continued the project. They named the station WDWS in his honor. In 1937, WDWS became a CBS RadioNetwork affiliate. It carried CBS's line up of dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas, game shows and big band broadcasts during the "Golden Age of Radio."
In 1949, WDWS added an FM station at 97.5 MHz. For most of its early years, WDWS-FM simulcast the programming of WDWS 1400. In 1988 it switched its call sign to WHMS-FM to establish a separate identity.
Fighting Illini
WDWS-AM-FM are the flagship stations for Illinois Fighting Illini football and basketball games, a role that WDWS 1400 has held throughout its history. Longtime sports director Jim Turpin also doubled as the radio voice of the Illini from 1960 until 2002. WDWS also airs the Illini women's basketball, volleyball, and baseball games exclusively.
WDWS's morning program is called "Penny for Your Thoughts." The show, formerly hosted by Jim Turpin, and later by Brian Barnhart, is known for its unique open-line call-in format.
In October 2021, WDWS began simulcasting on FM translator W230CW at 93.9 MHz and rebranded itself as "Newstalk 1400 & 93.9FM DWS."