Rev. Albert Holmes Batts remains an obscure figure. This songbook is undated. But I found a newspaper ads from 1947 and 1965 which match. A 1948 issue of the Church of God Evangel lists it on 1340 WDEF-AM daily at 4:45 with Rev. Batts. [SOURCE] It appears that Batts was on both WDEF and WAPO at the same time, or that he crossed the street multiple times in the 1940s.
But the big name there is Doyle Blackwood. He can only be one of the Blackwood Brothers. Their eponymous singing group formed in 1934 in Choctaw County, MS. They broke big in television in 1954 and stayed big on a Quartet circuit. I've written about them before.
I think Doyle appears in the Blackwood Brothers pictures at the Dollywood museum. The KMA guide of April 1946 commemorates his involvement with the radio station. [SOURCE] The book A History and Encyclopedia of Country, Western, and Gospel Music by E. Linnell Gentry further confirms Doyle Blackwood was an announcer on WAPO. This somewhat dates the hymnal to the late 1940s.
"Doyle Blackwood, who is now an announcer in Chattanooga, TN will visit the Blackwood quartet from April 8 to April 26. He is a brother of Roy and James Blackwood and was former manager and master of ceremonies of the group. While here, he will make guest appearances with the Quartet."
Batt's "Word of God" radio program became a TV program. They released at least one LP which has one small picture of Batts on WTVC channel 9 and gives the PO Box 21305 in Chattanooga. WTVC signed on in 1953. I'd guess that picture is late 50s early 60s. But in the top corner of that LP it reads "On radio and television for thirty-five years." But without a date that's not terribly helpful. Few sources help the dating of his career. There was a book published in 1965 transcribing a debate he had with Rev. Harold Sain. Then another published in 1967 of a debate he did with Rev. Gus Nicols. He wrote the forward in 1969, quite lively and even somewhat salty.
A 1993 compilation of some newsletter called Evangel [SOURCE] records Batts turning 90 years old that year, and having been broadcasting, in Chattanooga for 58 years. He was now on WFLI-AM 11:00 Saturday mornings. Station 1070 WFLI-AM was a later AM stick, signing on in 1961. Initially a contemporary hits format, it became a christian radio format in 1962. They rebranded as "The Mid South's Most Powerful AM Gospel Station". They played Southern gospel music with some Christian talk and teaching shows. Sounds like somewhere Batts might fit in with his Pentecostal rhetoric.
But using this date we can finally work backwards to date the rest of the story. If Batts was truly on air for 58 years then he first was on radio in 1935. But that's before WAPO signed on. I'm assuming there was a little rounding, and he was on air the first year WAPO was broadcasting, which is 936. It also means he was born in about 1903, which matches the one correct obit. He was about 33 years old when he first had a program at WAPO. It also dates that LP to approximately 1971.
I found an image of Batts at WBMD, a station in Baltimore. I am assuming that was a guest appearance. |
In 1940 WAPO moved from 1420 to 1140 AM at 5,00 watts. Around that time the studios moved to the Read House, a fancy hotel. Today WAPO is WGOW, as it has been since Ted Turner bought the station in 1968. It flipped to a news talk format in 1988. Batts died in 2001 at the age of 98. WDOD signed off the air permanently on May 31, 2011. Thus WGOW became the longest running active radio station in Chattanooga. Next year they will celebrate their 90th anniversary. Hopefully they have something to remember about the long radio career of Rev. Batts.