Delmarva is interesting enough on it's own geographically. but the Eastern Shore of Virginia has some real radio oddities. (It also has some colorful town names like central PA, but that's not a radio thing. ) But why is that shore part of Virginia anyway? It's only connected to Virginia by bridge, by land it's adjacent to Maryland. Well per the original 1609 land grant Virginia consisted of the North American coast stretching 200 miles north and south of what we now call Hampton, VA. the real question is why does Maryland exist? An English nobleman, By way of his father George, Cecil Calvert managed to lobby King Charles I to carve a land grant from Virginia in 1642. Anyway, that's all ancient history. It's less strange than what happened to East and West New Jersey.
Because of the Chesapeake Bay many shoreline stations have unexpectedly large and asymmetrical coverage areas. The local big MSA is #37: Virginia Beach–Norfolk–Newport News, VA–NC, with an estimated 2023 population of 1,787,169. That part of the Delmarva peninsula is broken into two counties: Accomack and Northampton. They are both technically part of the Norfolk MSA, but many of these stations have little coverage in the metro center because of that geography.
But outside of that orbit, many stations serve their communities in the greater bay area. You might try the map in the dxtra.com website visualizing that geography. It you look up the lat/long of the antennas you will also see how rural this area is, with most towers surrounded by farm land.
88.9 WMVA - The station has no relation to the former WMVA-AM in Martinsville, VA. That was cancelled in 2019. This one is in Painter, VA and was only first licensed in June of 2023. The original 2021 CP was with Friendship Cathedral who still operate the station today.
89.1 WHAR - These calls were previously on 105.1 in Havelock, NC from 2018 to 2024 and that station was also broadcasting Air-1 satcast christian music. WHAR signed on in 2005 in Cheriton, VA and in being in Cape Charles, it signal does cross the bay and reach into the metro center. Air-1 generally shuffles call letters often, which complicates the history. But I think it's always been a religious satcaster. Print sources confirm that 89.1 Cheriton was formerly WWIP. Those calls go back to it's start in 1998. The original CP lists the Delmarva Educational Association which still owns the license today. In April of 2024 they flipped calls to WHAR. If you go looking please remember that from about 1993 - 1998 there was a CHR station with the WWIP calls on 105.9 in Wabash, IN. Not them.
90.1 WHRX - This 46,000 watt stick is a simulcast of WHRV, out of Nassawadox, and it's coverage doesn't each much further south than Cape Charles. Oddly it's been through several call sign changes. The station was launched as WJCN in 2002, became WHRE in 2010, then WHRJ in 2011 and the WHRX later that same year. I'm not sure why all the shuffling. But those calls intimate an acquisition, and the tower is Nandua High School intimating a connection, but that was not the case. Prior to 2010 the stick was owned by Positive alternative Radio inc and aired Spirit FM. The original 1998 CP lists only Nassawadox FM Inc. Only in the 2002 Assignment of Authorization does that change to CSN international. Both M Street and VARTV corroborate this [LINK] that CP so it's not an entry error. The corporation was real. It was incorporated in 1998 in Boca Raton, FL. [SOURCE] Radio Business magazine [SOURCE] reported that they sold the CP to CSN Int'l for 80k. It smells like a shell company. Anyway also read that the WHRO format flip started with an all-Christmas format stunt which is more fun.
90.7 WZLV - Being situated on the tip of the peninsula, this station penetrates into Norfolk and Virginia Beach. It's a shame the signal is wasted on K-love. The station signed on as WAZP in 1998 owned by Delmarva Educational Association. It changed calls to WZLV only in 2010. The Broadcasting yearbook of 2007 claims the station signed on in 2000 with K-love which confirms. Back then it was the only stick in Cape Charles too. What a waste.
91.5 W218CQ - This is a simulcast of WYFQ, a AM/FM station duo out of Charlotte, NC. That station has no earthly business operating a repeater in the Chesapeake, about 280 miles away... but it does. It's another example of religious satcaster obeying no earthly laws. It's operated by the Bible Broadcasting Network. The FCC lists it as silent today due to a fire on April 7th 2026. Hey, that was last week!
91.9 WHRE - This 4,400 watt stick is a simulcast of WHRV, who's coverage doesn't each much further north than Cape Charles. Per the FCC it signed on in December of 2010 with the call sign WHRJ, then changed to WHRE in January of 2011. This stick broadcasts from the grounds of Northampton High School in Eastville, VA. The original 2007 CP lists the applicant as Hampton Roads Educational Telecommunications so I think it's safe to say that this has always been a WHRO/WHRV public radio property.
96.1 WROX - Technically in Exmore, this is basically in Cape Charles. This station signed on in 1986 as WIAV, "Wave 96" with a CHR format. A lightning strike took them off air in 1987 and it was sold to Bishop L.E. Willis and co-owned 1550 WVAB-AM but spinning off the AM stick. By the end of 1988 the calls where changed to WKSV,and in 1989 WXRI with a Christian AC format. In 1991 they tried an Urban Contemporary format and changed calls to WMYK. Sinclair bought the stick in 1993 and flipped the format to rock. then in 1998 it became WROX. In the 1990 Broadcasting yearbook they're listed under Virginia Beach instead of Cape Charles. They had a repeater on 106.1 downtown for years but lost is to the full service WUSH-FM in 2004. But back to WVAB-AM for a moment, they had a very interesting history. 1550 WVAB broadcast from 1954 to 2018, and after an FCC investigation Birach Broadcasting surrendered the license for it and 1450 WBVA-AM. WVAB had been off air since 2008 due to "vandalism" at that time. Birach only bought the station from the very politically connected Kellam family that same year. Hmmmm
96.9 WCCZ - The station signed on in 2005 as WFAJ, in Nassawadox owned by Hispanic Target Media, Inc. They are a well known operator, which currently owns 22 stations, though they've deleted at least another 5 in recent years. Even at at 13,500 watts, this station reaches Newport News but only the very shores of Norfolk; a glancing blow on the metro center. When it was airing the Radio Amigo format it was a huge Reg Mex station. In 2024 it was sold to GSB Media who flipped the format to Classic Hits.
98.3 WHRF - This 6,000 watt stick is a simulcast of WHRO, who's coverage doesn't each much further South than Cape Charles. The original 2009 CP was filed by Hampton Roads Educational Telecommunications so very little has changed for this stick in the last 15+ years.
99.3 WOWZ - Like WCCZ, this is a GSB Media property today. The station was founded in 1987, by Eastern Shore Broadcasting but DBA the Chincoteague Broadcasting Corporation. That was a Stephen Marks company like The Marks Group. They entered radio in 1983 in a big way acquiring 51% of Thunder Bay Broadcasting. Then it owned only WKBKB-TV in Alpena, MI. But under Marks they went into acquisition mode. In 2022, Marks died and his window began selling off their radio properties. WOWZ signed on in 1990 as WVES, the WOWZ calls only began in 2017, six years before WOWZ was sold to GSB Media. The station has been playing country as far back as I can confirm, at least 20 years.
103.3 WESR - This station signed on in 1068, 10 years after their AM sister station. Initially a simulcast, as a Vernon Baker station it was acquired by Eastern Shore Radio in 1987 and the FM stick split off to broadcast MOR. More here.
105.7 W289CE - This little translator broadcasts WESR-AM. Both W289CE and 103.3 WESR-FM we're knocked off air recently, April 7th by a transmitter fire. That's surely the same fire that took out W218CQ. In the daytime it's pretty redundant to that AM signal on 1330, but at night WESR-AM powers down from 5,000 watts to 51 so it doubles the coverage area with just 250 watts. I notice the tower is across the street from an Elks Lodge (BPOE 1766). ...A lot of lodges have a bar inside, I'll bet some of the staff are members.
1330 WESR-AM - This is the only AM stick in either Accomack or Northampton county; so that also makes it the only one in the Virginia section of the Delmarva Peninsula. This AM stick is the original local station for the Eastern Shore. They signed on in January of 1958, the product of a meeting between a hotel owner, Charles F. Russell and Vernon Baker, a Virginia tech professor who founded many radio stations. It is audible miles out to sea, and due to it's coverage pattern, it covers parts to both the Washington D.C. market and Norfolk, though more of the former. I listened to it this evening and Coastal Country was Darius Rucker while the FM stick was playing the Pointer Sisters "Neutron Dance."







































