Old Farm Hour (WCHS) T. Texas Tyler (My Buckets Got a Hole In It

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
1,272
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on May 17, 2011

Old Farm Hour (WCHS)

WCHS-AM Radio went on the air Sept. 15, 1927 at 580 KHZ. The station was the third station in West Virginia (WV) to go on the air. Its first call letters were WOBU, with the first location being in the Ruffner Hotel on Kanawha Boulevard. It was founded by Walter Fredericks who had an electric shop, but couldn't sell radios with no local stations. So he built one, later calling it WCHS. The station moved into Middleburg Auditorium, which was used for various events.

The Old Farm Hour apparently was the creation of Buddy Starcher, who was destined to have the largest impact on the Charleston country radio scene. While Buddy was working in Charleston, he found himself being asked to work on personal appearances with an act called Salt and Peanuts who were working out of WOBU. Buddy got the idea that he could begin booking himself. Starcher began auditioning amateur talent on Wednesdays with announcer Gene Ferguson. Those that did well in this audition would appear on a broadcast on Friday nights. As time went on, the show had regular performers and was held before a live audience. That show became the Old Farm Hour.

The Old Farm Hour was the live Friday night jamboree program from WCHS radio. Shows were held in the Middleburg Auditorium and during its period of peak popularity the Old Farm Hour regularly drew crowds of 2,000 people. As Buddy Starcher's career moved on, Frank Welling would also audition talent that would appear on the Old Farm Hour show. Frank Welling (1898--1957), a musician, homespun philosopher, emcee and radio announcer, played a key part in the program's success, usually in his comic role of ''Uncle Si.'' Welling pretty much directed the hillbilly music aspects of Charleston radio during the early years with the station. A 1940 promotional booklet for the West Virginia network identified him as "in charge of our old-time talent and the Old farm Hour in addition to his staff announcing duties," which generally ran from 06:00 to 08:00 each morning. The WCHS management team reserved those hours almost exclusively for country music.

Charleston-area musicians who appeared on the program included the legendary fiddler Clark Kessinger, singer-yodeler Billy Cox and vocalist Buddy Starcher. During the program's zenith in the late 1930s and early 1940s, cast members included the Bailes Brothers, the Delmore Brothers, Cliff and Bill Carlisle and the duo of Slim Clere and T. Texas Tyler. Tyler would introduce his famous "growl" technique by singing a special version of El Rancho Grande to a cheering audience. Local favorites affiliated with the Old Farm Hour at one time or another included Tommy Cantrell, tap dancer Orville Q. Miller and the sacred vocal trio of Cap, Andy and Flip, Andy and Flip (Warren Caplinger, Andy Patterson, and William Strickland - 1939). The noted trio had their only recording sessions shortly afterward, waxing about a dozen sides which they subsequently released on their own Fireside Melodies label.

With the coming of World War II and gas rationing, the Old Farm Hour like the WWVA Wheeling Jamboree, curtailed its live audience broadcasts, although not so drastically. Once a month the public performance broadcasts continued from the WCHS Auditorium. To a greater degree than elsewhere, however, the war seemed to take something out of country music in Charleston. The program never regained its former popularity after the war and the Old Farm Hour had passed into history by the late 1940s. Cap Andy and Milt remained evidently as popular as ever and Frank Welling went on with his Uncle Si role. A few casts continued, but otherwise the Kanawha Valley entered a slow decline into a lackluster period of its musical history that would not undergo a real revival until 1960. Country music enjoyed something of a renaissance in Charleston on early morning WCHS-TV (1960--73) as first Buddy Starcher and then Sleepy Jeffers had popular programs featuring Wick Craig, the Davis Twins, Herman Yarbrough and Lori Lee Bowles in addition to themselves.

The Old Farm Hour saw many artists on its roster that would one day become well-known to country music fans. The following are some of the artists who were guests or regularly featured on the Old Farm Hour.

Old Farm Hour Artist Roster, Partial Listing

• Bailes Brothers
• Billy Cox
• Bob Atcher
• Buddy Starcher
• Cap, Andy and Flip
• Clark Kessinger
• Cliff & Bill Carlisle
• Cowboy Copas
• Delmore Brothers
• Ernest Ferguson
• Frank Welling
• Grandpa Jones
• Harmie Smith
• Kitty Wells
• Lee and Juanita Moore
• Lonesome Holler Boys
• Orville Q. Miller
• Red Sovine
• Rex Parker
• Slim Clere
• T. Texas Tyler
• Tommy Cantrell

RJB: Country Music Historian, May, 2011. References: Record Research: Country Music Singles 1944 -- 1993; Billboard Magazine; RJB: Original Country Music Chronicles

Category:

Music

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

Link to this comment:

Share to:
see all

All Comments (2)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • I sure enjoy your write ups. Could not sell radio with no stations lol. Know you put

    a lot of hard work into gathering all this good info!!! Again thank you!!!!

  • Remember this one well. Thanks for the share.

    Ginnie

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more