He is credited as the founder of the Philadelphia group, The Larks. In 1954, he was singing bass. Along with Calvin Nichols, Mary Archer and the Blalock brothers, Clarence & Bill Blalock, he started a group called The Victors. Not long after the formation, Mary Archer left the group and her replacement was Herman Green. The progress of the Victors was interrupted with McDougal joining the marines at the end of the year. While in still in the marines, he was performing in a group with the same name. He left the service in 1958, and went about reforming The Victors. The only member he could get was Calvin Nichols. He managed to bring other members, Jackie Marshall who was a high tenor. Then Baritone Bill Oxendine joined up. McDougal's wife Cleopatra also joined the group. He changed the name of the group to The Larks after seeing a brand of nails called Lark. One day Weldon ran into
Atlantic Records promo man
Jerry Ross. His group auditioned for Ross, and the Larks recorded around six tracks. The backing band on the session was called The Manhattans and included keyboardist
Ruben Wright, guitarist Johnny Stiles, sax player Harrison Scott and drummer Norman Conners. In 1961, their recording "It's Unbelievable" was released on the
Sheryl label. It entered the charts at no 78 for the Week Ending 12th March, 1961. It eventually rose to no 69 on the
Billboard pop charts. Jerry Ross arranged for the group to appear on
American Bandstand to sing their song. ==Record label career==