On June 10, 1940, the station first
signed on. During
World War II, getting equipment was difficult, but Ed Long put together the WHKY transmitter with the help of a mule and plow. The station signed on in 1940, broadcasting from the Hotel Hickory. In the 1950s, it moved to the
Elliott-Carnegie Library. Tom Long, Ed Long's son, supervised the station's daytime signal boost from 5,000 to 50,000 watts in 2003, as well as the construction of a new building. Jeff Long, representing the third generation of Longs, was station manager. In 1987, WHKY ended its music programming and went with an all talk format. WHKY aired
Paul Harvey's
News and Comment segments prior to his death in 2009. WHKY was a charter station of
The Rush Limbaugh Show and aired the show through his death until
Premiere Networks debuted
The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show four months after his death. ==References==