WOPI signed on June 15, 1929 at State and 22nd Streets in Bristol, Tennessee, as the first radio station in the
Tri-Cities. W.A. Wilson, former chief
telegraph operator for
Western Union's Bristol office, came up with the plan for a radio station when he spent several years selling and installing radios. His son James C. Wilson worked at WOPI and later bought the Tri-Cities' second-oldest radio station,
Johnson City-based WJHL, and changed the calls to
WJCW. An early show on the station was "WOPI Jamboree", which featured live
country music. In the 1940s, WOPI and
WKPT formed a network called "the Sister City Network" for broadcasting local information. WOPI-FM signed on
Christmas Day 1946 as the area's first FM station. It was sold to the owner of WKYE in the 1960s and is now
WXBQ-FM. In 1990, WOPI was
bankrupt and Joe Morrell bought the station. Morrell wanted to increase the amount of country music on the station, bringing it back to its roots. In 1991, WOPI joined the WKPT network. Glenwood Broadcasting, owner of WKPT, bought the station in 1996. For most of the time since 1991, WOPI has been a simulcast of WKPT, though it breaks off from the simulcast to air
Tennessee High sports. ==Translator==