History
Radio has been a Bowdoin tradition dating back to the early 1940s when students and faculty sporadically hosted and recorded programs on campus, which were later broadcast through Portland's WCSH, Lewiston's WCOU, Augusta's WRDO, and Bangor's WLBZ. These programs usually consisted of a combination of play readings, faculty interviews, and live vocal music, usually from the Bowdoin College Glee Club and the Meddiebempsters.
In the late 1940s, Bowdoin begian a program entitled Bowdoin-on-the-air (BOTA), where students would record radio broadcasts, which would ultimately be rebroadcast on Portland station WGAN. After years of BOTA popularity, the college invested in an AM transmitter and built a station on the second floor of the Moulton Union. However, due to weakness of their AM signal, BOTA continued to broadcast through WGAN, but live, thanks to a dedicated phone line in the college's new studio. Along with this dedicated phone line to WGAN, BOTA also changed their name to WBOA (Bowdoin on-the-air).
In December 1956, WBOA applied to the FCC for an FM station license and was granted one on the frequency of 91.1 MHz. In conjunction with the switch to FM, WBOA changed its name to WBOR (Bowdoin-on-radio). On February 20, 1957, WBOR's first FM broadcast was heard across campus. Prior to this, WBOA could only be heard in the freshmen dorms within a few hundred feet of the Moulton Union station.
On October 19, 1982, after a two-year battle with local radio and T.V. stations, the FCC gave WBOR the go ahead to increase their signal strength to 300 watts.