Photoville 2024: 100 Years of WNYC
“100 Years of WNYC” was part of Photoville 2024, an annual photography showcase located in Brooklyn Bridge Park.
From 1924 until 1997, WNYC Radio was owned and operated by the City of New York as the Municipal Broadcasting Station for “Instruction, Enlightenment, and Entertainment.” WNYC turns 100 this year, and its history is intimately tied with not just City government, but the NYC Municipal Archives. From the very first broadcast on July 8, 1924, photographed by Eugene de Salignac, to recent collaborative grants to digitize historic broadcasts housed in the Municipal Archives, this exhibit will use archival photographs, ephemera, and audio clips to celebrate WNYC’s history and importance to the City of New York. John Glenn and John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, Josephine Baker and Bob Dylan, astronauts and politicians, artists, musicians, and poets all made appearances on WNYC. The founder of the Municipal Archives, librarian Rebecca Rankin, even had her own radio program on WNYC.
The exhibit consisted of 4 panels showing 25 years of history each, accompanied by an audio medley, presented below.
WNYC, 1924-1949
WNYC, 1950-1974
WNYC, 1975-1999
WNYC, 2000-2024
100 Years of WNYC, Audio medley, list of clips
Re-enactment of first 1924 WNYC broadcast, 1948
Sweet Georgia Brown, Ben Bernie and His Hotel Roosevelt Orchestra, 1925
Col. Lindbergh Tickertape Parade Reception, June 13, 1927
Emergency Relief Committee Orchestra, 1931
Station sign-off, December 1931
Rebecca Rankin, Municipal Librarian, 1938
News broadcast, 1938
World’s Fair station ID, 1939
Pearl Harbor attack broadcast, December 7, 1941
Mayor La Guardia war-time Talk to the People, January 2, 1944
Mayor LaGuardia reads the comics during newspaper strike, July 8, 1945
Audio from City of Magic, WNYC-TV/Film, 1949
AM and FM Station ID, January 11, 1950
Bert the Turtle, Duck and Cover, ca. 1952
Audio from This is the Municipal Broadcasting System, WNYC-TV/Film, 1953
Eleanor Roosevelt DJs Elvis Presley’s song Ready Teddy, February 6, 1957
Last run of the 3rd Avenue El, May 12, 1955
Footloose in Greenwich Village, May 6, 1960
Bob Dylan’s first radio appearance, October 29, 1961
John Glenn, first American to orbit the earth, February 20, 1962
President Lyndon B. Johnson, Gulf of Tonkin announcement, August 4, 1964
Martin Luther King, Jr. welcome at City Hall, December 17, 1964
Station ID, 1963
Diane Arbus, interviewed for Viewpoints of Women by Richard Pyatt, September 2, 1971
Shirley Chisholm announces run for presidency, January 25, 1972
WNYC Golden Anniversary, Mayor Abraham D. Beame reading proclamation, July 8, 1974
Mayor Ed Koch town hall in Jackson Heights, June 1, 1979
Transit Strike, April 3, 1980
“Voices of Disarmament” rally, June 14, 1982
Vito Russo’s Our Time: Episode 1 - Lesbian & Gay History, February 16, 1983
Philip Glass interviewed on New Sounds by John Schaefer, January 6, 1985
ACT UP demonstration at City Hall, Andy Lanset reporting, March 28, 1989
Ladysmith Black Mambazo, August 30, 1987
Mayor David N. Dinkins and Nelson Mandela in New York, June 20, 1990
Snap!, The Power, Video Music Box with Ralph McDaniels, WNYC-TV, September 14, 1990
Audio from Heart of the City with John F. Kennedy, Jr., March 2, 1994
WNYC Independence Celebration, January 27, 1997
Kurt Vonnegut, Reporter for the Afterlife, 1998
World Trade Center montage, September 11, 2001
Brooke Gladstone, On the Media, December 20, 2002
Blackout announcement, August 14, 2003
David Garland, NYPR takeover of WQXR, October 8, 2009
RadioLab intro, February 20, 2010
John Schaefer, Soundcheck live from The Greene Space, December 15, 2011
Hurricane Sandy aircheck, October 29, 2012
Brian Lehrer Show, first broadcast from his apartment due to COVID-19, March 16, 2020
Protests, September 4, 2020
All of It, Allison Stewart, October 21, 2021
New Yorker Radio Hour, May 11, 2024
Notes From America with Kai Wright, May 19, 2024
Morning Edition, Michael Hill with Andy Lanset on the Anniversary of WNYC, July 8, 2023
This exhibit was curated by Michael Lorenzini of the NYC Municipal Archives and Andy Lanset of the New York Public Radio Archives. WNYC audio and WNYC-TV/Film collections are available from the NYC Municipal Archives and from the New York Public Radio Archive.
To learn more about WNYC’s history, follow Andy Lanset’s New York Public Radio History Notes Newsletter.