WNYC

Black History Highlights of Municipal Broadcasting’s First 25 Years - Part 2

The 1940s 

The wartime decade placed WNYC firmly in the vanguard of American broadcasting where Black producers and Black-centered programming were concerned. This leadership emerged early in the decade with calypso music on Henrietta Yurchenco’s Adventures in Music. A notable example is the July 28 broadcast featuring Cecil Anderson—better known as The Duke of Iron—who paid tribute to the municipal station in song with “The Ballad of WNYC.” 

Station WNYC. Yes, WNYC, it is owned by the people of N.Y.C. 
My friends, I’m known as the Duke of Iron, 
And I sing to people throughout the land. 
I came from Trinidad, maybe you have heard 
Of the glorious land of the humming bird. 
I highly appreciate your loyalty 
And the grand privilege that’s offered me 
By the nice people of New York City 
And the station WNYC… 

The Duke of Iron (Cecil Anderson) publicity photo, Wikimedia Commons.

In the song, Anderson also praised Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, crediting him as the station’s “godfather” and acknowledging his tireless efforts to ensure WNYC’s survival during its early years—although it’s worth noting that La Guardia originally ran for Mayor on a platform calling for the abolition of the station given its cost to the taxpayer.

Producer Yurchenco also brought Huddie Ledbetter—Lead Belly, the king of the twelve-string guitar—to WNYC’s air in 1940. This appearance marked the first of four regular series he would host during the decade, along with frequent guest spots on other programs, including the annual American Music Festival. In a 2001 interview with WNYC, Yurchenco recalled his professionalism, punctuality, and meticulous dress, as well as the collaborative way they shaped his broadcasts. She emphasized that Lead Belly’s commentary drew directly from his own life and described it as “colorful and magnificent,” noting that he remains one of the great blues singers of all time. Here is Lead Belly from his program, Folksongs of America, on February 27, 1941. 

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Among the other programs on which Lead Belly appeared was Ralph Berton’s Metropolitan Review, radio’s first serious jazz music program, and its companion series, Jazz Institute on the Air. Together, these broadcasts introduced New York audiences to a wide range of African-American jazz, blues, boogie-woogie and swing artists in the early 1940s. In November 1941, Berton devoted a full week of programming to Louis Armstrong—whom he dubbed “the Beethoven of hot jazz”—in celebration of Armstrong’s twenty-fifth year in show business. Berton also hosted a segment of WNYC’s American Music Festival in February 1941 featuring Lead Belly, Albert Ammons, Sam Price, Meade Lux Lewis, and the Golden Gate Singers. 

(Audio from the Municipal Archives WNYC Collection) 

Paul Robeson by Gordon Parks for the OWI, June 1942/Library of Congress.

Paul Robeson’s powerful baritone graced WNYC’s airwaves on at least two occasions during the 1940s. The first occurred on June 24, 1940, when he performed “Ballad for Americans” at Lewisohn Stadium with the Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra conducted by Artur Rodziński. Written by Earl Robinson and John Latouche, the cantata was conducted by Mark Warnow and featured a chorus of fifty voices drawn from the Schola Cantorum and the Wen Talbert Negro Choir, with African-American contralto Louise Burge joining the ensemble. The concert also included the premiere of William Grant Still’s And They Lynched Him on a Tree, based on a poem by Katherine Garrison Chapin. Robeson’s second live WNYC broadcast was a Central Park bandshell concert of contemporary Russian music on September 1, 1942, conducted by noted African-American conductor Dean Dixon.

From May through July 1941, WNYC aired the pioneering thirteen-week dramatic series Native Sons, which portrayed the lives of significant historical Black figures. The biographical sketches were groundbreaking not only in content but in authorship: they were written by African Americans Kirk Lord and Frank D. Griffin at a time when few Black writers worked in radio beyond menial roles. Writing for the Baltimore Afro-American in August 1941, Griffin charged that commercial radio would not hire Black writers, arguing that as radio became a big business, Jim Crow practices had become entrenched in both studios and control rooms. Two years later, The New York Age noted Griffin’s hiring by the  Congress of Industrial Organizations to write NBC’s Labor for Victory series, observing that he was “the only Negro at present writing for a network program.”  

Headline from the August 1, 1941 radio listings in the Daily Worker.

Native Sons also broke new ground by presenting profiles of insurgent figures such as Nat Turner and Denmark Vesey—subjects rarely, if ever, discussed on the air. Alongside these were portraits of figures including Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Crispus Attucks, George Washington Carver, Benjamin Banneker, Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield, Paul Robeson, Marian Anderson, Roland Hayes, Dorothy Maynor, Ira Aldridge, Robert Smalls, Toussaint L’Ouverture, and the Moroccan explorer Estevanico. The series featured an all-Black cast that included Canada Lee, Jessie Zackerey, P. J. Sidney, Jimmy Wright, Rose Poindexter, and Eric Boroughs, with musical segments provided by the Juanita Hall Choir. Author Richard Wright delivered commentary following the final broadcast.

Clifford Burdette/NAACP Collection – Library of Congress.

May 1941 also marked the debut of Those Who Have Made Good, an interview program sponsored by the NAACP and designed to spotlight “the most outstanding race figures in contemporary life, from all fields of endeavor.” Hosted and produced weekly by Clifford Burdette for more than a year, the program fulfilled that mission, beginning with actor Canada Lee and continuing with guests such as Paul Robeson, W.C. Handy, Josh White, Noble Sissle, Mercedes Gilbert, Dean Dixon, Count Basie, the Reverend Adam Clayton Powell, Hazel Scott, Max Yergan, Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, and many others. The sole surviving recording of the series features Harlem poet Countee Cullen. 

(Audio courtesy of the Amistad Research Center, Tulane University

Duke Ellington’s first Carnegie Hall concert on January 23, 1943 featured his expansive jazz composition Black, Brown and Beige, a work he described as “a parallel to the history of the Negro in America.” Recorded on location, the performance was broadcast over WNYC nine days later. Unfortunately, critics initially received the work poorly, and Ellington never revisited it in full. Half a century later, however, Scott DeVeaux of the University of Virginia described it as “an intriguing piece of music, well worth reexamining” and “a celebration of Black artistic achievement” that “confronted both the cultural snobbery that excluded jazz musicians from the musical establishment and the pervasive racism that excluded African Americans from their share of citizenship.” 

Judge Jane Bolin, first Black female to occupy a court bench/U.S. Office of War Information Photo/Wikimedia Commons.

On March 18, 1943, Justice Jane M. Bolin—the first African-American judge in New York and the first Black woman to graduate from Yale Law School—came to the municipal radio studio to deliver the address Womenpower is Vital to Victory. Bolin was speaking as part of the Eleventh Vocational Opportunity Campaign of the National Urban League. She called for employment of African-American women and condemned discrimination as antithetical to the nation’s democratic war aims.

WNYC revisited the African-American docudrama with the Great Americans series May 19 through June 23, 1943. Sponsored by the City’s Juvenile Welfare Council, the program included profiles of inventor George Washington Carver, champion fighter Joe Louis, contralto Marian Anderson, sculptor Richmond Barthe, police officer Samuel Battle, activist James Weldon Johnson, and heard here, ship captain Hugh Mulzac.  

(Audio from the Municipal Archives WNYC Collection) 

Compared to Native Sons, the series was more conventional and corny in tone. Variety commented that it “ducked the fundamental racial issues” and was “slanted for juves and strictly inspirational,” with episodes often concluding with exhortations about self-improvement. 

The year 1943 was marked by unrest tied to racial and ethnic tensions across the United States. Violent clashes erupted in Mobile, Alabama, Detroit, Los Angeles, and Beaumont, Texas, undermining morale on the home front as the nation fought a global war. Mayor La Guardia—also the national head of the Office of Civilian Defense—was deeply concerned that similar disturbances might erupt in New York, particularly given the reliance on minority soldiers in a segregated military. 

Seeking to defuse rising tensions, La Guardia pressed for a radio series titled Unity at Home – Victory Abroad and wrote poet, activist, and playwright Langston Hughes for assistance. Slated to air on WNYC and seven other New York stations in August and September, the series featured figures such as contralto Marian Anderson, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, and former governor Al Smith. Tragically, the effort came too late to prevent the Harlem riot of August 1, although WNYC played a critical role in calming the situation through its broadcasts and sound trucks. 

(Audio from the Municipal Archives WNYC Collection)

Page one of a four-page WNYC press release on the 1943 disturbances in Harlem. NYC Municipal Library vertical files.

Excerpt from Behind the Mike, September/October 1943 Masterwork Bulletin/WNYC Archive Collections.

According to Hughes biographer Arnold Rampersad, Hughes was also contacted by the Writers’ War Board, which sought radio programming to promote unity and prevent further racial violence. Hughes responded with some songs and two short plays, In the Service of My Country and Private Jim Crow. While the former was broadcast on WNYC and praised, the latter—more critical in its depiction of discrimination faced by Black soldiers—was never aired anywhere. Hughes himself acknowledged the difficulty of such material, noting radio’s persistent censorship of dramatic treatments of Black life. 

Hughes returned to WNYC in 1944 as a guest on mezzo-soprano Lola Hayes’s weekly program Tone Pictures of the Negro in Music, which highlighted African-American composers and their work. The November 29 broadcast focused on musical settings of Hughes’s poetry, and he read from his opera Troubled Island. Other guests during the program’s run included Abbie Mitchell, Will Marion Cook, Hall Johnson, and Clarence Cameron White. 

Portrait of Lola Hayes in 1941 by James L. Allen/Courtesy of The New York Times.

NAEB Newsletter April 1, 1944. Excerpt courtesy of Unlocking the Airwaves/University of Maryland. 

In February 1944, Billie Holiday made a late addition to WNYC’s annual American Music Festival, appearing in a swing session alongside Hot Lips Page and Coleman Hawkins. The following month, WNYC also began airing spots against bigotry as part of director Morris Novik’s vision of public radio to educate for democracy. 

NAEB Newsletter April 1, 1944. Excerpt courtesy of Unlocking the Airwaves/University of Maryland. 

Script for a spot on tolerance from 1944. WNYC Archive Collections. 

On April 2, 1944, Mayor La Guardia welcomed composer and baritone Harry T. Burleigh to City Hall for a broadcast of Talk to the People, continuing the station’s engagement with African-American cultural leadership during the war years. 

(Audio from the Municipal Archives WNYC Collection) 

1936 portrait of Harry T. Burleigh by Maud Cuney-Hare, 1874-1936/Wikimedia Commons. 

The year 1944 saw the municipal station move away from biodramas toward short-lived serial dramas that aimed to portray African Americans as everyday Americans who happened to be Black. On Saturday evenings in June, an all-Black cast appeared in I’m Your Next Door Neighbor, which followed the business and home life of a “typical” New York family living in Harlem. Station director Morris Novik explained that “tolerance and prejudice were not the theme of the series, but during the course of normal events it brought home to the listener that there were certain evils that perhaps he was not aware of previously.” 

In an article about the “falling color bar” in radio, The Chicago Defender called the program “the most advanced program artistically.” The paper also quoted producer Barbara M. Watson, who said, “It is most important that young Negroes look to radio as the future. There are inroads to be made now. It will be tougher later.” Watson went on to have a distinguished career, becoming the first African American and the first woman appointed Assistant Secretary of State. 

Josh White at Café Society circa 1946 by William P. Gottlieb/Library of Congress. 

The second serial drama was Henry Allen—American. Airing on Sundays from October into November 1944, the program was a takeoff on Henry Aldrich, the popular white protagonist of NBC’s The Aldrich Family. Like I’m Your Next Door Neighbor, the series sought to normalize Black domestic life. An announcement in The Brooklyn Eagle said the program would “try to give us an understanding glimpse into the homes and hearts of 14,000,000 fellow citizens.” 

Folksinger Josh White performed at the February 1945 American Music Festival. The announcer described his repertoire as “music that is rooted in the soil and the heart of the American people,” and quoted Langston Hughes, who called White “a fine singer of anybody’s songs—Southern Negro, Southern white, plantation work songs, modern union songs, English or Irish ballads—any songs that come from the heart of a people.” 

(Audio courtesy of Smithsonian Moe Asch Collection.)

The following month, President Franklin D. Roosevelt died, and the NAACP mounted an extensive tribute over the municipal station. On April 15, listeners heard from attorney Herman Taylor, Roy Wilkins, NAACP president Arthur B. Spingarn, and Maude Turner of the New York City NAACP branch. Spingarn said, “The death of President Roosevelt is a tragic loss to mankind. But to minority peoples of the world—particularly the minority groups in this country—it is an irreparable calamity.” 

Returning from Army service, producer and host Clifford Burdette launched Freedom’s Ladder in July 1946. The weekly program blended music and civil rights advocacy and was described as “the only weekly program battling discrimination and prejudice.” Echoing the mission of his earlier WNYC series Those Who Have Made Good, Burdette told the Baltimore Afro-American, “Our show aims to entertain and to promote the idea that everyone has a chance to climb freedom’s ladder. You’ve got to be good, and you’ve got to work at it.” 

The program ran for a year and featured some nationally known performers, including Nat King Cole and Sarah Vaughan, but largely relied on entertainers from Harlem nightclubs and other local venues, along with frequent appearances by members of the New York State Commission Against Discrimination. Unlike Burdette’s earlier program, the high-powered roster of Harlem Renaissance celebrities was largely absent. New York Amsterdam News columnist and radio host Bill Chase was a regular presence and shared hosting duties.   

(Audio from the Municipal Archives WNYC Collection.)

On April 16, 1946, municipal radio listeners heard NYU sociologist Dr. Dan Dodson moderate a panel discussion titled “How Can We Work for Interracial Understanding?” Panelists included pioneering African-American psychologist Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, Judge and civil-rights attorney Hubert Delany, and journalist and social historian Dr. Albert Deutsch. Later that spring, on June 3, listeners may also have caught a live broadcast of Billie Holiday performing at Jazz at the Philharmonic at Carnegie Hall. 

Kenneth B. Clark, Judge Hubert T. Delaney, Dr. Dan Dodson, and Mr. Albert Deutsch during broadcast of WNYC radio show, “How can we work for interracial understanding?” Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress. 

One More River producers Bill Chase and Ken Joseph in front of the microphone circa 1947.  WNYC Archive Collections. 

From January 10 to April 6, 1947, One More River was billed as “the only radio show in the country produced by a Negro–White team” dedicated to improving race relations. The Sunday broadcast was produced by New York Amsterdam News columnist Bill Chase and WNYC staff announcer Ken Joseph, who said the program was “dedicated to the equality and dignity of all men” and sought to expose prejudice in both the North and the South. The series combined dramatizations and music, with guests including Teddy Wilson, Kenneth Spencer, Jenny Powell, Mildred Bailey, Lillette Thomas, Melba Allen, the Ellis Larkins Trio, and the Al Casey Trio. The Nameless Choir appeared regularly under the direction of Charles King. This is the April 6, 1947 program from the Municipal Archives WNYC collection. 

African-American conductor Dean Dixon led the American Youth Symphony in February 1947 for the eleventh WNYC American Music Festival concert. The program featured contralto Carol Brice, with pianist Vivian Rivkin, and included works by William Schuman, Johan Franco, Norman Dello Joio, and Richard J. Newman. The concert concluded with Newman’s United Nations Cantata for Chorus and Orchestra, performed by the David Randolph Chamber Chorus. 

On June 29, 1947, WNYC carried President Harry S. Truman’s address to the NAACP at its thirty-eighth annual conference. The Lincoln Memorial speech was the first time a sitting U.S. president spoke to the organization’s annual meeting.

(Audio from the Municipal Archive WNYC Collection.)

President Truman delivering remarks to the NAACP at the Lincoln Memorial, June 29, 1947. Photo courtesy of the Truman Library. 

The Thelonius Monk Quartet performed at the ninth American Music Festival on February 16, 1948. Monk was joined on piano by trumpeter Idrees Sulieman, bassist Curly Russell, and drummer Art Blakey. Their set included the standard All the Things You Are

(Audio from the WNYC Archive Collections.)

Jazz Classroom of the Air premiered on October 9, 1948. The thirty-minute broadcast accompanied an NYU jazz course taught by John Hammond of Mercury Records and George Avakian of Columbia Records. Designed as both public educational entertainment and a supplement to the university course, the program paired Saturday evening broadcasts with Monday classroom lectures. The inaugural episode traced the origins of jazz and featured several early recordings, including one by a young Louis Armstrong.

(Audio from the WNYC Archive Collections.)

Civil rights leader Walter White spoke at the Cooper Union Forum on December 18, 1949. His address, “The Race Problem in the United States,” examined the relationship between race and foreign policy and was carried live from the Great Hall over WNYC. 

(Audio from the Municipal Archives WNYC Collection.)

Conclusion 

Taken together, these early decades of New York’s municipal broadcasting reveal WNYC as an imperfect but often pioneering civic platform for Black cultural expression, political debate, and historical self-representation. At a time when commercial radio routinely excluded African-American voices—or confined them to caricatures—the city-owned station repeatedly created space for Black artists, intellectuals, activists, and institutions to speak in their own voices and on their own terms. These efforts unfolded unevenly, shaped by the limits of the era, wartime pressures, censorship, and persistent racial inequities. Yet they also reflected a sustained belief that public broadcasting could serve democratic ends by broadening who was heard and what was heard. 

From early policy decisions banning racial epithets, to landmark series such as Native Sons and Those Who Have Made Good, to wartime appeals for unity and postwar explorations of everyday Black life, WNYC’s programming documented—and at times anticipated—larger national conversations about race, citizenship, and cultural authority. The station’s airwaves carried music, drama, and debate that challenged prevailing stereotypes and introduced audiences to a fuller, more complex vision of African-American life in the United States. 

As WNYC moved beyond its first quarter-century, these broadcasts formed a foundation on which later generations would build. The preserved recordings remain vital historical evidence of how New York City’s municipal radio, at its best, functioned as a forum for inclusion, education, and civic responsibility—an aspiration that continues to resonate during Black History Month and beyond. 

Anti-bigotry spot from 1946. WNYC Archive Collections. 

Black History Highlights of Municipal Broadcasting’s First 25 Years - Part 1

For 73 years, WNYC was owned and operated by the City of New York. Detailing its African-American-focused programing over this period is no small task—indeed, it could easily serve as a master’s thesis in broadcast history. Within the limits of this essay, however, I have highlighted some of the most significant early moments and broadcasts that merit reflection during Black History Month. 

Reverend Dr. Henry Hugh Proctor. Photo courtesy Wikimedia Commons. 

Among the earliest African American speakers on WNYC—if not the first—was the Reverend Dr. Henry Hugh Proctor, an early civil-rights leader who addressed listeners on the evening of October 11, 1924. He opened the broadcast with a prayer, followed by the Nazarene Chorus, based at his Brooklyn church, the Nazarene Congregational Church. Proctor is recognized as a key figure in the Social-Gospel movement, a significant precursor to the modern civil-rights movement. 

The municipal station was only eight months old in March 1925—and radio itself was still very much a toddler—when WNYC banned the use of racial epithets on the air. The action came at a moment of peak Ku Klux Klan membership nationwide and three years before NBC would launch the enormously popular, and racially charged, Amos ’n’ Andy. The ban followed a broadcast in which a city official told “a harmless watermelon story,” unaware that he had caused offense by using  a slur related to skin color.” Department of Plant and Structures Commissioner William Wirt Mills, whose agency oversaw the station, issued an apology and ordered corrective action in response to a complaint from The Baltimore Afro-American newspaper.

Excerpt from WNYC Engineering Log for October 11, 1924. WNYC Archive Collections.

The Baltimore Afro-American, March 7, 1925, pg.6. 

Seen in this light, it is notable that by 1946—likely earlier—the station’s operations manual extended its prohibition on racial and ethnic epithets to Jews, Irish Americans, and other maligned groups. The guide also instructed staff that “there is no need, for example, in crime news to refer repeatedly to a man's color unless there is a specific news reason, such as a police description of a missing person.” It further cautioned against repeating derogatory remarks about any individual, even when accurately attributed, unless the quotation itself had specific news value, such as forming the basis of a lawsuit. 

Black participation on WNYC and other broadcast outlets during the 1920s remained limited, largely confined to occasional gospel performances and dance band appearances. That changed in 1929, when both the New York Urban League and the NAACP secured regular weekly time slots—among the earliest sustained programming by and for African Americans in the nation. These broadcasts featured prominent voices including scholar and activist W.E.B. Du Bois, labor leader A. Philip Randolph, writer and civil rights advocate James Weldon Johnson, and actress Rose McClendon. 

Between 1930 and 1933, the U.S. government sponsored trips to Europe for surviving mothers of deceased World War I soldiers and for widows who had not remarried, allowing them to visit the American cemeteries where their loved ones were buried. The program was initially praised in Black newspapers, which encouraged all eligible women to participate. That support shifted, however, when the War Department announced that the pilgrimages would be segregated. 

Mrs. Willie Rush, whose son died in France, spoke over WNYC on behalf of Gold Star mothers during a City Hall protest broadcast on July 11, 1930. An Atlanta native, she condemned the segregation of the Black and white delegations. She and other protesters were joined in the Aldermanic Chamber by Acting Mayor Joseph V. McKee and city officials. 

The NAACP attempted to persuade the federal government to integrate the excursions but was unsuccessful. The organization subsequently called for a boycott, prompting roughly two dozen mothers and widows to cancel their trips. Ultimately, however, 279 African-American women chose to make the journey. 

Planting ceremony of the Tree of Hope, Seventh Avenue and 131 Street, where out-of-work black entertainers traded gossip and tips on jobs, November 1934. Mayor LaGuardia collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

November 17, 1934 edition of Literary Digest courtesy of the Internet Archive.

An unusual event celebrating legend, myth, and collective hope brought WNYC microphones to Harlem on November 4, 1934. The occasion was the replanting and dedication of the community’s “Wishing Tree” at 131st Street and Seventh Avenue, with Bill “Bojangles” Robinson presiding before public officials and a crowd of thousands. Also known as the “Tree of Hope,” the elm was believed to possess magical powers, according to reports in The Literary Digest.

Shortly thereafter, newly hired assistant program director Seymour Siegel moved quickly to bring government-subsidized musicians into the municipal studios through the Federal Music Project. Although the program remained segregated and Black musicians were paid less than their white counterparts, African-American performers were nonetheless employed under the WPA. The ensembles were broadcast nationally via 16-inch transcription discs mailed from Washington, D.C.—a pre-satellite distribution system. These groups included the Juanita Hall Choir, the Negro Melody Singers, the Negro Art Singers, the Los Angeles Colored Chorus, and the Los Angeles Negro Choir. 

The WNYC Archives compiled this mixtape of 26 performances selected from the Municipal Archives WNYC Collection of WPA music transcriptions. 

Singer and actress Juanita Hall, with back turned, conducting the Negro Melody Singers, circa late 1930s. Photographs and Prints Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations / New York Public Library.

Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia’s second term in 1938 marked another turning point with the appointment of Morris Novik as station director and head of the Municipal Broadcasting System, a communications agency reporting directly to the Mayor rather than the Department of Plant and Structures. This reorganization ushered in a new era of inclusiveness at WNYC, beginning with an on-air discussion and debate over the federal Anti-Lynching Bill featuring NAACP executive secretary Walter White. The period also included a notable studio performance by actor Alvin Childress, who portrayed an enslaved person in a dramatic sketch titled Two Faces

Portrait of author Richard Wright (PM Photo/A. Lanset Collection).

In April of that year, author Richard Wright appeared on a Federal Writers’ Project roundtable broadcast and addressed the persistence of racial stereotyping and reflected on his work for The WPA Guide to New York City. “The most amazing thing about these stories, to my way of thinking, is that they were never done before… the average American's conception of Negro culture and life as it exists in New York is probably derived from not very accurate novels, or Hollywood representations of the urban Negro as either shabby and comical or exceedingly prosperous as the conductor of a popular swing orchestra.”

The following month, the National Urban League launched Negro News & Views, a new weekly program intended, in its words, “to awaken the general public to the realization of the importance of the Negro’s cultural contribution to American life.” Two weeks after the funeral of James Weldon Johnson in June, WNYC broadcast an on-air remembrance of the author of Lift Every Voice and Sing, often referred to as the Black national anthem. Listeners heard tributes from Mayor La Guardia and leaders of the NAACP, underscoring the station’s growing role as a civic platform for Black cultural and political life. 

In 1939, African-American actor Gordon Heath came to WNYC through the WPA’s National Youth Administration via its NYA Varieties radio program. He produced a biographical series titled Music and Youth, which he later recalled in his memoirs as a stream of “15-minute potted sketches from the lives of great musicians of the past.” One such vignette featured Beethoven in conversation with his landlord, declaring, “Ah, Herr Sturch—the wages of sin, they have not been paid.” 

 

Part Two of the blog will continue documenting WNYC’s role as a leading producer of programs focusing on Black civic and cultural leadership in the 1940s.

Socialists on the City Airwaves

The recent election and swearing-in of Zohran Mamdani a member of the Democratic Socialist Party was not the first socialist or progressive—of one persuasion or another—to run for elected office in the city. Mayor David Dinkins, for example, was also a member of the Democratic Socialist Party. Mayor Mamdani’s victory, however, offers an opportunity to look back at some of the socialist voices New Yorkers have heard over WNYC, the City’s municipal radio station, across the decades.

Before 1938, many candidates, would have found it difficult to gain access to the City’s airwaves at all. WNYC’s director at the time, Christie Bohnsack, largely followed the lead of the Tammany Hall political machine, which tended to lump progressive movements together under a broad—and pejorative—“red” label.

BPS 12625: WNYC Director Christie Bohnsack (in bowtie, far right) at a reception at the WNYC studio in the Municipal Building, July 31, 1929. Mayor Jimmy Walker is at the microphone. Photograph by Eugene de Salignac, Department o Bridges/Plant & Structures Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

Change began with Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia’s second term in 1938. La Guardia had run with the support of the relatively new American Labor Party (1936-1956), a nexus of labor leaders and former Socialist Party members who rebranded themselves as the Social Democratic Federation.

La Guardia appointed Morris S. Novik as director of WNYC. Novik arrived from WEVD, a station owned and operated by the progressive Jewish Forward and founded by the Socialist Party as a memorial to its late leader, Eugene Victor Debs. The connection was unambiguous—and not lost on La Guardia’s opponents.

Daily Worker article about lefty teens on WNYC, from August 29, 1940.

Within weeks, critics seized on a WNYC travelogue that painted an unusually rosy picture of the Soviet Union while avoiding criticism of Joseph Stalin’s dictatorship. The broadcast touched off a political storm, complete with calls to shut down the station and a formal investigation. The controversy eventually collapsed when it was revealed that the program had been produced by a subsidiary of the American Express Company as a piece of travel promotion. Still, the episode appears to have had a chilling effect.

Left-leaning voices were not barred from WNYC after that, but Novik seems to have been cautious about offering airtime to overt socialists or communists. One notable exception came in August 1940, when the station aired a program featuring five young members of junior lodges affiliated with the Communist Party-influenced International Workers Organization (IWO). The Daily Worker reported the teenagers spoke out against a proposal for a military draft, responding to a group of youths who had endorsed a national call-up on Youth Builders a week earlier.

No recordings of explicitly socialist programming from this period survive in the Municipal Archives’ WNYC lacquer disc collection. Newspaper radio listings from late October 1944 and 1945, however, do note a couple of broadcasts titled “Socialist Labor Talk” and “Socialist Party.” These election-season talks include an appearance by Joseph G. Glass, the Socialist Party candidate for mayor.  

Darlington Hoopes in 1952. Courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Running for Mayor In 1949, and in his earlier campaigns, Congressman Vito Marcantonio campaigned on the progressive American Labor Party line. As such he was included among equal time broadcasts. While such broadcasts were not uncommon because of the FCC provision and leased time, Socialist and Communist Party officials were also heard occasionally in 1930s and 1940s on the major national commercial networks CBS, NBC, and the Mutual Broadcasting System.

The earliest surviving WNYC recordings featuring socialist speakers date well after Novik’s tenure and continued to air under the FCC’s equal-time provision. In October 1952, Darlington Hoopes, the Socialist Party’s candidate for president, addressed issues of affordability and economic insecurity, criticizing both Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal and Harry Truman’s Fair Deal. Hoopes argued that the socialist model pursued by Britain’s Labor Party offered a path seriously worth considering.

That same year, WNYC listeners also heard from the leading socialist candidates running for U.S. Senate in New York. Socialist Party candidate Joseph Glass used one broadcast to distinguish his views from those of Nathan Karp of the Socialist Labor Party (SLP) and Michael Bartell of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP). All three contenders appeared on Campus Press Conference, where newsmakers faced questions from a panel of local college newspaper editors and reporters.

In the November 5th program, moderated by a young Gabe Pressman, Glass argued for cost-of-living adjustments to Social Security and maintained—reluctantly—that communist aggression in Korea needed to be resisted.

Karp of the SLP appeared two days earlier, focusing primarily on party doctrine rather than specific policy proposals. While a bit strident here, he reportedly mellowed in later years and did stand-up comedy at SLP conventions and meetings.

Bartell of the SWP, the Trotskyist candidate, appeared on October 28, 1952. He began by laying out a basic definition of his party as a revolutionary socialist one achieving its goals through democratic means.  The balance of time was spent responding to questions about the Korean conflict, the Soviet Union, China and the Berlin blockade. In his last few minutes Bartell called for an end to an economy based on military armament, a withdrawal of U.S. troops from Korea, and the abolition of the Smith Act. This law imposed criminal penalties for advocating the overthrow of the U.S. government by force or violence and required all foreigners over the age of 14 to register with the federal government.  

Norman Thomas, 1937. Courtesy Wikimedia Commons

In January 1953, prominent American Socialist Norman Thomas delivered the address “What Are We Voting For?” at the Cooper Union Forum. The talk was distributed nationwide through the National Association of Educational Broadcasters’ tape network—the first non-commercial radio syndication system, initiated by WNYC.

In this talk Thomas decried our vote for electors over the popular vote, and the role played by southern white supremacist Democrats blocking civil rights legislation. He argued that on average, there are not large differences between Republicans and Democrats. His answer, in part, is what he called a “democratic socialist party.” Thomas also called for international control over atomic weapons, campaign finance reform, and transparency over “the fog of words.”

Thomas,  a serial Socialist Party candidate for President (1928-1948), would be heard over the municipal station another six times as part of the Cooper Union’s Great Hall series of talks between 1953 and 1964. He also appeared on WNYC’s broadcast of The New York Herald Tribune Book and Author Luncheon in 1964, where he addressed civil rights, nuclear disarmament, and poverty, while warning progressive listeners against political fatalism.

In 1957 “Mrs.” Joyce Cowley, a rare woman candidate with the anti-Stalinist Socialist Workers Party, ran for New York City Mayor. A year earlier she had been a candidate for the New York State Senate. She echoed much of what had been said by Bartell but did emphasize the need for civil rights. She also demanded the removal of the SWP from the Attorney General’s list of subversive organizations. Cowley called for an end to nuclear weapons tests, production for peace, not war and charged that the Democratic Party had conspired to keep the SWP off the ballot.

Michael Harrington portrait photograph from the dust jacket of The Other America. Courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Although the Democratic Socialists of America would not be founded until 1982, the phrase “democratic socialist” appeared sporadically in 1920s and ‘30s news reports, particularly in reference to Europe, but slowly came into more frequent use during the Cold War. In the 1960s and ‘70s, Norman Thomas and writer and activist Michael Harrington often self-identified as democratic socialists to signal a clear rejection of Soviet communism while maintaining a socialist critique of capitalism. Harrington’s usage of the phrase in the 1960s and ‘70s helped cement “democratic socialism” as a recognizable label in U.S. political discourse.

Michael Harrington, a member of the American Socialist Party and head of the League for Industrial Democracy, appeared on the city’s station in 1968. In an interview with Patricia Marx he discussed his influential book The Other America, which exposed the persistence of poverty and inequality in postwar America.

Many socialist ideas—variously labeled, constrained, and contested—have surfaced repeatedly in New York City’s political life and on its municipal airwaves, even during the Cold War period of intense suspicion and retrenchment. The evolution of those voices over WNYC reflects not only shifts in the political climate but also broader debates about democracy, economic justice, and legitimacy in public discourse. Mamdani’s victory suggests that many arguments on behalf of the poor, working class, and disenfranchised, once relegated to the margins, have reentered the civic mainstream, carrying with them a history that is longer, and more complex, than current headlines may suggest.

Andy Lanset (retired) was the Founding Director of the New York Public Radio Archives.

Quiz Shows on WNYC: A History of Civic Curiosity

The Municipal Archives’ upcoming trivia night reminds us that New York City has long used questions—and the thrill of answering them under pressure—to engage, educate, and entertain the public. Decades before televised quiz scandals or the high-stakes glitz of commercial networks, WNYC and WNYE were using the question-and-answer format, helping to define one of radio’s most popular genres during its so-called “golden age.” But unlike commercial broadcasters, the city stations used these contests of knowledge and recall as a powerful tool for civic understanding and cultural enlightenment.

H.V. Kaltenborn at Town Hall, 123 West 43rd Street, January 27, 1934. Photograph by Eugene de Salignac, Department of Bridges/Plant & Structures Collection, NYC Municipal Archives. Brooklyn Daily Eagle editor H. V. Kaltenborn started radio’s first quiz show on WNYC, before going on to a long career in broadcasting.

Early Experiments: The 1920s and 1930s

More than ten years before CBS introduced Professor Quiz in 1936 (popularly regarded as first of the genre), WNYC aired the Brooklyn Daily Eagle’s annual Current Events Bee, a competition that pitted leading high-school students against each other in feats of news knowledge. The Bee’s quizmaster, associate editor H. V. Kaltenborn, would later become known nationwide as the “Dean of Network News Commentators.”

Four Current Events “Demons” who won prizes on WNYC, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, April 24, 1926 pg. 5, Brooklyn Public Library Collection.

Brooklyn Daily Eagle Current Events Bee medal from the 1920s. NYPR Archives Collection.

Twelve years later, WNYC inaugurated what is widely recognized as radio’s first music quiz show, Symphonic Varieties. The program arose almost by accident: a last-minute Saturday cancellation left announcer and drama director Ted Cott scrambling to fill two hours of airtime. He gathered five staff members, jotted down a dozen music questions, and launched an impromptu quiz that immediately drew enthusiastic listener mail. Cott refined the idea into a successful weekly contest pairing a professional musician against a knowledgeable amateur, accompanied by plentiful musical excerpts.

The show attracted notable talent. A young Jonathan Sternberg, later an internationally known conductor, scripted roughly 200 episodes, crafting both questions and correct answers. In January 1939, NBC’s famed “tune detective” Sigmund Spaeth filled in as host. One young contestant—future WNYC and WQXR classical host David Randolph—was encouraged by Spaeth to stick with radio, advice that shaped Randolph’s lifelong broadcasting career.

Cott eventually took the program to CBS, where it was rebranded as So You Think You Know Music.


Art, Culture, and Civic Knowledge

WNYE Know Your City radio transcription disc label, 1927. WNYC collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

In February 1939, the Brooklyn Museum sponsored Art for Art’s Sake, a quiz devoted entirely to painting, sculpture, dance, drama, literature, and architecture. It premiered in WNYC’s largest studio before moving to the museum’s auditorium. Winners were said to receive works of art, although Brooklyn Eagle radio columnist Jo Ranson assured readers that no Rembrandts or Botticellis were being handed out as prizes.

That same year, the WPA’s Federal Writers’ Project joined the wave with Quiz of the Town, airing weekly over the city’s station from the New York World’s Fair. Designed to deepen New Yorkers’ knowledge of their city, the contest drew questions from the WPA’s New York City Guide and similar works. Early contestants included journalists covering the Fair, and winners received a copy of the 800-page guide.


Educating Young New Yorkers: Know Your City

Beginning in 1943, WNYC and WNYE collaborated with the City History Club of New York to launch Know Your City, a weekly children’s quiz on local history, civics, geography, and landmarks. The program was hosted by Edith McGinnis, affectionately known on the air as “Aunt Edith,” who would later become Manhattan’s first borough historian (1950). She viewed the program as an extension of classroom instruction, a way to instill civic pride through lively competition.

In 1945, the Schools Broadcast Conference recognized Know Your City for “outstanding excellence” and “superior educational application.” Listen here to Aunt Edith with kids from P.S. 8 and P.S. 166 on this February 27, 1951 edition.


Postwar Variety and Innovation

At the end of May 1949, WNYC introduced Mind Over Music, with conductor and violinist Mishel Piastro, composer George Kleinsinger (Tubby the Tuba), pianist Seymour Lipkin, and NYU music professor Phillip James as panelists, and John Savage as host. Variety praised the program’s range—from grand opera to Broadway, classics to folk songs—and its mixed format of panel questions and individualized challenges.

Listen here to panelists Walter Hendl, former Assistant Conductor of the New York Philharmonic, Vernon Duke, composer of Cabin in the Sky, and WNYC’s “shoeless troubadour” Oscar Brand at the end of August 1949.

During the early 1950s, quiz programs became staples of WNYC’s annual art and book festivals. The first book festival in March 1953 featured a literary Q and A moderated by critic and editor Clifton Fadiman, with a panel of authors, reviewers, and academics that included: “The Critics”—Charles Poore of The New York Times Book Review paired with Columbia University Professor of Philosophy Irwin Edman—against “the Authors”—Alfred Kazin of The New Yorker, and Jan Struther, of “Mrs. Miniver” fame—in a battle over various literary facts. The Critics won.


Civil Service on the Air: Quiz Time

In October 1954, public service became a subject for public competition on Quiz Time, a weekly show featuring teams of city employees from sixteen different departments. Hosted by the Department of Personnel’s Dr. John Furia, the premiere matched Welfare Department staff (a stenographer, interviewer, and investigator) against a fireman, truckman, and fire-boat lieutenant from the Fire Department. Questions escalated from basics—the colors of the city flag, the rivers surrounding it—to thornier queries about how the opposing agency functioned.

Mayor Robert Wagner, introducing the program, described it as a way to show “how the thousands of loyal employees of the city are serving you.” Variety called it “a pleasant vehicle for transporting incidental intelligence about home.” Here, the Department of Budget goes head-to-head against the Department of Correction in May 1954.


A Transforming Genre Transformed

From music and art contests to citywide tests of civic knowledge, WNYC and WNYE’s quiz programs reveal far more than a fondness for trivia. They reflect a philosophy of public broadcasting rooted in curiosity, community, and democratic participation. Long before podcasts or online quizzes invited audiences to “play along,” New York’s municipal stations understood that asking questions was a powerful way to spark interest—whether in classical music, fine arts, local history, or the day-to-day workings of city government.

These programs also underscore the unique role that the city’s radio stations played in mid-century New York culture. Unlike network quiz shows driven by sponsors, prizes, and ratings, WNYC and WNYE’s contests were designed to illuminate rather than sensationalize. They offered New Yorkers a forum in which learning was not merely entertainment but a civic virtue—something shared among students, musicians, museum curators, firefighters, welfare investigators, and anyone tuned in at home.

Although the quiz-show scandals of the late 1950s reshaped public perception of the genre, the municipal station’s earlier efforts stand apart. They belonged to a different tradition: one that celebrated knowledge without cash incentives, showcased the talents of city workers, encouraged children to explore their neighborhoods, and invited listeners to see culture and government as accessible parts of daily life.

In revisiting these programs—from Symphonic Varieties to Know Your City and Quiz Time—we are reminded that the simple act of posing questions can knit a community together. WNYC’s legacy of inquiry lives on not only in modern trivia nights but in the station’s continued commitment to public service broadcasting. The history of these quiz shows offers an instructive window into how New York once educated and entertained itself—one question at a time.


Test Your NYC Knowledge at the NYC Department of Records and Information Services’ Second Annual Trivia Night! 
 

Do you know which Brooklyn thoroughfare was the location of the nation’s first bike lane? Or how many U.S. presidents were born in NYC? Or which hip-hop group from Staten Island helped put “Shaolin” on the musical map? 

Whether you’re a native New Yorker, new to the Big Apple, or simply love trivia, join us for an exciting evening of fun, facts, and friendly competition at our second annual NYC history trivia night! 

Test your knowledge of the city’s rich past and unique records, with questions highlighting everything from iconic moments to forgotten landmarks in New York City’s history. This is your chance to show off your smarts, bond with friends, and maybe learn something new along the way!


Date: Tuesday, December 2nd, 2025 
Time: Doors Open at 6:00PM; Trivia begins at 6:30PM 
Location: Surrogate’s Courthouse, 31 Chambers Street, New York, NY 10007 

Teams: 

  • Teams of up to 5 are welcome! 

  • Already have a team? Great! All teammates must register individually and indicate the team captain’s name.

  • Coming solo or with just a few friends? No problem! You can compete on your own or we'll happily match you with other trivia lovers on the night of. 

Prizes: 

  • The top two teams will take home some fantastic prizes! 

  • Spots are limited, so don’t wait—reserve your spot today! 

 
To RSVP for “Trivia Night at the Municipal Archives & Library,” click here. 

Victory Day in NYC

Victory celebrations, Times Square, August 15, 1945. Department of Sanitation Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

When Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia received word of the Japanese surrender late in the day on Tuesday, August 14, 1945, he rushed home to Gracie Mansion where he delivered a fifteen-minute broadcast on WNYC. Anticipating the end-of-war news, WNYC equipment had been installed at the Mayor’s residence the preceding Friday.

According to the report in the next day’s Herald Tribune, LaGuardia, “his voice hesitant and choked with emotion,” said that the “Japanese capitulation had thrust upon the United States the greatest responsibility that has ever come to any people.”

The Mayor’s clerical staff pasted the Tribune news story, along with several others into a scrapbook. Preserved in the Municipal Archives, the news clipping scrapbooks have served as an important research resource for topics in mayoral administrations from Mitchel to Koch.

Mayor LaGuardia scrapbook 282, p. 24. NYC Municipal Archives.

Mayor LaGuardia’s scrapbook also includes the complete text of his “Victory Day Proclamation” printed by The New York Times on August 15, 1945. “Whereas the President of the United States has announced the cessation of hostilities in the Pacific, … and whereas the World War which was thrust upon us by the attack on Pearl Harbor Dec. 7, 1941, … has now completely ended… Now, therefore, I, Mayor of the City of New York, do hereby declare and proclaim Aug. 15 as Victory Day, and order all departments of the city government except services necessary for the protection of life, health and property, and the care of the sick and infirm to be closed on said day, and on Aug. 16, and to call upon all public places, stores and offices to display the national colors, and call on all citizens to repair to their respective places of worship and there give thanks to Almighty God for his divine guidance, and for his will that such complete victory has come to the forces of democracy in this world.”

Mayor LaGuardia scrapbook 282, p. 23. NYC Municipal Archives.

“Celebrate and be happy,” the Mayor told his fellow-citizens, the New York Times noted in their report of the day’s events. And celebrate they did. The Archives collection of photographs from the Department of Sanitation provides engaging illustrations of the revelry. Or, more precisely, its aftermath. As these examples attest, the Sanitation photographer captured jubilant scenes in Times Square and mid-town, and the equally dramatic clean-up work.

Victory celebrations, Times Square, August 15, 1945. Department of Sanitation Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

Other clippings in the Mayor’s scrapbook add details to the Victory Day story. Perhaps Victory Days would be a better description. On Thursday, August 16, the Times reported, “New York gave an encore last night of the delirious performance it staged Tuesday night.” The article continued, “Following the now familiar pattern Times Square again was the heart of the celebration.... police estimated 100,000 persons... the merrymakers tooted horns, service men exacted kisses from strolling girls as tribute for their part in the victory, the inevitable showers of confetti and streamers fell in abundance... those celebrating on the streets were noisy but for the most part orderly.” 

Seeking other references to Victory Day in New York City brings researchers to Mayor LaGuardia’s Sunday radio broadcasts on WNYC. Typed transcripts of the programs can be found in the Mayor LaGuardia subject files preserved in the Archives. On Sunday, August 12, 1945, two days before his victory proclamation, LaGuardia began his remarks by saying “We all had to exercise patience this morning. I had so hoped that by this time the last word in the Pacific would have been received.”  He continued on about the war, and then announced, “This war is going to end with the new bomb.”  He then launched into a lengthy discussion about the “new,” i.e. atomic, bomb.

Victory celebrations, Times Square, August 15, 1945. Department of Sanitation Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

In typical fashion his speech covered wide-ranging topics such as gambling, poultry, rabies, and the new East River Cooperative housing development. He warned listeners about a “scam” in Times Square where photographers preyed on tourists, servicemen and women in particular, taking their picture for a dollar and promising to mail the print. And of course, according to the Mayor, the print never materialized. 

Victory celebrations, Times Square, August 15, 1945. Department of Sanitation Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

The radio broadcast transcripts have served researchers in the Archives for years. What may be less well known, are the supporting “correspondence” files the Mayor and his staff assembled for each broadcast. On August 12, when LaGuardia spoke about the “new” bomb he went on to say, “It is not the first time that a new weapon has won a war in a short time.” The Mayor told the story of a war between Prussia and Austria, and “certain minor German states” in 1866. Turning to the “correspondence” file for the August 12 broadcast, researchers will find detailed notes and sources to support everything in his talk. For the section on the 1866 war, the Mayor’s staff reached out to the Municipal Library. The file contains a detailed two-page, typed summary of the war prepared by a librarian.

The following Sunday broadcast, on August 19, the Mayor began his talk with a prayer of peace. He then said, “This is the first Sunday that I broadcast to you in peacetime. My first broadcast I shall never forget. It was on December 7th – Pearl Harbor Day. Yes, we were unprepared. It was around five or six o’clock in the afternoon. I have been talking to you every week ever since.”

Victory celebrations, Times Square, August 15, 1945. Department of Sanitation Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

His talk continued in a very personal fashion. “I think we have come to know each other better, and you know, it is nice to visit with you every Sunday. But now that the War is over, as I said the other day, we cannot afford to relax or to be idle any more. We must get back to work. There has been a load lifted, the strain is over. I know how you feel. I know all of a sudden I feel tired – so tired.” But he rallied and moved on to talk about the future, describing all the work that needs to be done. Finally, he concluded: “Now, please remember, a great responsibility has come to us. We now have the leadership of the world, and that is a great responsibility. And here in New York City, the biggest City in the world, we have the leadership of the entire country. We worked so well together during the war and we must continue to do so now with the problems ahead of us. And remember, it will still require a great deal of Patience and Fortitude.”

Victory celebrations, Times Square, August 15, 1945. Department of Sanitation Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

Victory celebrations, Times Square, August 15, 1945. Department of Sanitation Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

Victory celebrations, Times Square, August 15, 1945. Department of Sanitation Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.


With thanks to WNYC Archivist (retired) Andy Lanset. For more on WNYC’s reporting from that day, https://www.wnyc.org/story/v-j-day-wnyc-behind-scenes-look/

WNYC celebrates

WNYC Greenpoint Radio Transmitter, ca. 1937. A.G. Lorimer artist. WNYC Archive Collections.

July 8, 2024, marked the 100th anniversary of municipal broadcasting for the City of New York. On September 9th, from 7-9pm, WNYC will celebrate with a live radio broadcast from SummerStage in Central Park. Hosted by Brian Lehrer, the event will include beloved voices from WNYC and a lineup of live music, storytelling, comedy, trivia and more.

Scheduled to appear are WNYC’s All Things Considered host Sean Carlson, Brooke Gladstone and Micah Loewinger from On the Media, Alison Stewart from All of It, Ira Glass from This American Life, John Schaefer of New Sounds, and The Moth storyteller Gabrielle Shea. Plus, performances by Nada Surf, Freestyle Love Supreme, Laurie Anderson with Sexmob, and mxmtoon; and a DJ set by Donwill.

This event is free to attend, no RSVP required, and will be broadcast live on WNYC at 93.9 FM, AM 820, wnyc.org or on the WNYC app.

https://www.wnyc.org/events/wnyc-events/2024/sep/09/central-park-summerstage/

NYC Life Specials: 100 Years of Municipal Broadcasting
Original Air Date: 07-08-2024

What began with WNYC, now the largest independent public radio station in the U.S., continues today with the city’s official broadcast network, NYC Media. They recently released a short documentary on the history of WNYC and NYC Media, which uses audio and video clips from collections now stored at the Municipal Archives.

The NYC Media documentary was inspired by the recent Municipal Archives exhibit 100 Years of WNYC, produced for Photoville 2024, which will soon be on display at the Municipal Archives headquarters at 31 Chambers Street.

Exhibit panel from 100 Years of WNYC.