John Hibbett DeWitt Jr. was born February 20, 1906, in Nashville, Tennessee, the son of judge John Hibbett DeWitt. He displayed an early interest in electrical engineering, specifically radio technology. He became an amateur radio operator in 1921[3] and used call sign N4CBC.[4] In 1924, he helped direct the design and installation of a 100-watt radio transmitter at First Baptist Church in Nashville, which would become the area's first commercial radio station.[5]
He retired from the Army in 1946 and worked for a year as a consultant to a Clear-channel station group, which was seeking approval for greater transmitter power. He became president of WSM in 1947, retiring in 1968.
Personal life and death
DeWitt was married twice and had two children. With first wife Ann Elise Martin DeWitt, he had a son, John Hibbett DeWitt III; with second wife Sykes Barbour Hewitt Neas, he had a daughter, Cary Claiborne DeWitt.[7]
DeWitt died January 25, 1999, 53 years to the day after making radio history.[8]
^"Army Awards DeWitt Legion of Merit Medal - Conceived, Prepared First Drawing of Radar Set to Locate Enemy Mortars by Fire". The Tennessean. 1946-01-26.
^"1995 Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame". Broadcasting & Cable. 1995-11-06. The 1995 Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame inductees include radio and television industry members who have made significant contributions, from early contributors to present day personalities. Earle C. Anthony, Martin Block, Sid Caesar and Merlin Hall Aylesworth are among those honored, as well as Imogene Coca, John H. DeWitt Jr., Geraldine Laybourne, Peter Jennings, Dinah Shore and Don Cornelius.
Further reading
Craig Havighurst, Air Castle of the South: WSM and the Making of Music City (2007, ISBN978-0-252-03257-8)
Cindy Stodola Pomerleau, To the Moon and Back: Essays on the Life and Times of Project Diana (2021, ISBN979-8-706-54632-8)