Personalities
Wilbur J. "Wilf" Woodill
Birth Date
1909-1997
Wilf Woodill takes his place in the history of CKSO and Canadian
Broadcasting as being an innovator. He is also highly regarded
for his endless dedication and commitment.
Wilf started in radio at just 17 years of age. His successful
strategy was making himself useful to the people who had already
established themselves in the business. He was only about 10
years old when he built his first crystal radio set. Before
his instrumental part in establishing Canada's first privately owned
television station, CKSO, Wilf proved he could do it all. He
worked as an operator, announcer, sportscaster, writer, program
director and radio station manager.
A big impression and mentor in his life, hockey broadcaster Foster
Hewitt, picked up on Wilf's ambition to become a hockey announcer.
While Foster was doing play-by-play on the Toronto Star station,
CFCA in the early 1920's, Wilf would carry equipment into the old
arena. Working alongside Foster, the two became friends.
Wilf also established alliances with other CFCA staffers. It
was Foster who suggested Wilbur adopt the name "Wilf" and from then
on, the industry and public came to know Woodill simply as Wilf.
By 1929 Wilf was in Regina at that city's first radio station CHWC
which had been established by the owners of a department store three
years earlier. Interestingly, the station shared the same frequency
and time throughout the broadcast day with another station, CKCK
which was owned by a Regina newspaper. While one station was
on the air, the other needed to turn off its transmitters and visa
versa. Wilf was described as the "spark-plug" in the operation of CHWC.
He handled the roles of program director, announcer, station manager
and hockey broadcaster. Most of the programming was local and
live and with only one control room and a studio, much innovation
was required on Wilf's part in
converting a hotel room, arranging for the use of foyers in theatres
and ballrooms for live broadcasting. His next best ambition of
becoming a second Foster Hewitt came true with his opportunity to
handle the play-by-play of the hockey games at
the Regina Stadium.
Poor wages in the depression discouraged Wilf and he decided to open
up a radio repair shop. Before background music systems were
even heard of, Wilf conceived and installed a sound
system throughout the Army and Navy Department store piping in music
and shopper information.
Wilf was back in radio within a year at CJRM in Regina, later to
become CKRM, but when the
manager, Vic Neilson, moved to CKSO in Sudbury, Wilf followed him.
In 1939, Wilf was in management. He left in 1944 for service overseas
with the U.S.I.S. in London and Paris as a construction
supervisor, but returned to CKSO with less than ten years before TV
would sign on.
In its early years CBC was not able to financially bring TV to every
significant market like Sudbury, and so the network opted to accept applications for private TV stations
to affiliate with the government network. CKSO would become
one of the first successful
applicants. Wilf was committed that CKSO-TV would be the
first private Canadian station on the airwaves, and it was! In
control of the operation, Wilf's dream was realized when they went
on the air, October 25, 1953 as a private broadcaster. Even
better, the station found itself in a ripe, viable market and was
operating in the black before the first 12 months.
By 1961, Wilf seemed content that he had met his goals and
accomplished some great feats in the rising years of radio and
television. He moved to Florida. On September 20, 1997
he passed away in Ocala, Florida.
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