Testing on the frequency may have begun as early as 1952, according to documents at the original transmitter site found by former station engineer Jim Appleton.
The single tower non-directional antenna was fed by a Collins 550A transmitter in a field across the highway from the station.
In the 1950s and 1960s, students rushed to the nearest drugstore for their free copy of the WEHH Fabulous 50, which detailed the 50 top hit songs of the day.
A stack of the Fabulous 50s was found in the basement of the Latta Brook Road studio when the station moved out in the early 2000s.
Seeking to fill a niche in the market in the early 1990s, Ross switched the format to adult standards.
By the end of the decade, the station was being operated at the WELM and WLVY studios by the Pembrook Pines Media Group under a local marketing agreement.
Frank Saia believed in the future of FM broadcasting and was responsible for WEHH-FM, which signed on at 94.3 MHz in 1964, with Elmira as its city of license.
The FM station later was sold to crosstown rival WELM and changed to the call sign WLVY.
It returned to the air in 2000 24/7 with reduced nighttime power, directional at 1600 kHz, using a satellite-delivered adult standards format.
On January 2, 2023, WEHH changed their format from adult standards to a simulcast of Top 40/CHR-formatted WLVY 94.3 FM Elmira.
[4] The programming moved to WEHH full time and the simulcast ended shortly afterward, following the consummation of the sale of WLVY to Family Life Ministries and its switch to a Christian radio format as WCIH.