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WNAP was a class D AM radio station on 1110 kHz serving the Norristown, Pennsylvania, area.WNAP (also known as Gospel Highway 11) broadcast gospel music. [4] Today, Gospel Highway 11 continues to service the community as 24-hour online radio station.
KGHY (88.5 FM) is a radio station airing a Southern gospel format in Beaumont, Texas, United States, broadcasting on 88.5 FM. The station serves the Beaumont – Port Arthur - Orange metropolitan area and southwestern Louisiana. KGHY is owned by CCS Radio, Inc. [2]
U.S. Route 11 (US 11) roughly parallels Interstate 81 (I-81) in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. The route runs from the Maryland state line in Antrim Township, Franklin County, northeast to the New York state line in Great Bend Township, Susquehanna County. US 11 serves Harrisburg, Wilkes-Barre, and Scranton.
U.S. Route 11 or U.S. Highway 11 (US 11) is a major north–south United States Numbered Highway extending 1,645 miles (2,647 km) [1] across the eastern U.S. The southern terminus of the route is at US 90 in Bayou Sauvage National Wildlife Refuge in eastern New Orleans, Louisiana.
This was prior to the station adopting its Sports Radio format. For a short time he was the voice of WNAP Norristown, Pennsylvania's "Gospel Highway Eleven." Marshall continued with the Gospel format during the summer of 1988 at WTMR 800 AM, Camden, New Jersey. The station broadcast religious music to the Philadelphia area.
The Highway Q.C.'s is an American gospel group that has been active for over 70 years. Its members sing in the tradition of jubilee quartets, though they have also added instrumental accompaniment. Its members sing in the tradition of jubilee quartets, though they have also added instrumental accompaniment.
Margaret Pleasant Douroux was born on March 21, 1941, in Los Angeles, California, to Olga and Earl A. Pleasant and was one of six children. Earl was a gospel singer who toured with Mahalia Jackson.
The group was formed by (Silas) Roy Crain, launching his first quartet who sang in a jubilee style, in 1926 in Trinity, Texas, United States. [1] In the early 1930s, after Crain moved to Houston, he joined an existing group on the condition that it change its name to The Soul Stirrers: this name yields from the description of one of Roy Crain's earlier quartets as "soul-stirring".