Stuart Epperson
Stuart Watson Epperson was an American businessman, politician and evangelical who was the co-founder and chairman of Salem Media Group, and a member and the president of the conservative Council for National Policy.
Early life
The youngest of six children, Epperson was born on November 2, 1936, in Ararat, Virginia, to Harry and Lula Epperson, with his paternal grandmother serving as the midwife. Epperson was raised in a shanty with no electricity or running water on a tobacco farm. To supplement their income, his family worked odd jobs, working as carpenters, dentists, and morticians. Epperson's family attended Unity Presbyterian Church, a fundamentalist church whose building was constructed from wood hewn by his family.When Epperson was eight years old, his older brother Ralph became interested in radio broadcasting, setting up a windmill to generate electricity and convincing his parents to buy a radio set from Montgomery Ward. Ralph then set up a radio station on the second floor of the family farmhouse. One of Epperson's first radio appearances might have been reading Psalm 23 for Ralph's radio broadcasts. Soon thereafter, his father put the tobacco farm up for collateral and started three radio stations with the loan he took out. Epperson was very involved in his family's business, working for Ralph's radio station in Airy.
At the behest of his parents, Epperson attended Bob Jones University in Greenville, South Carolina, where he received a bachelor's degree in radio/television broadcasting in 1956 and a master's degree in communications in 1959. While in college, he met his future wife, Nancy Atsinger, and married her in 1963.
Career
Epperson acquired his first radio station in Roanoke, Virginia, in 1961. The radio station played country music and sermons from various local pastors. In 1964, he moved to Winston-Salem, North Carolina. There, he bought the radio station WXBX, which followed a similar format to the radio station in Roanoke. The radio station had a small staff and was run out of a shanty rented for $95 a month from a widowed woman named Erline Tate. Epperson's radio station in Winston-Salem ran afoul of the government in 1970 when the US Labor Department fined him for insufficiently paying his employees overtime. The Federal Communications Commission also fined Epperson the maximum amount of money for not keeping proper business records. In 1976, he sold the station.In 1984 and 1986, Epperson was the Republican nominee for the fifth Congressional district of North Carolina. Epperson had no prior political experience and spent most of his first campaign trying to gain attention. In both races, Epperson was defeated by the incumbent Democrat, Stephen L. Neal, falling short 5,000 and 13,000 votes respectively.