Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

WGN radio and TV legend and longtime Elgin resident

- By Mike Danahey Courier-News Mike Danahey is a freelance reporter for The Courier-News.

Floyd Brown, the longtime Elgin resident who broke color barriers by being one of the first Blacks hired by a national radio network and best known for more than 28 years with WGN television and radio, died Friday at the age of 92.

Brown was known locally for his roles as a founding member of the Elgin Human Relations Commission, president of the Elgin Housing Commission and marketing director of the Kane County Fair.

He died at Advocate Sherman Hospital in Elgin. His funeral will be Saturday at First Congregati­onal Church of Elgin.

Over the course of Brown’s 50-plus-years career, he worked as an engineer, program manager, newscaster, sportscast­er and associate news editor and hosted several radio and television shows, including a jazz program, “The Floyd Brown Show” that aired on Sunday nights on WGN radio.

He started out in Texas, where he was born in 1930, and later moved with his family to Washington, D.C., according to his biography on WGN Radio’s website. He was studying accounting at Northweste­rn University in the 1940s when he realized his true calling was radio, the website says.

“He signed up for engineerin­g and announcing classes (at the Radio Institute of America, which passed daily en route to his porter job at Chicago’s Drake Hotel) in order to pursue his dream and was hired in 1951 as an engineer at radio station WRMN in Elgin.

“When the usual announcer was late one day, Floyd stepped in and made his (on air) debut.”

He achieved national recognitio­n in the mid-1960s when he was hired by NBC-owned WMAQ in Chicago, becoming the first Black to be hired by a major network. It was such an achievemen­t that he was featured on the cover of NBC’s company magazine with Bill Cosby, who was then starring in the NBC television show “I Spy.”

He would work at WMAQ radio from 1965 to 1970 before moving to WGN radio and television, where he remained from 1971 until his retirement in 1999. He also had a show on WTTW-TV called “30 Good Minutes” in the 1980s.

Brown’s radio show was a fixture for more than two decades, and in addition to jazz, it featured a mix of current events and investment and business news. Over the years, he interviewe­d an array of jazz icons, including Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald and Lionel Hampton.

He’s also remembered as the emcee for the annual Bud Billiken Parade in Chicago and WGN’s “Know Your Heritage.”

In 2016, he was inducted into the radio station’s Walk of Fame in 2016 and was a member of the Fox Valley Arts Hall of Fame.

When Brown hosted his

last show on July 4, 1999, the Courier-News wrote, “Brown shattered the color barrier with his trademark dose of gentlemanl­y grace, fueled by a veiled undercurre­nt of rage … armed with a baritone as smooth and rich as molasses.”

He is survived by his wife, Betty Brown, who owned a marketing and public relations firm in Elgin and wrote society columns for North Shore Magazine and The Courier-News.

In addition to his wife, he’s survived by a son, Keith Brown; a daughter, Diane Brown; four grandchild­ren and three great-grandchild­ren.

Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at the First Congregati­onal Church of Elgin. Burial will be at Bluff City Cemetery in Elgin.

Visitation is set for 4 to 8 p.m. Friday at the Laird Funeral Home in Elgin and 10 a.m. until the start of services Saturday at the church.

 ?? BOB OSWALD/COURIER-NEWS ?? Floyd Brown, left, seen here in 2016 speaking with WGN radio personalit­y Orion Samuelson at the WGN Radio Walk of Fame member induction ceremony, died in Elgin on Friday at age 92.
BOB OSWALD/COURIER-NEWS Floyd Brown, left, seen here in 2016 speaking with WGN radio personalit­y Orion Samuelson at the WGN Radio Walk of Fame member induction ceremony, died in Elgin on Friday at age 92.

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