radio Halls of Fameradio Personalities

Roy Queen

KMOX 1929-, 1956-1957;
WIL 1955;

KXLW 1946-1954;

KADY 1963;

Legacy Inductee

​Roy Queen’s career as a hillbilly singer and broadcaster began in 1929 when he was 16. He hitched a ride on a freight train from Pilot Knob, MO., to St. Louis and auditioned at the KMOX studios in the Mayfair Hotel. He got the job and was soon yodeling and playing his guitar on a daily basis on KMOX. He was an entertainer on KMOX and WIL and later worked as a disc jockey on KXLW and on KWRE in nearby Warrenton, MO.

Early on at KMOX, he had a namesake program, “Roy Queen and His Ozark Mountaineers,” that was fed to some network affiliates. KMOX later moved him to the wildly popular “Uncle Dick Slack’s Barn Dance.”

Like many of the young performers in those days, Queen did many personal appearances in addition to his musical performances at the station. It was during the return trip from one of those appearances that he was gravely injured in an auto accident.

The recovery period for his two broken legs was lengthy, but that didn’t keep him from working. The station set up a remote microphone in Queen’s hospital room while engineers ran the records at the station.

Uploaded on Jun 4, 2008

From KETC, Living St. Louis Producer Jim Kirchherr sits down with country music legend Roy Queen. He got his big break in 1929 after walking into KMOX radio with a guitar and singing to audiences all over the country. Thus, Queen became known as the Lone Singer. He died in 2004, at the age of 91.

Roy Queen, KMOX (1936)

Subscribe To Receive Our Latest News

Please subscribe to receive emails from the Foundation for important updates to our work and invitations to our exciting events.

Follow Us on Our Socials