WDJC-FM

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WDJC
City of license Birmingham, Alabama
Broadcast area Birmingham and north-central Alabama
Branding 93.7 WDJC
Slogan "All Music, all Jesus, all the time"
Frequency 93.7 MHz (Also on HD Radio)
First air date 1940s as WSGN-FM
Format Contemporary Christian
ERP 99,000 watts
HAAT 307 meters
Class C0
Facility ID 34819
Callsign meaning Witness Daily for Jesus Christ, or Donald J. Crawford, president of Crawford Broadcasting Company
Owner Crawford Broadcasting Company
Website http://www.wdjconline.com

WDJC (93.7 FM) is a radio station licensed to Birmingham, Alabama. The station was one of the first commercial FM radio stations in the United States to exclusively feature Christian programming. Today the station programs contemporary Christian music. Crawford Broadcasting Company owns WDJC. Other stations in the Birmingham market owned by Crawford include WXJC-FM (92.5), WYDE-FM (101.1), WXJC-AM (850), and WYDE-AM (1260).

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[edit] History

The initial call letters of WDJC were WSGN-FM. The station signed on in the 1940s, and was originally owned by the parent company of The Birmingham News, and it was the sister station of one of the more popular AM radio stations in Birmingham. In 1953, the parent company of The News purchased WAFM-TV, WAPI-AM and WAFM-FM and was forced to sell WSGN-AM and FM. Because FM radio was in its infancy, and as such neither popular nor profitable, the station was sold later in the 1950s and became WSFM, featuring a classical music format.

In 1967, WSFM owner James Melonas, who struggled through most of his ownership to get advertisers to sponsor classical music programming, sold the frequency to Crawford Broadcasting Company. With its new call letters, WDJC, the station changed formats and began broadcasting Christian programming. Initially, the programming consisted of Bible studies, church services and other Christian teaching; by the mid-1970s, some contemporary Christian music was added to the programming mix (it is believed that only Huntsville's now-defunct WNDA--now WRTT-FM--was the only other station in the state to do so at the time).[citation needed] At about the same time, a nightly program featuring Southern gospel music was added. This programming strategy continued well into the 1990s.

In 1998 WDJC dropped the non-music elements of its programming. WFMH-FM in Cullman was purchased by a group of Birmingham investors with the purpose of launching a station that would play contemporary Christian music 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Initially, the new station, rebranded as WRRS-FM proved to be a challenger to WDJC; in reaction to the challenge, WDJC began to play contemporary Christian music exclusively. Within three years, WRRS changed formats; ironically, Crawford Broadcasting bought the competing station in 2003.

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