KSJB

KSJB
Broadcast area Jamestown, North Dakota
Branding KSJB 600
Slogan Classic Country
Frequency 600 (kHz)
First air date 1937
Format Commercial; Classic country
Power 5,000 watts
Class B
Facility ID 10778
Transmitter coordinates 46°49′03″N 98°42′34″W / 46.81750°N 98.70944°W
Owner Chesterman Communications
Website www.ksjbam.com

KSJB is an AM radio station based in Jamestown in the U.S. state of North Dakota.

Broadcasting at 600 kHz with 5000 watts of power and a directional pattern that drives the signal from northwest to southeast, the station boasts that it can be heard clearly in six states and two Canadian provinces. KSJB can be heard with a clear signal in cities such as Valley City, Bismarck, Fargo, Grand Forks, Minot, Pierre, South Dakota, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada and Bemidji, Minnesota.

Both KSJB and KSJZ broadcast from studios at the Buffalo Mall. They share a transmitter site south of Jamestown, on Highway 281.

Programming

When they signed on in 1937, they featured local programs and news, with Standard Middle of the Road Music formatting. Beginning in 1963, KSJB-AM programmed a "Top 40" format, competing directly with Bismarck's KFYR 550-AM 100 miles to the west, which also featured a popular music format. In the 1960s the station became heavily involved with various promotions, including publishing and distributing a weekly Top 40 handout and sponsoring numerous concerts. Several of those concerts featured Count Basie's Orchestra, who station owner at that time Ed Crilly often played with on various cruise ships in the early 1970s. In 1973, the decision was made to change the format to country-western, and the change was made over the Easter weekend, without fanfare, or prior notice to the listeners or the announcing staff. Given the station's extensive reach, it continues to focus on music and programming for truck drivers and farmers, with a schedule very heavy with farm market reports and agribusiness information.

History

KSJB went on the air for the first time on March 14, 1937. It operated under the name of KRMC with a power of 250 watts at 1370 kHz. The call letters KRMC came from the company name at the time: Roberts, MacNab Co. (Arthur L. Robetts, R.B. MacNab and A.J. Breitbach, general manager.) The studios were at the Gladstone Hotel downtown, and the transmitter and tower was on the south edge of Jamestown. A few years later, the station moved to their current spot on the dial at 600 kHz, but the power was still 250 watts daytime and 100 watts at night. Later the station was purchased by John W. Boler, who changed the call letters to KSJB in 1943. Finally in 1947, KSJB began its operation as a 5,000 watt directional station, with the transmitter and triple towers located along highway 281 about 6 miles south of Jamestown. Both are still located there, and in the fall of 2014, all three towers and infrastructure are being replaced at a cost of $750,000. The company's FM station, KSJZ-FM "MIX 93.3" (originally KSJM), an adult contemporary radio station, went on the air in 1967.

In 1948, KSJB "established auxiliary studios and control facilities in Fargo."[1]

References

  1. "KSJB Expands" (PDF). Broadcasting. November 1, 1948. Retrieved 30 January 2015.

External links