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KTKN (930 AM) is an American commercial
radio station Radio broadcasting is the broadcasting of audio (sound), sometimes with related metadata, by radio waves to radio receivers belonging to a public audience. In terrestrial radio broadcasting the radio waves are broadcast by a land-based rad ...
airing
talk Talk may refer to: Communication * Communication, the encoding and decoding of exchanged messages between people * Conversation, interactive communication between two or more people * Lecture, an oral presentation intended to inform or instruct ...
and
hot adult contemporary Adult contemporary music (AC) is a form of radio-played popular music, ranging from 1960s vocal and 1970s soft rock music to predominantly ballad-heavy music of the 1980s to the present day, with varying degrees of easy listening, pop, soul ...
music programming in
Ketchikan, Alaska Ketchikan ( ; ) is a city in and the borough seat of the Ketchikan Gateway Borough on Revillagigedo Island of Alaska. It is the state's southeasternmost major settlement. Downtown Ketchikan is a National Historic Landmark District. With a p ...
. It is owned and operated by
Alaska Broadcast Communications Alaska Broadcast Communications is a local radio broadcasting company, serving the entire southeastern area of Alaska. The main office, along with the Juneau studios, is located at the Juneau Radio Center, located at 3161 Channel Drive in Juneau, ...
. The studios are at 526 Stedman Street in Ketchikan, with sister station
KGTW KGTW is a commercial country music radio station in Ketchikan, Alaska, broadcasting on 106.7 FM. It is owned and operated by Alaska Broadcast Communications. The studios are at 526 Stedman Street in Ketchikan, with sister station KTKN KTKN ( ...
and next door from its other sister station KFMJ. KTKN programming is also heard on 97.5 FM from translator K248AI; the station holds a permit for a second translator facility.


History

The current KTKN license, which dates to 1942, is the successor of the first station to operate in Ketchikan.


KGBU

KGBU was granted its first license to operate on July 29, 1926. It was owned by Roy Thornton, with the licensee soon changed to the Alaska Radio Service Company. As part of
General Order 40 The Federal Radio Commission's (FRC) General Order 40, dated August 30, 1928, described the standards for a sweeping reorganization of radio broadcasting in the United States. This order grouped the AM radio band transmitting frequencies into thre ...
in 1928, it relocated from 610 to 900 kilohertz. A fire on December 26, 1931, destroyed the station and its two transmitters. KGBU affiliated with the
Mutual Broadcasting System The Mutual Broadcasting System (commonly referred to simply as Mutual; sometimes referred to as MBS, Mutual Radio or the Mutual Radio Network) was an American commercial radio network in operation from 1934 to 1999. In the Golden Age of Radio, ...
in November 1940 and was its first affiliate in the territory, receiving Mutual programs from the network's affiliates in Seattle and Tacoma. Alongside Mutual came the
Don Lee Network The Don Lee Network, sometimes called the Don Lee Broadcasting System, was an American regional network of radio stations in the old-time radio era. Origin Don Lee made a fortune as the exclusive West Coast distributor of Cadillac automobiles. ...
hookup, giving the West Coast regional network its 33rd outlet. It was the first time any Alaska radio station had been affiliated with one of the major networks. In early 1942, KGBU went off the air permanently. Its owners, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Britton, turned over the property to a local bank, saying that wartime conditions had caused the withdrawal of national advertising accounts and made it impossible to continue.


KTKN at wartime

On July 17, 1942, Edwin A. Kraft applied to the
Federal Communications Commission The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is an independent agency of the United States government that regulates communications by radio, television, wire, internet, wi-fi, satellite, and cable across the United States. The FCC maintains j ...
for a new radio station to be located in Ketchikan and using the facilities, including studio, of KGBU, ( Guide to reading History Cards) which the station's creditors were to sell to him. Kraft owned radio station KINY in
Juneau Juneau ( ; ), officially the City and Borough of Juneau, is the capital of the U.S. state of Alaska, located along the Gastineau Channel and the Alaskan panhandle. Juneau was named the capital of Alaska in 1906, when the government of wha ...
and the Seattle-based Northwest Radio Advertising Company. The FCC granted the application on August 18. Ketchikan's new radio station debuted in a time of turmoil. In July 1942, the Board of War Communications by order took control of all civilian communications facilities in Alaska, including the three remaining radio stations in the territory. Additionally, a wartime freeze order meant that the FCC only authorized six new radio stations all year, just one of them requiring new equipment. Regular programs over KTKN began on November 14, 1942. Through the
Office of War Information The United States Office of War Information (OWI) was a United States government agency created during World War II. The OWI operated from June 1942 until September 1945. Through radio broadcasts, newspapers, posters, photographs, films and other ...
, KTKN aired transcriptions of network programs flown to Alaska by military planes for the benefit of soldiers stationed there. The OWI purchased eight hours of air time a day on the territory's four stations in this endeavor. Later in the war, KTKN and KINY presented programs produced by Army, Navy and Coast Guard combat forces.


Peacetime expansion

After the war, Kraft became a key player in Alaska radio, and KTKN along with him. The Kraft stations were two of the three charter members of Alaska's first state network, the Alaska Broadcasting System, which was announced in September 1946; they were joined by KFQD in
Anchorage Anchorage, officially the Municipality of Anchorage, is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Alaska. With a population of 291,247 at the 2020 census, it contains nearly 40 percent of the state's population. The Anchorage metropolita ...
, owned by William J. Wagner. The next year, Wagner bought KTKN and KINY for $140,000 as Kraft left the territory to look after his interests in Seattle; the acquisition brought Wagner's station total to five, as he held construction permits for outlets in Fairbanks and Seward that took to the air in 1948. The entire network was now aligned with CBS; they added NBC in 1950, broadcasting the network's shows from tape recordings made in Seattle and by ACS shortwave pickup. In 1953, KTKN sought a power increase from 1,000 to 5,000 watts. The application was contested by the second station to set up in Ketchikan, KABI, which said soil conductivity in Alaska meant that the operation would not meet FCC standards. KTKN later withdrew the application. In 1956, station manager Robert C. Mehan bought KTKN from Wagner for $40,000. Two years later, Mehan sold the station to the Midnight Sun Broadcasting Company, which divested itself of KABI, for $50,000. The entire Midnight Sun group, including AM-TV combos in Anchorage and Fairbanks, was sold for $1.2 million in 1960 to All-Alaska Broadcasters, which became the new Midnight Sun Broadcasters in 1962. The station was finally approved in 1965 for the daytime power increase to 5,000 watts that had first been pursued 12 years earlier, though it would have to replace its tower after it was toppled in a Thanksgiving Day wind storm in 1968. During that time, Midnight Sun expanded into Ketchikan cable with the first-ever television service in Alaska,
KATV KATV (channel 7) is a television station in Little Rock, Arkansas, United States, affiliated with ABC and owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group. The station's studios are located on Riverfront Drive in the Riverdale section northwest of downtown L ...
.


After 1980

Midnight Sun attempted to sell itself in 1977, but years of petitions with a citizen group known as
Alaskans for Better Media Alaska ( ) is a non-contiguous U.S. state on the northwest extremity of North America. Part of the Western United States region, it is one of the two non-contiguous U.S. states, alongside Hawaii. Alaska is also considered to be the norther ...
scuppered the sale. In addition, it was not until a 1980 settlement agreement with ABM that the company's broadcast licenses were renewed. In 1980, the group finally began to sell off its holdings piecemeal, beginning with the Anchorage and Fairbanks television stations and concluding with KTKN being sold to Gateway Broadcasting for $350,000 in 1981. KTKN, its sister station KGTW, and other broadcast holdings of E. Roy Paschal were sold to Richard and Sharon Burns, Australian citizens, in 2017, in exchange for the assumption of Paschal's liabilities; the Burns already owned 20 percent of the stations. The Burns had been running Alaska Broadcast Communications for the previous decade, including the Ketchikan Radio Center with sister stations KGTW and KFMJ (which is commonly operated but separately owned).


References


External links

* * {{Coord, 55, 20, 22, N, 131, 38, 12, W, type:landmark_region:US_source:FCC, display=title Hot adult contemporary radio stations in the United States Buildings and structures in Ketchikan Gateway Borough, Alaska Ketchikan, Alaska TKN Talk radio stations in the United States