| Broadcast area | Tri-Cites–Bristol–Kingsport |
|---|---|
| Frequency | 910kHz |
| Branding | WJCW AM 910 |
| Programming | |
| Format | News/talk |
| Network | ABC News Radio |
| Affiliations | |
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| WGOC,WKOS,WQUT,WXSM | |
| History | |
First air date | December 13, 1938; 86 years ago (1938-12-13) (as WJHL) |
Former call signs | WJHL (1938–1960) |
Call sign meaning | James C. Wilson, former owner |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 67672 |
| Class | B |
| Power |
|
| Repeater | 101.5WQUT-HD3 (Johnson City) |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Webcast | Listen live |
| Website | www |
WJCW (910AM) is acommercialradio stationlicensed toJohnson City, Tennessee, and serving theTri-Citiesradio market (Johnson City-Bristol-Kingsport). It is owned byCumulus Media and airs anews/talkformat.
WJCW'stransmitter, offices and studios are on Free Hill Road inGray, Tennessee.[2] The complex also houses the studios for Cumulus' other Tri-Cities radio stations. WJCW broadcasts with a 5,000-wattnon-directional signal in the daytime. At night, to protect other stations onAM 910, the station reduces power to 1,000 watts and uses adirectional antenna. The station is East Tennessee's AM primary entry point station for theEmergency Alert System, withWJXB-FM inKnoxville performing the PEP function on FM in east Tennessee.
The station firstsigned on the air on December 13, 1938; 86 years ago (1938-12-13). The originalcall sign was WJHL, jointly owned by Hanes Lancaster, Sr. and J. W. Birdwell, both fromChattanooga.[3] It was the second radio station in the Tri-Cities and the first in Johnson City. It began broadcasting at only 250 watts. During 1940, Birdwell was no longer a partner in the new station.
The station's original frequency was 1200 kHz. In December 1940, WJHL moved to 880 kHz with 1,000 watts, utilizing a directional three-tower pattern at night. With theNorth American Regional Broadcasting Agreement coming into force on March 29, 1941, the station was required to move to 910 kHz due to the adoption of the new international radio treaty.
In 1942, WJHL got a power boost to its current 5,000 watts by day, 1,000 watts at night. It became anaffiliate of theNBC Blue Network, laterABC. By 1956, WJHL joinedCBS, an affiliation that lasted five decades. Under Hanes Lancaster, Sr and son Hanes Jr., WJHL added 100.7 WJHL-FM in 1948 (now 101.5WQUT) and in 1953 addedWJHL-TV Channel 11. Because the AM station carried CBS programming, WJHL-TV became a CBS-TV affiliate.
In 1960, the radio stations were sold to Tri-Cities Broadcasting,[4] owned by James C. Wilson (son of the founder of the area's first radio station,WOPI in Bristol)[5] Channel 11 kept the WJHL-TV callsign, while AM 910 was renamed WJCW after Wilson's initials and continued to program anmiddle of the road,full service format. In the early 1970s, the station switched to acountry music format.
Notable announcers included:
Jim Wilson/Tri-Cities Broadcasting sold WJCW and WQUT to Bloomington Broadcasting in 1981.
The original studios were located in downtown Johnson City. The transmitter site was on Princeton Road in North Johnson City. In 1977, new studios and transmitter site were built inGray, Tennessee. The new location allowed the station's signal to cover a larger area, especially north of Johnson City, plus delivering a better signal to Kingsport.
In the 1980s, listeners began shifting to FM radio for music, so in 1990, WJCW became the Tri-Cities' first news/talk station.

In 2000, the station was sold toCitadel Broadcasting, a forerunner of Cumulus.[6]
Most of WJCW's weekday schedule is made up ofnationally syndicated talk shows. At dawn,America in the Morning is heard, followed byThis Morning, America's First News with Gordon Deal,The Chris Plante Show, The Vince Coglianese Show,The Charlie Kirk Show,The Mark Levin Show,The Chad Benson Show, America at Night with Rick Valdes andRed Eye Radio. One hour of local talk is heard each morning at 8,In Touch with Don Helman.
Weekend programming includes shows on money, health, cars and other topics, some of which are paidbrokered programming.NASCAR races are also broadcast. Most hours begin with world and national news fromABC News Radio.
36°24′37″N82°27′13″W / 36.41028°N 82.45361°W /36.41028; -82.45361