KNOX-TV explained

Callsign:KNOX-TV
Country:United States
Analog:10 (VHF)
Affiliations:Defunct
Location:Grand Forks, North Dakota
Callsign Meaning:From radio station KNOX (AM)
Owner:Community Radio Corporation
Sister Stations:KCND-TV, KNOX

KNOX-TV, channel 10, was a VHF television station in Grand Forks, North Dakota, owned by Community Radio Corporation. The station operated from December 11, 1955, to February 1964.

History

KNOX broadcast on channel 10 as an ABC affiliate. The station later signed on Winnipeg-targeted border blaster KCND-TV, which was a semi-satellite of KNOX, on November 7, 1960. While KNOX was a primary ABC affiliate, the station also carried programming from NBC. In 1962, KNOX and KCND, along with KEND-TV (now KVLY-TV) in Fargo, North Dakota, were purchased for $675,200 by the Pembina Broadcasting Company, a group led by Ferris Traylor, the part-owner of an Indiana TV station.[1] KNOX merged with KEND, and KNOX shut down in 1964 after KEND (known as KTHI-TV at this time) began transmitting from a tower in Blanchard, between Fargo and Grand Forks. After KNOX-TV's shutdown, the Grand Forks area did not have a local television station until NBC affiliate WDAZ-TV signed on in 1967.

Channel 10 is now used by Fox affiliate KBRR serving Grand Forks (a satellite of KVRR), which signed on in 1985 licensed to Thief River Falls, Minnesota.

Notes and References

  1. News: KXGO-TV Fargo, KNOX-TV Grand Forks, KNCD-TV Pembina, all North Dakota. Broadcasting. May 21, 1962. 64. July 18, 2019.