KSJR-FM | |
City: | Collegeville, Minnesota |
Area: | St. Cloud, Minnesota |
Branding: | YourClassical MPR |
Translator: | 90.9 K215BL Alexandria 103.9 K280ET Olivia |
Airdate: | January 22, 1967 |
Format: | Public radio, Classical music |
Erp: | 100,000 watts |
Haat: | 258m (846feet) |
Class: | C1 |
Facility Id: | 42955 |
Callsign Meaning: | Saint John's Radio |
Affiliations: | Minnesota Public Radio, NPR, American Public Media |
Owner: | Minnesota Public Radio |
Licensee: | Minnesota Public Radio |
Sister Stations: | KNSR |
Website: | Classical Minnesota Public Radio |
Licensing Authority: | FCC |
KSJR-FM (90.1 FM) is a radio station licensed to Collegeville, Minnesota, and serving the St. Cloud area. The station is owned by Minnesota Public Radio (MPR), and airs MPR's "Classical Music Network," originating from the Twin Cities. The station has inserts at least once an hour for local underwriting and weather.
KSJR was the birthplace of MPR. It signed on from the campus of Saint John's University on January 22, 1967. However, it soon became apparent that the station needed to reach the Twin Cities, an hour southeast, if it had any chance of surviving, as the St. Cloud/Stearns County area was not nearly large enough for the station to be viable. KSJR tripled its power in hopes of reaching the valuable Twin Cities market. Even then, it barely covered Minneapolis and missed St. Paul. The station's young general manager, Bill Kling, then persuaded Saint John's to sign on a repeater for the Twin Cities, KSJN. By 1969, however, the operation was still awash in debt, so Saint John's transferred the stations to a nonprofit corporation that evolved into Minnesota Public Radio.[1]
MPR moved its headquarters to St. Paul in 1971, and KSJR eventually reduced its power to normal levels as KSJN became the flagship station. It became an all-classical station in 1988, with news and talk moving to KNSR at 88.9. MPR still maintains office and studio space on the St. John's campus in Collegeville.
KSJR-FM is relayed by two additional translator stations.