- WTRN
Infobox Radio Station
name = WTRN-AM
frequency = 1340 (kHz)
city =Tyrone, Pennsylvania
area =State College, Pennsylvania
format =Adult contemporary , full service
owner = Allegheny Mountain Network
erp = 1000watt s (unlimited)
branding =
slogan =
class = B1
website = [http://www.wtrn.net/ http://www.wtrn.net/]
callsign_meaning = W TyRoNeWTRN is an American commercial AM radio station, licensed to the borough of
Tyrone, Pennsylvania . The station operates at the federally assigned frequency of 1340kHz with a full-time power output of 1,000watt s. WTRN is the flagship station for the Allegheny Mountain Network (AMN).History: A Small-town Boy's Dream
WTRN's beginnings were part of a boom in local radio station construction in the northern and central part of Pennsylvania that began in 1950. In 1947, Allegheny Mountain Network founder Cary H. Simpson helped build
WHUN , where he also would serve as program director, in his hometown ofHuntingdon, Pennsylvania ; approximately 20 miles southeast of Tyrone in Huntingdon County. Inspired by the station's success, Simpson built the first station in his group,WKBI (AM) inSt. Marys, Pennsylvania . As this was the very first station in his group, WKBI served as the flagship station for the other stations that Simpson would build and put on the air over the next four decades.Desiring to put a station on the air in his newly-adopted hometown of Tyrone, Simpson petitioned the FCC for an AM license to be assigned to Tyrone. A construction permit was granted, and Simpson signed WTRN on the air on January 12, 1955. Simpson also successfully applied for an FM license to also be assigned to Tyrone. That station,
WGMR (which was sold to Forever Broadcasting in Altoona in 2008), was granted license to operate at 101.1mHz and signed on August 15, 1961.As WTRN was close to his home, Simpson moved AMN's corporate operations to this station. Many of AMN's properties were in communities that were large enough to make the radio business profitable, but perhaps not quite large enough to support a typical radio station's staff at the time. Thus, many duties were centralized (traffic, billing, upper management) in the Tyrone office, requiring only airstaff and sales consultants at the individual stations. This business model would start to become the accepted standard following the first round of FCC ownership limit changes that began in 1992.
WTRN Today
WTRN, like its affiliate stations, continues to be community-focused, despite a trend of many rural radio stations with larger market penetration to serve larger markets. News Director Jean Dixon, who has been with the station since its sign-on, continues to air an hour-long local news block at 10am weekday mornings, which also includes interviews with local townspeople. Another longtime AMN staffer, Peg Baney, does sales for WTRN.
Cary Simpson, in addition to his duties as AMN President, manages WTRN and does occasional on-air work such as parade broadcasts and interviews.
WTRN also provides a window to Tyrone to many who have moved away. They have teamed up with Open Door Visions, a Tyrone company to provide webcasts of Tyrone Golden Eagles football.
AMN Affiliate Stations
*
WEEO-FM Chambersburg [http://www.revolution1037.net/]
* WKBI-AM St. Marys [http://www.b94fm.net/]
*WKBI-FM St. Marys [http://www.wkbi.net/]
*WQRM -FM Smethport [http://www.wqrm.net/]
* WFRM-AM/FM Coudersport [http://www.wfrm.net/]
* WNBT/WNBT-FM Wellsboro [http://www.wnbt.net/]Former AMN Affiliate Stations
* WIYQ Ebensburg (now
WRKW )
*WGMR Tyrone/State College
*WBLF Bellefonte
*WKMC Roaring Spring
* WEEO Shippensburg
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.