KSFB 1260 AM, San Francisco
(2007-Present)
Previously KYA (1926-1983)
Previously KOIT (1983-1985, 1986-2007)
Previously KXLR (1985-1986)
TIMELINE:
The 1920s
|

Vincent I. Kraft |
In October of 1926, the Pacific Broadcasting Corporation was formed
as a subsidiary of the Seattle-based Northwest Radio Supply Company.
Co-owners were Vincent I. Kraft of Seattle and Frederick C. Clift of San
Francisco. In 1920, Mr. Kraft (photo, right) went on the air with a
station that would become KJR, one of the first stations in Seattle. Also in October, equipment of KFOB at Burlingame was
acquired, with the expectation that this gear was to be used for the new
San Francisco station.
Call letters KYA were reserved on November 30, 1926, for use by the
Pacific Broadcasting Corporation, which scrapped the old KFOB equipment
and purchased a new 500-watt transmitter. It was installed atop its
proposed studio location, the Clift Hotel. On December 17, 1926, the
Radio Division of the U.S. Department of Commerce's Bureau of Navigation granted
its authority for KYA to operate on 970 kilocycles with 500 watts of
power. KYA went on the air Saturday, December 18, 1926, broadcasting
from the Clift Hotel, San Francisco. Its license was received December
18th.
KYA was re-assigned to operate on 850 kilocycles with a power of 1,000
watts in November of 1927. By January of 1928, studios were moved from
the Clift Hotel to the Warfield Theatre Building, 988 Market Street, and
it then adopted the air slogan "West Coast Theatres Studio." Its
transmitter remained atop the Clift Hotel.
In a major frequency reallocations taking place November 11, 1928,
which affected the dial position of most United States broadcast
stations, KYA found itself reassigned to 1230 kilocycles. In late
November 1928, the station joined the Columbia Broadcasting System as
that chain's San Francisco affiliate. Manager of KYA at this time was
Clair E. Morrison.
|

The Clift Hotel |
By 1929, KYA's air slogan was "The Theatre of The Air." Its
transmitter was reportedly located at 680 Geary (corner of Taylor Street),
San Francisco, by May 1929. On August 28, 1929, the Northwest Radio
Service Company, parent of the Pacific Broadcasting Corporation, was
declared insolvent and was then transferred to a court-appointed
receiver. This financial stigma hit KYA's licensee on September 13,
1929, as the Federal Radio Commission on that date granted an
involuntary assignment of KYA's license to F. O. Dahlquist, Receiver. In
December 1929, the station was reportedly "silent" due to financial
woes, but in late 1929 it was transferred to a new (solvent) Pacific
Broadcasting Corporation.
After returning to the air, KYA changed its transmitting location to
the Whitcomb Hotel, 1231 Market Street — a site vacated by San
Francisco's KFRC in May of 1927. This move was carried out on June 25,
1930. On that date, a new RCA 1001-B transmitter was placed into
service. Studios remained at 988 Market Street, the Loew's Warfield
Theatre Building.
The 1930s
The National Broadcasting Company, under a new subsidiary, acquired
the Pacific Broadcasting Corporation in late 1931. At this time, KYA
switched from CBS to the NBC-Pacific Network, allowing for optional Red
or Blue network programs. By June 1932, Edward McCallum was named
Station Manager. In late 1932, offices of KYA were moved to NBC's San
Francisco studio complex located in the Hunter-Dulin Building at 111
Sutter Street, where KPO and KGO resided. Studios remained at 988 Market
Street with KYA's transmitter located atop the Whitcomb Hotel.
The Pacific Broadcasting Corporation was sold by NBC Inc. to William
Randolph Hearst's San Francisco Examiner newspaper in 1934. After this
sale, KYA relocated to new office and studio quarters in the Examiner
Building at Third and Market Streets, downtown San Francisco. Mr.
McCallum elected to remain as KYA's manager under the new ownership.
KYA's licensee name was changed from the Pacific Broadcasting
Corporation to Hearst Radio Inc. — no change in actual ownership —
effective March 12, 1936. Authorization was granted by the Federal
Communications Commission on July 17, 1936 for KYA to raise daytime
power to 5,000 watts (nights to remain at 1,000 watts) and to change its
transmitting location.
In late 1936, M. E. (Bob) Roberts replaced Edward McCallum as Station
Manager. KYA's secondary affiliation with NBC was dropped in 1936. On
December 29, 1936, it became a charter member of the California Radio
System, a loose-knit statewide network maintained mainly for sales
purposes, but which occasionally interchanged programs. The chain was
owned by the Hearst Radio and McClatchy Newspapers station groups. Key
outlet was Hearst's KEHE, Los Angeles. In April 1937, KYA opened an
auxiliary studio in the Hotel Oakland, across the bay in Oakland.
Daylight power of KYA was upped to 5,000 watts from a new RCA 5-C
transmitter installed at Candlestick Point, near Bayview Park, at the
southern edge of San Francisco, on May 15, 1937. A Bethlehem Steel
vertical radiating antenna tower, measuring 450 feet in height, was
erected on the west side of a hill, adjacent to KYA's new one story
building atop Candlestick Hill (later known as "KYA Hill.") Bob Roberts
was promoted to general manager in 1937. In January 1938, Clarence B.
Juneau was named Station Manager and Commercial Manager of KYA. He
transferred up from a similar position at Hearst's KEHE Los Angeles (Mr.
Juneau had founded that station in 1925).
By mid-1938, KYA was in operation from 6:30 a. m. until 12 midnight
daily (Sunday hours began at 8:00 a. m.) from studios in the Hearst
Building at Third and Market Streets. J. V. Connolly was president of
Hearst Radio Inc. at this time. On October 10, 1938, Reiland Quinn was
named as KYA's new general manager. KYA closed its Hotel Oakland remote
studio on November 1, 1938, with the notation that it "was too expensive
to maintain." By the end of 1938, a new Collins 20-H 250 watt
transmitter was installed at "KYA Hill," intended for back-up service.
The California Radio System was disbanded in 1939.
The 1940s
Harold H. Meyer was appointed general manager in 1940. Former Manager
Reiland Quinn remained with KYA for another year as its Program
Director. As a result of the NARBA Treaty frequency reallocations,
taking place at 3:00 a. m. (EST), on Saturday, March 29, 1941, KYA was
shifted from 1230 to 1260 kilocycles. An around-the-clock program
schedule debuted on KYA by the beginning of 1942.
Hearst Radio Inc. sold KYA on June 24, 1942, to Palo Alto Radio
Station, Inc., a group headed by Wilfred L. Davis. The organization was
composed of 24 stockholders, which earlier was an unsuccessful applicant
for a new AM broadcast station at nearby Palo Alto, Calif. The group
then opted to purchase an existing station, with the intention of
"identifying with the interests of Palo Alto residents," paying $50,000
for KYA. Mr. Davis was president and 20 percent owner, and became
general manager of the station after assuming control.
Don J. Fedderson, a vice president of Palo Alto Radio Station, Inc.,
became Commercial Manager of KYA in 1942, and was promoted to vice
president and general manager in April 1943. Later in 1943, Mr.
Fedderson succeeded Mr. Davis as president as well. Studios remained in
leased space on the fifth floor of the Hearst Building in downtown San
Francisco. The station's stand-by Collins 20-H transmitter was sold to
KWKW Pasadena in 1943.
KYA's licensee, Palo Alto Radio Station Inc. was sold October 10,
1945, to New York Post publisher Dorothy Schiff Thackrey for $348,800.
Mrs. Thackrey's husband, Theodore O. Thackrey, was president and editor
of the New York City newspaper. She named Bartley C. Crum to the post of
KYA president in October 1945, with Don Fedderson continuing on as vice
president and general manager. Studios of KYA were moved from the Hearst
Building to new quarters in San Francisco's Fairmont Hotel in July 1949.
The 1950s
KYA's licensee, Palo Alto Radio Station, Inc., was acquired from
Dolly Thackrey by John Elroy McCaw and John D. Keating (each with 50
percent interest) for $155,000 on April 13, 1950; the pair also owned
New York's 1010/WINS. (McCaw's son, Craig, would later found McCaw
Cellular and XO Communications.) J. G. Paltridge
thereupon became general manager of KYA when the new owners took over,
while
Don Fedderson moved down the coast to manage Dorothy Schiff Thackrey's AM and
TV properties (KLAC and KLAC-TV) in Los Angeles. Also in 1950, KYA
joined the Dallas-based Liberty Broadcasting System network as its Bay
Area affiliate.
In 1951, the station's licensee name was changed to the Palo Alto
Broadcasting Company with H.G. Fearnhead installed as its new general
manager. KYA's licensee name was again changed — in 1952 — to Radio
Station KYA, Inc. Effective May 16, 1952, the Liberty Broadcasting
System ceased operations due to insolvency. At this time, KYA's
programming consisted of record shows presided over by disc jockeys.
In early 1954, KYA's licensee name was simplified to KYA, Inc. Irving
C. Phillips was appointed KYA's new general manager in late 1956. The
station was sold by the McCaw-Keating interests on May 1, 1958, to
Golden State Broadcasters, Inc., for $1-million (the price included the
permit for proposed KYA-FM). The FCC approved this transfer March 5,
1958. The firm was owned principally by Milwaukee broadcaster Gerald A.
Bartell and his family. On May 1, 1958, Lee Bartell was named president
and general manager of the station, which, on that date debuted a "Top
40" popular music format.
Studios were moved from its earlier quarters nearby in the Fairmont
Hotel to One Nob Hill Circle in the summer of 1958. (KYA-FM, at 93.3
megacycles, went on the air in January 1959, duplicating KYA's AM
programming fulltime.)
In early 1959, Gerald Bartell became president of KYA's licensee as
Morton J. Wagner concurrently became vice president and general manager.
Golden State Broadcasters, Inc., was transferred from Gerald A. Bartell,
et al, to Bartell Broadcasters, Inc., on September 3, 1959. Lee Bartell
became president and Gerald Bartell became vice president of KYA
effective in late 1959.
The 1960s
Bill Drake (nom de radieux of Phil Yarborough) joined KYA as its
Program Director in November 1961 and installed a new, fast-paced Top
40 format, dubbed "The Boss of the Bay." Les Crane (air name of Leslie
Stein) became Program Director in January 1962. Bill Drake
remained at KYA as morning man at least through the end of October 1962.
Crane later hosted an eponymous television talk show on the ABC network
(1964-1965) and had a national Top Ten record with the spoken-word
"Desiderata" (1971).
Veteran Buffalo, N.Y., broadcaster Clinton D. Churchill, through his
Churchill Broadcasting Corporation, acquired KYA and KYA-FM for
$1.25-million on Tuesday, August 7, 1962. Mr. Churchill then assumed the
post of president and general manager of KYA. FCC approval took place
July 25, 1962. New vice president of the station was Lewis H. Avery, who
also served as KYA's sales manager. By 1964, KYA operated 24 hours a day
from studios located at Number One Nob Hill Circle, San Francisco.
KYA became the property of the Avco Broadcasting Corporation in
August 1966. FCC approval of the $4.4-million sale took place August 24,
1966. The new licensee was a subsidiary of the Avco Corporation. KYA's
licensee name was changed to the Avco Broadcasting Corporation of
California on September 28, 1966. Lewis H. Avery was named vice
president and general manager in October 1966.
In February 1967, Howard S. Kester became KYA's new general manager.
Effective February 10, 1969, KYA's licensee name was changed again — to
the Avco Radio Corporation.
The 1970s
Former co-owner J. Elroy McCaw died at age 57 on August 17, 1979.
From 1954 to 1962, he also owned WINS in New York City. Lewis Havens
Avery, former KYA general manager, died November 25, 1971, at 69 years
of age. Former Board Chairman Clinton H. Churchill died August 26, 1973.
He was 85. His son, Clinton D. Churchill, owned KYA from 1962 until
1966.
Howard Zwick was named acting general manager by KYA's management in
August 1974 to replace the departing Howard Kester. In October 1974,
Clifford M. Hunter was appointed general manager of the contemporary
music-formatted station. A "Pop Adult Music" format was adopted in 1976.
The Avco Radio Corporation sold KYA (plus KYA-FM and WRTH at Wood
River, Illinois) to the King Radio Broadcasting Company, a subsidiary of
the Seattle-based King Broadcasting Company, on October 20, 1977. Owners
of the firm were Dorothy Bullitt and her daughters, Harriet B. Rice and
Priscilla B. Collins, all Seattle residents. The $4-million transaction
obtained FCC sanction on August 22, 1977. Ancil H. Payne was president
of the buying organization and James D. Kime was transferred down from
Seattle to become KYA's new vice president and general manager.
By 1979, KYA simulcast KYA-FM's automated programming from 2:00 a.m.
until 6:00 a.m. In the fall of 1979, KYA moved studios from One Nob Hill
Circle (behind the Mark Hopkins Hotel) to new modern facilities at 300
Broadway in San Francisco's Financial District. Those quarters were
dedicated in March 1980.
The 1980s
Jim Kime was promoted to VP-Radio for the King Radio Broadcasting in
June 1980. Effective July 1, 1980, Fred Schumacher became KYA's new
general manager. By December 1980, the station featured a mass appeal
Adult Contemporary music format, dubbed "Easy Rock 1260." KYA adopted an
Oldies music format in 1981. AM stereo broadcasts began in the summer of
1983, utilizing the Motorola C-QUAM system.
KYA was sold by the King Radio Broadcasting Company on
December 13, 1983, to the Bay Area Broadcasting Company, a subsidiary of
Bonneville International Corporation, for $3.5-million. King
Broadcasting concurrently upgraded in the market by purchasing KSFO from
Gene Autry’s Golden West Broadcasting. FCC approval of the KYA transfer
took place October 19, 1983. Arch L. Madsen was president of Bonneville,
which was the broadcast division of the Corporation of the president of
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. president of the Bay
Area Broadcasting Company was Jack Adamson.
Call letters were changed from KYA to KOIT on December
13, 1983, when an Easy Listening music format debuted. Gone, along with
the historic KYA calls, was its Golden Oldies music format. At this
time, studios were moved from 300 Broadway to 77 Maiden Lane, and Kari
Johnson Winston became vice president and general manager. KOIT then
began 75 percent duplication of its new FM sister station, KOIT-FM
(96.5).
A new "Trendformation" format, developed by program
director Norm Woodruff — faced with a lean budget — debuted July 15,
1985. At this time, KOIT(AM) changed call letters to KXLR and switched
to a news and information format, which featured Mutual Broadcasting
System network and BBC World Service programs, plus Light Jazz and New
Age music. Twenty minutes of music per hour were presented. The
call-letter change received FCC authorization in mid-June.
When Kari Winston was transferred to a Bonneville-owned
FM station in Los Angeles in early September 1985, Charles R. (Chuck)
Tweedle assumed the post of vice president and general manager of KXLR
and KOIT(FM). President Jack Adamson was reassigned to new duties at
Bonneville-owned KSL Salt Lake City in early October 1985.
Call letters were changed back from KXLR to KOIT in
mid-January 1986 and, by the end of the month, its unsuccessful
"Trendformation" format was dropped with the AM station switching to a
Light Rock Music format, simulcasting fully the FM program schedule. Its
MBS network affiliation ended at this time.
Significant changes in technical facilities were taking
place in early 1986. In the first move to erect a new transmitting tower
to replace the aging self-supported 450-foot tower at Bayview Park, the
original tower was toppled in early 1986 and KOIT(AM) switched to an
80-foot temporary antenna atop its transmitter building. (In April 1986,
its old tower was lying on its side across the northwest face of the
hill). The FCC granted KOIT permission on May 20, 1986, to construct a
new tower on the same site. In 1987, the downed tower was removed by
work crews and a new guyed antenna tower took its place. Also in 1987,
AM stereo broadcasts ended.
KOIT switched to a Contemporary Music format, fully
duplicating KOIT-FM, in 1989.
The 1990s
Former owner and president Gerald A. Bartell died at 76
at his Wisconsin home on July 27, 1990. In 1992, the KOIT stations moved
to new modern offices and studios at 400 Second Street, Suite 300, San
Francisco. (A year later, its old studios at 77 Maiden Lane were taken
over by KDFC AM and FM). In 1998, KOIT relocated to new studios at 455
Market Street, Suite 2300, in San Francisco.
KOIT operated on 1260 kHz. with 5,000 watts by day and 1
,000 watts by night, from studios at 455 Market Street, Suite 2300, San
Francisco, Calif., with its transmitter and tower at Bayview Park, south
of the city. The independent station was licensed to the Bonneville
Holding Company. Charles R. (Chuck) Tweedle was vice president and
general manager of California's 30th oldest continuously licensed AM
broadcast station, which duplicated KOIT-FM's Adult Contemporary music
format 24 hours a day.
RELATED EXHIBITS:

 |