The history is that is used to be on 92.1 and was a semi automated country station for years. It was only 3kW at the time & was sister station to AC WJNC.
Yep. Back in the mid 1970s, there were five stations in Jacksonville, WJNC/WRCM, WBBS and WLAS/WXQR.
WLAS/WXQR were owned by Sidney Popkin at the time. I seem to recall that Sidney also had a furniture store (was it BoomTown Furniture?) in the heart of old Jacksonville, and his brother "Itchy" owned Furniture Fair.
WBBS was a daytime AMer, owned by a gentleman who was also an FBI agent in the area. The late Jim Kelso moved from WBBS to LCC to teach radio broadcasting at the college.
WJNC was probably the first station in Jacksonville. I don't how long Bob Mendelson owned the stations, but sometime in the mid-1970s, he sold the pair to Beasley Broadcast. At that time, Beasley was still headquartered in Goldsboro.
I did find a reference to Bob and WJNC at:
http://books.google.com.kw/books?id...6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=bob mendelson WJNC&f=false
WRCM had a homebuilt automation system, built by its engineer, Jim (something). Seems to me it had maybe three or four Carousel cart decks. Its "brain" was a series of peg-board like pin controller boards and a series of mechanical stepper switches to step things. The peg-board units controlled which tray of the Carousel was played. Live in the morning from sign-on and then automated mid day.
When WRCM went stereo (1977?) with the installation of a Ramko 8-pot board and an Orban Optimod, the automation system was no longer used, since it was a mono system.
The WRCM antenna was side mounted on the WJNC tower, and had a Collins Rockwell FM transmitter. WJNC was running the 1960s vintage Gates BC-1T on 1240. The tower was a folded unipole system, where the tower structure was grounded but there was an insulated skirt, three wires around the tower, insulated at the ground and bonded to the tower quarter wave or so up.
Mike Shadeed was the WJNC morning guy and he did "Ask Your Neighbor," the call-in show. Gene somebody was the WJNC/WRCM manager, but he left and Ron Brown became manager. Gene also had his hands in a western wear store.
Back in those days, 1976 or so, WJNC ran a Friday night remote broadcast from Big Ed's Bowery Club. Tim Downs did the remote, using the record system of the club for the music with his commentary on the activities at the club. As I recall, he could not fully describe every little movement on the stage.