CJSS-TV

Former TV station in Cornwall, Ontario
  • Analog: 8 (VHF)
ProgrammingAffiliationsCBCOwnershipOwnerStanley ShenkmanHistory
First air date
October 18, 1959; 64 years ago (1959-10-18)
Last air date
1963; 61 years ago (1963)
Call sign meaning
C J Stanley Shenkman

CJSS-TV was a television station in Cornwall, Ontario, Canada. In operation from 1959 to 1963 as a private affiliate of CBC Television, the station was later converted to a rebroadcaster of Ottawa's CJOH-TV.

The station originally signed on as a CBC Television affiliate on October 18, 1959, owned by Toronto architect Stanley Shenkman[1]. Shenkman also acquired the radio stations CKSF and CKSF-FM, which both adopted the CJSS call sign as well.

In 1963, CJSS was acquired by Ernie Bushnell and converted into a rebroadcaster of Ottawa's CTV affiliate CJOH, making CJSS the first TV station in Canada ever to cease operations as its own station and become a repeater for another. After many years of use to rimshot the Montréal market, Bell Media took the station permanently dark in 2017.[1] The radio stations were sold to a local family, and subsequently broadcast as part of Corus Entertainment. Of these stations, 1220 AM (as CJUL) left the air August 18, 2010 leaving just CJSS-FM retaining the original call sign.

Former CJOH/CJSS transmitter in Lancaster, Ontario, near the Quebec border.

References

  1. ^ "Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2017-149 | CRTC".

External links

  • The Brisson Brothers star on their own TV series "The Town & Country Show" on CJSS-TV in Cornwall, (Ottawa Country Music Hall of Fame, 1994).
  • 237 Water Street East, former home of CJSS radio; in the late 1950s and early 1960s, this building served as the studios for short-lived CJSS-TV 8.
  • CJSS-TV at The History of Canadian Broadcasting by the Canadian Communications Foundation
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Metropolitan markets
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Southwestern OntarioEastern OntarioNortheastern OntarioNorthwestern OntarioDefunct

1 Channel still on the air as a full-time repeater of another station.

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Defunct television stations in Canada
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Bold denotes stations that did not become a rebroadcaster of another station when it closed.


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