In 1948, a
construction permit was issued for 500 watts on 1380 kHz for Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The station went on the air in 1950 as WPAW with local origination studios and transmitter originally located on the grounds of the affiliated "Peoples Coal Company" coal yard at 75 Mill Street in Cumberland, Rhode Island. In 1952, it moved to 550 kHz, and on October 13, 1961, the station was renamed WXTR. Broadcast studios and transmitter were moved to along the Blackstone River at 101 John Street in Cumberland, Rhode Island. On March 25, 1972, the call letters changed to WGNG ("Gold-N-Great") with the station adopting an
oldies format. It quickly switched to
top 40 in early 1973, then to "
mellow rock" in the spring of 1977. Around 1980, the station returned to its "Gold-N-Great" format. The next callsign change occurred on
Halloween 1985 when the station changed its call to WICE (which were vacated from 1290 in Providence, now
WPVD). In 1992, WICE took on a
country music format as "
WHIM Country", though the WICE call sign was retained; during this period, the format and WHIM call sign had been vacated from WHIM's longtime home on 1110 (now
WPMZ) in favor of
CNN Headline News station WWRX. After 1110 returned to the WHIM call sign and country format in 1993, WICE moved to a
sports talk format. In 1995, WICE was sold to Back Bay Broadcasters, owner of Boston business-talk station WBNW, with the intention of making it a Providence-market simulcast of WBNW; the callsign was changed to WPNW on June 16, 1995. along with Providence-market news, weather, and traffic inserts from
Metro Networks. The format was retained when WBNW was sold in December 1996; however, WBNW's local programming was cancelled, and virtually all of WPNW's programming was thereafter provided by
Bloomberg Radio. After two years of business talk, WPNW took on the
adult standards programming of WLKW (790 AM, now
WPRV), which had switched to a sports format, on October 20, 1997, with the WLKW call sign following suit on December 12, 1997. On July 17, 2000, the WICE calls returned. On May 16, 2001, the station became WDDZ. A deal to sell the station to
Salem Communications was reached that November; after returning to the air, it ran in conjunction with Boston sister station
WEZE (the descendant of WBNW). The callsign was changed to WBZS on January 1, 2011, on March 14, 2011, the station relaunched with a business talk format. The call sign changed to WSJW when the station was acquired by Starboard Media Foundation and the format changed to Catholic radio on March 17, 2012. ==Translator==