Delaney Park Strip

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Alaskan Veterans Memorial at Delaney Park Strip Alaskan Veterans Memorial at Delaney Park Strip. (47708962232).jpg
Alaskan Veterans Memorial at Delaney Park Strip

The Delaney Park Strip is an 11-block park in the Municipality of Anchorage, Alaska. Originally a firebreak, the Park Strip would become Anchorage's first airfield.

Contents

History

Known to the Anchorage community as the Park Strip, Delaney Park is the oldest park in the city. It was established as part of the original Anchorage township plat in 1917 and named for James Delaney, one of the first mayors of Anchorage.

The park was originally used simply as a firebreak, but in 1923 it became “The Golf Course.” The community used the space both for a golf course and an airstrip.

Anchorage residents, working for free, had prepared a 300 by 2000 foot landing field for Noel Wien to fly Jimmy Rodebaugh's newly arrived Standard J-1. Wien's first flight took place on 4 June 1924, and by the end of the month had flown 170 passengers, two at a time in the front cockpit, on a 15 minute ride. These were the first passenger flights from Anchorage. Wien also started the first flight between Anchorage and Fairbanks from the strip on 6 July. [1] [2]

In 1932, however, Merrill Field opened, so the Delaney Park airstrip was no longer necessary.

In 1954 the Parks & Recreation Department began to develop recreation facilities for a variety of activities and events, including ice skating, softball, horseshoes, and, later, tennis. In 1958 the Park Strip hosted the Alaska Statehood Celebration.

On the 75th anniversary of Noel Wien's historic flight to Fairbanks, his two sons Noel Merrill and Richard, reenacted the flight using a Boeing Stearman, after receiving FAA permission to take off from the park. [3]

Presently, the park is used for a variety of community events, sports, and festivals year-round.

Facilities

Engine 556, a 2-8-0 built by Baldwin Locomotive Works, was used by the Alaska Railroad in the 1940s and 1950s following initial service in Europe during World War II. The locomotive is shown on display at the southeast corner of Ninth Avenue and E Street, where it has sat since 1959. Former Alaska Railroad locomotive on display at Delaney Park Strip, Anchorage, Alaska.jpg
Engine 556, a 2-8-0 built by Baldwin Locomotive Works, was used by the Alaska Railroad in the 1940s and 1950s following initial service in Europe during World War II. The locomotive is shown on display at the southeast corner of Ninth Avenue and E Street, where it has sat since 1959.

Reference

  1. Harkey, Ira (1991). Pioneer Bush Pilot. Bantam Books. p. 78,85. ISBN   0553289195.
  2. Rearden, Jim (2009). Alaska's First Bush Pilots, 1923-30. Missoula: Pictorial Histories Publishing Company, Inc. p. 25. ISBN   9781575101477.
  3. Wien, Noel Merrill (2016). Noel Merrill Wien, Born to Fly. Portland: Alaska Northwest Books. pp. 201–202. ISBN   9781943328758.

Commons-logo.svg Media related to Delaney Park Strip at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 61°12′48″N149°54′06″W / 61.21333°N 149.90167°W / 61.21333; -149.90167

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