The 'Northwest Staging Route' was a series of
airstrips,
airports and radio ranging stations built in
British Columbia, the
Yukon and
Alaska during
World War II.
Airfields were built or upgraded every 100
miles (160
kilometres) from
Edmonton, Alberta to
Fairbanks, Alaska. The route of the
Alaska Highway, which was built to provide a land route to Alaska, basically connected the airfields together.
The route was used to ferry aircraft, notably the
Bell P-39 Airacobra to
Siberia in the
Soviet Union as part of the
Lend-Lease program.
Known airfields include:
★
Grande Prairie, Alberta
★
Fort St. John, British Columbia
★
Beatton River, British Columbia, emergency airstrip
★
Sikanni Chief, British Columbia, emergency airstrip
★
Prophet River, British Columbia, emergency airstrip
★
Fort Nelson, British Columbia
★
Smith River, British Columbia, emergency airstrip
★
Watson Lake, Yukon
★
Pine Lake, Yukon, emergency airstrip
★
Squanga Lake, Yukon, emergency airstrip
★
Whitehorse, Yukon
★
Aishihik, Yukon, emergency airstrip
★
Snag, Yukon, emergency airstrip
There were additional airfields between Snag and Fairbanks, the terminus of the route where Soviet pilots took over.
External link
★
Yukon Archives page