The 'Rogers-Post Site', located on the
North Slope of the
U.S. state of
Alaska, is the location of a
plane crash that killed humorist
Will Rogers and aviator
Wiley Post on
15 August 1935 during an aerial tour of
Alaska. It is about 13 miles (21 km) southwest of
Barrow, on the north side of
Walakpa Bay near the mouth of the
Walakpa River. The flight was described by the
AP [1] as prelude to a planned Trans-Siberian flight to Moscow. The pair were flying from Fairbanks to
Barrow when they encountered fog and low-visibility. Locating a hole in the fog at Walakpa Bay, they landed. They spent some time with a small party of
Alaska Natives and received directions for the short distance remaining to Barrow. They were barely airborne, around 50 feet, when the motor failed. The aircraft plummeted into the lagoon and overturned. It was the first fatal air accident Barrow had known.
The first monument at the site was dedicated three years after the crash and financed through nationwide public subscription. It was designed in
Oklahoma, home of both Rogers and Post, and built from poured
concrete. The design was essentially two cubes, the smaller atop the larger, with a pink
granite memorial marker quarried near the Rogers
homestead in
Claremore, Oklahoma. The elaborate dedication ceremonies involved a four-way
CBS radio broadcast from Barrow, the
United States Capitol, the
Oklahoma State Capitol, and the
Texas State Capitol.
The second monument, built 15 years later, is a concrete obelisk consisting of four diminishing rectangular blocks, and is more slender and almost 10 feet (3 m) taller than the first monument. It was built by then 72-year-old Jesse Stubbs, who claimed to be a childhood friend of Rogers and arrived in
Anchorage in summer 1953 intending to walk from there to Barrow. The Stubbs monument memorializes not only Rogers and Post, but also the Alaskan veterans of
World War II. Both monuments overlook the lagoon crash site.
References
1. http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/aviation/rps.htm