Gold was discovered near Fairbanks in 1902, and the Gold
Rush was on!
Along the Chena, near the start |
The walk starts
Downtown and follows the Chena River.
On this stretch you can see some of the earliest buildings from 1904-09,
including the first Catholic and Episcopal churches, the Tanana Masonic
Club, and the first library.
An Art Deco relic, probably built by the Federal Government during the "Second Gold Rush" in the 1930's. |
Pioneer Park was built in 1967 for a centennial
exposition. It offers restaurants, a
theater, historical buildings, and a saloon.
You can see the Pioneer Air Museum, the Tanana Valley Railroad Museum,
and the Riverboat Nenana.
You can also see the railroad car used by President Warren
G. Harding when he visited Fairbanks in July of 1923 to celebrate the
completion of the Alaska Railroad.
Harding was the first President to visit Alaska, but he never returned
to Washington, DC. He died two weeks later in San Francisco amid an
emerging scandal regarding the Teapot
Dome.
At the Cemetery - Note the planters made from mining dredge buckets |
The route then heads back towards downtown and on to the
cemetery on the other side of downtown.
This is a neighborhood of "modest" homes. Some have amazing gardens. They grow corn and tomatoes in their small yards. These items won't grow in Anchorage, but they
will grow during the warmer, but shorter, Fairbanks summers.
A small house with a big garden |
A tiny well-maintained log cabin home |
Junk "R" Us |
When I say some of these houses are modest, I need to
explain that in Alaskan terms. During
the original Gold Rush era, many homes were built from logs. They were very small because it was difficult
to heat a larger house and building materials were expensive and hard to come by. Some of the
houses downtown appear to have been built during that era - they are tiny. Some of them have additions that have been
cobbled together by someone other than a professional builder. Blue tarps are in evidence. The yards of some of these houses have become
junkyards.
Note the Jerry-rigged additions at the rear of both houses |
Blue tarps have many uses |
According to one website about Fairbanks:
"Fairbanks has an unique architectural history. Building
styles developed far away from those of the rest of the United States, but
elements of popular styles from the Lower 49 are evident in many buildings.
The earliest buildings in Fairbanks were made of logs. In 1906,
fire ruined much of the original townsite, and only a few buildings survived.
Replacements were frame homes and stores using lumber produced at two local
sawmills. For the first time, two-story buildings appeared.
Commercial buildings were very simple frame affairs behind more
elaborate "false fronts,'' such as those commonly identified with western
frontier towns in the Lower 49. Few of these commercial and industrial
buildings remain. Most of the buildings left, built before 1940, are houses or
cabins.
An old log cabin in need of TLC |
Building practices were influenced by the materials available and
the harsh climate of the Interior. Many of the early homes were built
with green lumber, which was cheap and abundant, but often twisted and gave
over time, resulting in cold, drafty cabins. Winterization techniques, too,
were often inefficient in Fairbanks, such as double-hung windows without storm
panes, which is common in warmer states.
Before 1950, commercial buildings often were insulated with
sawdust, against current building codes. Many had additions added with
inadequate foundations, or were built in areas subject to flooding. The result
is that many of the historic buildings in Fairbanks have foundations
that have settled. Log buildings suffer the most from the sagging foundations."
I
didn't get very far from the cemetery before I was forced to make a
detour. About a block ahead of me I
could see an unchained pit bull standing on the sidewalk barking very
fiercely. I made my left turn a block
early so as to avoid this dog.The Rabinowitz State Court Building |
Walk Route: B+
Walk Documentation: B+
Note: I did not have
time to do the full walk, but I did the entire 10k last year, so I have included some observations from both walks..
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