'Fire Island' is a 5.5-mile-long (8.9 km)
island in the
U.S. state of
Alaska, located near the head of
Cook Inlet at . It is the only island in the
Municipality of Anchorage, sitting three miles (5 km) off the city's Point Campbell, and nine miles (14.5 km) from downtown. Its land area is 17.467 km² (6.7439 sq mi, or 4,316.1
acres), and there was no permanent resident population at the
2000 census.
The island's
Dena’ina name is ''Nutuł’iy'', or "object that stands in the water".
George Vancouver called it "Turnagain Island" in 1794, after
Turnagain Arm, which the southeast side of the island faces. The
Russian Hydrographic Department's Chart 1378, published in 1847, called it ''Ostrov Mushukhli'' (Mushukhli Island), possibly an approximation of ''Nutuł’iy''. "Fire Island" had become established by 1895, when that name was published by the
U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey.
Fire Island was the site of Dena’ina fish camps until the 1970s. A Dena’ina elder reported that a village had once existed as well, but an epidemic forced the survivors to move to
Point Possession on the
Kenai Peninsula sometime before 1934. During
World War II, the
U.S. Army used it as an observation point to guard against
Japanese
submarines.
In September 1951, the
U.S. Air Force 626th Airborne Control and Warning Squadron was established on the island at a base on its southern end called 'Fire Island AFS'. Staffed by about 200 personnel, the base was an air defense
radar center and
Nike surface-to-air missile site for
NORAD, doubling as a
Federal Aviation Administration air traffic control radar and communications site. Since the island is not connected to the mainland, all supplies came by helicopter from
Elmendorf Air Force Base and, during summer, by barge from Anchorage.
Fire Island AFS closed in 1969, leaving the FAA as the sole user of the island. The FAA site stayed open until 1980, when new
Kenai-based radar became active. The base site was cleaned up in the 1990s, and the facilities razed. Fire Island is now owned by
Cook Inlet Region, Inc., with access by permission only. Various uses have been suggested for the island since its abandonment, including an expansion of the
Port of Anchorage, a replacement for
Anchorage International Airport, and a
wind generator farm.
Currently
Chugach Electric has plans to install 24 windmills with a total combined output of 36
Mw. These plans are tenative until engineers can be certain that installation of these will not result in the disruption of local airport radio signals. The main concerns are with
RADAR and
VOR disruption.
References
★
Shem Pete's Alaska: The Territory of the Upper Cook Inlet Dena'ina, , James, Kari, University of Alaska Press, 2003, ISBN 1-889963-57-7
★
Information for Fire Island AFS, AK
★
Those lights are a year away Stan McDonnough
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AC&W closing stirs fond (?) memories
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Fire Island Wind Project
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Airport radar tilts with Fire Island windmills
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Fire Island: Blocks 1052 thru 1055, Census Tract 23.01, Anchorage Municipality, Alaska United States Census Bureau
External links
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ALSAP - Fire Island AFS
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Outlook Alaska - Fire Island