50 Years Ago, Pipeline Construction Was Roaring Through Copper Valley

TAPS THROWBACK   FIRST PIPE INSTALLED AT TONSINA RIVER  FROM THE ALYESKA PIPELINE WEBSITE:   March 27, 2025, marks the 50th anniversary of t...

TAPS THROWBACK  

FIRST PIPE INSTALLED AT TONSINA RIVER 

FROM THE ALYESKA PIPELINE WEBSITE: 

March 27, 2025, marks the 50th anniversary of the unofficial start of TAPS construction as the first pipe was laid at Tonsina River, 75 miles north of Valdez. (In reality, work was well underway by 1975. (For example, $100 million of the first 48-inch pipe arrived in Valdez from Japan in Sept. 1969, the road from Livengood to the Yukon River was built in winter 1969-1970, etc. …)

While ceremony and excitement surrounded the day witnessed by dignitaries, including Senator Ted Stevens, pipeline and industry leadership, media, and a curious crowd of Alaskans (including a passing dog sled team), the energy of the event was sunk when the pipeline floated.

PBS’ The Alaska Pipeline Collection’s The Tale of the Concrete Horseshoenoted: “The first challenge came on the very first day pipe was laid in the Tonsina River. An empty pipe is buoyant, so it had to be weighed down with a 7,000-pound horseshoe. If it isn’t done right, the pipe comes floating to the surface. Bill Howitt, then an Alyeska engineer, said: ‘The first pipe went in and there were dignitaries all around and everybody clapped and kind of walked away and they were almost gone when the concrete weight slipped off and she came up.’”

The New York Times, in an April 10, 1975, article reported, “Two weeks ago Alyeska flew newsmen and dignitaries to witness installation of the first buried pipe at the Tonsina River crossing 75 miles north of Valdez. … A portion of that 1,500 feet of steel later floated to the top of the river but Alyeska blamed that complication on concrete weighted collars designed to hold the pipe in place. The company said the situation was corrected a short time after it occurred. … ‘We’ve had our last ceremony until we finish the pipeline,’ spokesman Robert Miller said.”

Related

Community Info 8868758325818675878

News From The Black Spruce Forest

This is the Life

This is the Life
The Gulkana River Bridge

Click Here For Front Page

Too Far North: David Mudrick

Too Far North: David Mudrick

Check Road Conditions Here

Check Road Conditions Here
Click On 511 Site

CLICK: TAKE A BREAK

CLICK: TAKE A BREAK
Read The Bearfoot Guide To Roadside Alaska

Today's Top Journal Stories

This Is The Search Engine

This Month's Journal Stories

The Journal Is Copyrighted Material

The Journal Is Copyrighted Material
All rights reserved. Contact us at 907-320-1145 or write: Linda.ncountry@gci.net
item