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Coast Guard Air Station Salem

1935 establishments in Massachusetts1970 disestablishments in MassachusettsAirports in Essex County, MassachusettsBuildings and structures in Salem, MassachusettsClosed facilities of the United States Coast Guard
Defunct airports in MassachusettsMilitary installations in MassachusettsUnited States Coast Guard Air StationsUnited States Coast Guard Aviation
Aerial view of Coast Guard Air Station Salem in 1952
Aerial view of Coast Guard Air Station Salem in 1952

Coast Guard Air Station Salem was a United States Coast Guard air station located in Salem, Massachusetts from 1935 to 1970. Its area of coverage extended from New York City to the Canada–United States border.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Coast Guard Air Station Salem (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Coast Guard Air Station Salem
Winter Island Road, Salem

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Wikipedia: Coast Guard Air Station SalemContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.526388888889 ° E -70.868611111111 °
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Address

Coast Guard Air Station Salem (historical)

Winter Island Road 50
01970 Salem
Massachusetts, United States
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Website
cgaviationhistory.org

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Aerial view of Coast Guard Air Station Salem in 1952
Aerial view of Coast Guard Air Station Salem in 1952
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Nearby Places

Fort Lee (Salem, Massachusetts)
Fort Lee (Salem, Massachusetts)

Fort Lee is a historic American Revolutionary War fort in Salem, Massachusetts. The site, located at a high point next to Fort Avenue on Salem Neck, is a relatively rare fortification from that period whose remains are relatively unaltered. It is an irregular 5-pointed star fort. Although there is some documentary evidence that the Neck was fortified as early as the 17th century, the earthworks built in 1776 are the first clear evidence of the site's military use. Reportedly, the fort had a garrison of 3 officers and 100 artillerymen with 16 guns. The site, of which only overgrown earthworks and a stone magazine survive, was repaired in the 1790s, and rebuilt for the American Civil War. A state cultural resource document states that the fort has not been much modified since the Revolution, and has not been built over. It was garrisoned by the Massachusetts militia in the War of 1812, abandoned afterwards, and rebuilt with four 8-inch columbiads in the Civil War. An Army engineer drawing dated 1872 depicts the fort's five-pointed trace and the four Civil War gun positions. It was also garrisoned during the Spanish–American War.The property was federalized in 1867, and transferred to the City of Salem in 1922. The site was briefly rehabilitated at the time of the United States bicentennial in 1976, with trails and interpretive signs, but these were later removed, and the site has again become overgrown. Earthworks and a stone magazine remain. The fort site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.