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Chester Creek (Alaska)

Rivers of AlaskaRivers of Anchorage, Alaska
Anchorage Alaska and Sleeping Lady
Anchorage Alaska and Sleeping Lady

Chester Creek is one of several streams that flow through the city of Anchorage, Alaska. It runs for 21 miles (34 km) from the Chugach Mountains to the Knik Arm of Cook Inlet.The creek connects a number of parks, open spaces, and lakes to form a green corridor running from east to west through the city. A paved trail follows the creek for part of its course through the areas from Goose Lake to Westchester Lagoon. The Chester Creek drainage roughly includes most of the old City of Anchorage.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Chester Creek (Alaska) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Chester Creek (Alaska)
Tony Knowles Coastal Trail, Anchorage

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 61.20833 ° E -149.92475 °
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Address

Tony Knowles Coastal Trail

Tony Knowles Coastal Trail
99517 Anchorage
Alaska, United States
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Anchorage Alaska and Sleeping Lady
Anchorage Alaska and Sleeping Lady
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Nearby Places

Oscar Gill House
Oscar Gill House

The Oscar Gill House is a historic house at 1344 West Tenth Avenue in the South Addition neighborhood of Anchorage, Alaska. It is one of Anchorage's oldest buildings. It is a two-story wood-frame structure, three bays wide, with a side gable roof. The bays are asymmetrically arranged, with a single-window bay on the right and a double-window bay on the left. The center bay is taken up by a projecting gable-roofed vestibule, in which the door is slightly off-center. The house's modest Craftsman style includes extended eaves with exposed rafter ends, and it has retained original interior flooring and woodwork. The house was built in 1913 by Oscar Gill in the (now ghost) town of Knik at the head of Knik Arm. When Anchorage was established in 1916, Gill had the house barged across the inlet, and it stood at 918 West Tenth Avenue for many decades. The house was removed from that site in 1982 to accommodate expansion of the Anchorage Pioneer Home, one of many historic houses throughout downtown Anchorage which fell victim to a real estate and building boom that intensified in 1982 and 1983. Unlike other similar structures, most of which spent years in storage on municipally-owned land but were eventually demolished, this house was spared. It sat on a vacant lot on P Street, across from the western end of the Delaney Park Strip, for approximately a decade and a half before being moved to its present location. The house has been operated as a bed and breakfast establishment since that time. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2001.