GC4V3CH Traditional Cache Airway Beacon 3 - Denver to Cheyenne
Type: Traditional | Size: Micro Micro | Difficulty: 1.5 out of 5 | Terrain: 1.5 out of 5
By: beartooth72, mouse_0000 @ | Hide Date: 11/25/2013 | Status: Available
Country: United States | State: Colorado
Coordinates: N40° 22.719 W104° 52.249 | Last updated: 08/30/2019 | Fav points: 0

In 1924, the federal government funded enormous concrete arrows to be built every 10 miles or so along established airmail routes to help the pilots trace their way across America at night.

Each was built connected to a 50 foot tall tower with a rotating light and a rest house for the folks that maintained the generators and lights.  This series of caches is placed to commemorate these lost pieces of American history.


The United States Postal Service first made the arrows in 1924. What? The Postal Service? Why did they make the arrows? In the early 1920s, airplanes hadn’t been around for very long. The Postal Service was experimenting with using airplanes to deliver mail. The Postal Service established routes along which to fly airmail. They called the routes “airways.” The Postal Service decided that pilots needed to be able to fly during both day and night to deliver the mail quickly. So they came up with the idea of building arrows and beacons. They built the towers in the middle of the concrete arrows. These giant arrows were the foundations for electrical beacons. The postal service hired people to turn on the beacons every night to guide airmail pilots flying airways in the dark. These people were a lot like lighthouse keepers.

How far apart were the arrows? They placed the beacons about every ten miles along an airway. The beacons or lights sat on top of tall steel towers, between 20 and 87 feet high. The beacons were two, very bright lights (1,250,000 candlepower). They ran on electricity and rotated so that a pilot would see flashes. They were only 10 miles apart so that when a pilot arrived at one beacon, he could see the flashes of the next. Did the arrows all point the same direction? No. The arrows pointed towards the next beacon along the airway, so pilots could use them to stay on course during daylight hours. The towers and foundations were painted with bright colors (yellow and black or orange and white) so pilots could see them easily.

The department worried that beacons were not good enough to guide pilots during bad weather. Soon it experimented with radio and radar, since these might be more efficient methods of guiding pilots. As these methods improved, the department decommissioned the lighted beacons. The department removed most of them by the mid-1940s. They took down the steel towers to be used for other things in other places. They left the foundations to confuse future archaeologists that were born years after they were removed.

Each beacon was given a name based on the Airmail Route it was pointing for, which beacon it was in the chain, and a Permanent Identifier (PID) name for tracking by the NGS.

This cache is placed near Beacon 3 of the Denver to Cheyenne airway, PID LL1245. The beacon at this location has long ago been plowed under in the nearby field. The cell tower here has deceived some into thinking the beacon still exists, but the actual coordinates place the beacon to the west by at least 100’.

Congratulations to Team Kremser for being First to Find!!!!

Additional Waypoints

R14V3CH - Beacon 3 location
N 40° 22.692 W 104° 52.321
Actual location of Beacon 3, now destroyed.
 Custom URLs

Add cache to watch list
Log your visit
Picture Gallery

 Additional Waypoints (1)

CodeNameTypeCommentsDateCoordinatesDistance
R14V3CHBeacon 3 location Reference Point Actual location of Beacon 3, now destroyed. 12/05/2013 N 40° 22.692 W 104° 52.321 0.11 kms SW 

 Nearby Caches

GC67DBY Template Strand (13.48 kms W)
GC41Y2W TR #4 (15.65 kms NW)
GC41Y32 TR #5 (15.68 kms NW)
GCA2EK4 Barasaur's 8th Annual Merry Cachemas 202 (17.45 kms NW)
GC6XE8P Quick and Easy :-) (29.37 kms W)

   


Driving Directions

 Logs

10 Logs: Found it 10  

Found it 06/24/2019 By airport101
It was awesome one of the coolest hiding places look at the fence

Found it 05/19/2019 By tylergarcialater
Typg
Cool find

Found it 05/18/2019 By bb44444
Good hide

Found it 05/10/2019 By herndonrd
Roadtrip to the Greeley/Johnstown/Windsor area for the letterbox powertrail, Wingin' it wherigos, What the Frack multis and anything else that caught our attention. Grabbed this one along the way. TFTC!

Found it 05/10/2019 By fearthefish
Out and about caching with the lovable and cuddly herndonrd (affectionately known by me as Mr. Disneyland - the happiest person on Earth). We decided to spend the day north of Denver to grab lots of letterboxes, multis, Wherigos, and whatever else tickled our fancy.

We were now on the letterbox trail and taking turns hopping out of the car to make the find. We figured out rather quickly where we should look for each one, and found this one with ease. Once we had the cache in hand and did the sign and replace thing, we were off to find the rest of the hides we had on our list for the day. Thanks for the fun hide and for your contribution to a great day of caching.

P. S. No animals (including humans, aliens, or PayMeCache) were harmed in the writing of this log.

P. P. S. Enjoyed the break from the letterbox hides to learn about the history here. Thanks for sharing.

Found it 07/24/2018 By TalonLS
TFTCSL Found with my dad today.

Found it 07/24/2018 By OwenfromKC
TFTCSL It was nice to be able to get off the road to log this cache. Log is a bit full so we signed in the margin. Otherwise all is well here. Thanks for the stop and history.

Found it 07/22/2018 By Izzifix
Arrived yesterday from Switzerland and heading North with FWIA and Harvestmoon2 to get a new state (Wyoming) for me before we travel back to the South of Colorado for some family time! TFTC and best regards, Izzifix

Found it 07/22/2018 By HarvestMoon2
Came to Denver to pick up my cousins FWIA & Izzifix. Made a quick trip to Cheyenne then back to Colorado. Thanks to all the CO’s for placing these caches.

Found it 07/22/2018 By FWIA
Ah yes, back in beautiful Colorado with Izzifix & Harvestmoon2 for family time, caching, and GCCO Campout fun. ( A little side trip to Cheyenne, WY for Izzifix)

Thanks to all the CO’s for placing the caches we enjoyed hunting. Much appreciated!

Log stamped FWIA, Izzifix, HM2.