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specifically to raise funds for a new school in
Anchorage. For this and other civic leadership, Jane Mears Middle School was named in her honor. His son Frederick Mears III was born on Christmas Day 1915. He later attended Yale and joined the navy as pilot in Guadalcanal and other Pacific Battles.
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broke out and Mears left Alaska and returned to
Leavenworth to where he organized and took command of the United States Army Thirty-first Railway Engineers regiment. He then went on to France to build the railroad system for the Allied forces. After World War I, Colonel Mears and his family returned
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in
Washington State. The 7.9-mile-long tunnel was completed in 36 months and the dedication on January 12, 1929, was a nationwide radio media event. The event was broadcast over a coast-to-coast network of NBC stations – a radio network established on December 28, just two weeks prior to the
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In May 1906, Mears went to work relocating portions of the Panama
Railroad. In 1907, Mears received a promotion to first lieutenant. That same year he married Jennifer (also known as Jennie, Jane, or Johnnie) Wainwright at
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was built on Dutch Harbor in the
Aleutian Islands during the summer of 1941. At its peak, the number of troops stationed at Fort Mears reached 10,000 people. tribute to Colonel Mears can be found at the site of the
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Bridge on the Alaska
Railroad which when built under the management of Col Mears was the longest single span bridge in North America at 702 ft. The bridge is known as the
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and railroad engineer and executive. He was the son of a career army officer and his brother Major Edward C. Mears was also in the US army. Mears was principal engineer of the
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On July 7, 1923, Colonel Mears resigned from the army and the Alaska
Engineering Commission and, with his family, left Anchorage for Seattle to start with the
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He spent virtually all of his formative years immersed in army life as his father spent 31 years in the military. At 15 years old, Mears enrolled at
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Cascade Tunnel broadcast. Colonel Mears died on
January 11, 1939, at the age of 60 at Seattle, Washington, from pneumonia. He is buried at
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The US Army honored
Frederick Mears’ service in Alaska by dedicating one of its posts in his memory during World War II.
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in the work of constructing the canal. Together they went back to Panama and started their family.
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His son
Frederick Mears III was a pilot in the US Army Air Corps and was awarded the
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Stevens Pass: The Story of Railroading and Recreation in the North Cascades
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to Alaska; he was appointed Chief Engineer to help complete the railroad.
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147:(May 5, 1878 – January 11, 1939) was an American military officer in the
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350:(1st ed.). United States: Binford & Mort Pubs. p. 304.
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A Dawn Like Thunder: The True Story of Torpedo Squadron Eight
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16:American Army officer and engineer (1878-1939)
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180:. having been next in authority to
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299:. Mears III died June 26, 1943.
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321:History of Oregon Illustrated
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198:Alaska Engineering Commission
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319:Carney, Charles H. (1922).
157:Infantry and Cavalry School
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371:Roe, JoAnn (Jan 1, 1995).
297:Distinguished Flying Cross
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192:In April 1914, President
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285:Mears Memorial Bridge
137:Major Edward C. Mears
423:at Wikimedia Commons
200:. With Mears’s help
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55:May 25, 1878
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218:World War I
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83:Nationality
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276:Fort Mears
250:Early life
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104:Fort Mears
91:Occupation
70:1939-01-11
51:1878-05-25
348:Get Mears
264:Minnesota
260:Faribault
206:Anchorage
134:Relatives
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