Friday, May 20, 2011

MORE ON BOBBY BENSON & ALASKA'S FLAG

BIG DIPPER & THE NORTH STAR

On May 2, 1927, the Territorial Legislature unanimously passed an act to adopt Benson's design as the official flag. His prize was an engraved watch and $1,000 to pay for a trip to Washington, D.C., with the intent that Benson would present the flag to President Calvin Coolidge in person. When those travel plans did not work out, the Legislature set aside the money for Benson's further education.  As a young man he went to Seattle and used the money to study diesel engines.  That got him out of subsistence fishing and into a life’s work as a mechanic.

Alaska's new flag of blue and gold silk first flew over the Jesse Lee Home in Unalaska on July 9, which is now recognized annually as Alaska Flag Day. During the special ceremony, Benson received his gold watch, which had been engraved with the flag design. As an adult, Benson made his home in Kodiak, where he raised two daughters and became a grandfather. Occasionally he made and signed replicas of the flag that he designed. The last one he made, at age 58, is now on display at the Alaskan Native Heritage Center in Anchorage. Benny, always a modest and humble man, gave his watch to an Alaskan Museum as well.


Anchorage in 1972


Benson worked as a master carpenter and as an airplane mechanic for Kodiak Airways from 1950 until his death on July 2, 1972. Having achieved celebrity at such a young age, Benson nonetheless is remembered on Kodiak as an unassuming man.



 
Big News in the Newest State
In 1959 the United States Congress formally made Alaska the 49th State of the United States.  The beauty and deeply felt spirit of Benny's Alaskan Territory flag was recognized by the new state and Benny's flag became the official flag of the new state.


Benny and the Governor


Anchorage's Benson Boulevard is named for him, as well as an Anchorage High School.  It is more like a special education vocational technology school rather than an academic school. In Kodiak, Benny Benson Drive honors their longtime resident.  There is even a variety of Kodiak wild grass named Benson Beach Wild Rye.  Ironically, the High School named for this big-hearted orphan is a school is for troubled kids and has within it a middle school for truants, dropouts and other of society's “bad” kids.




Once Benny's Home Ground


If you are on a ship that calls in Seward take a few moments to visit the Bobby Benson monument.  It is not an overwhelming place.  In fact, when I first saw it I said to myself “So this is it. Maybe it ought to be a bit more grand.”  Then I realized that it was completely consistent with Bobby; kind of just there but solid and done in the non-ostentatious Alaskan mainstream way.




Seward warmly remembers the young boy whose love for Alaska is reflected in the beauty of the flag. The monument erected in Benny Benson's honor is at Mile 1.4 of the Seward Highway. The roadside park is near the entrance to the town, across from the small boat harbor. In 1964, following the massive destruction of the Good Friday Earthquake, the Jesse Lee Home for Orphans moved again, from Seward to Anchorage. In 1970, it merged with Lutheran Youth Services and the Anchorage Christian Children's Home to create Alaska Children's Services. Since 1991, ACS has hosted Alaska Flag Day activities. Festivities on Alaska Flag Day retell the story of how one young boy forever left his mark on his homeland, Alaska, The Great Land.


Benny's Love of Alaska Still Waves Everyday

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