List of White Alice Communications System sites


This is a list of White Alice Communications System sites. The White Alice Communications System was a United States Air Force telecommunication link system constructed in Alaska during the Cold War. It featured tropospheric scatter links and line-of-sight microwave radio links.

Original White Alice installations

These sites were part of the initial White Alice system and connected Aircraft Control and Warning sites with central command and control facilities. The Boswell Bay to Neklasson Lake link was both the first and last operational link in the White Alice system, serving from 1956 to 1985.

Tropospheric scatter sites

Microwave sites

Dual Tropo/Micro

Note: There were Tropo Billboards at Soldotna and at Fire Island, as well.
Also, There was a TD-2 site at what is now the Civil Air Patrol Wing Headquarters on Elmendorf AFB—it was called R2N.
And, there is a TD-2 site at Rabbit Creek, that was originally, and briefly, called R1S, which linked into the TD-2 site at Naptowne.
The second segment of White Alice was a pair of TD-2 microwave radio links that supported the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System at Clear Air Force Station. This section provided two routes from Alaska to NORAD in Colorado, for this reason it was also known as the Rearward Communications System. The A Route went down the southeast coast of Alaska to a submarine cable and the B Route went east into Canada. Some of the systems were colocated with previous sites.

A Route

Aurora, Black Rapids, Boswell Bay, Cape Yakataga, Clear, Donnelly Dome, Duncan Canal, Glennallen, Harding Lake, Hoonah, McCallum, Murphy Dome, Neklasson Lake, Ocean Cape, Paxson, Pedro Dome, Sawmill, Sheep Mountain, Smuggler Cove, Tahneta Pass, Tolsona

B Route

Beaver Creek, Canyon Creek, Cathedral, Delta Junction, Gerstle River, Gold King Creek, Knob Ridge, Tok Junction

Project Stretchout sites

Project Stretchout began in 1959 and finished in the mid-1960s. It was the extension of White Alice to the Alaska Peninsula including the Aleutian DEW Line system.
LocationOperationalColocated withCoordinatesNotes
Cold Bay, AlaskaDEW LineEst.About $8 million combined cost for Cold Bay and Cape Sarichef
Driftwood Bay, AlaskaDEW LineEst.
Nikolski, AlaskaDEW Line, Navy, FAAEst.
Port Heiden, AlaskaDEW LineEst.$3.5 million
Port Moller, AlaskaDEW LineEst.$4.4 million to construct.
Cape Sarichef, Alaskalate 1950s to the mid-1970sDEW line / LORAN station / AirfieldEst.Built atop a levelled cinder cone

Project Bluegrass sites

Extension of the White Alice system from Nikolski to Shemya near the end of the Aleutian Islands. Both shots were over, requiring large antennas and 50 kW transmitters. Both sites were demolished before 1987. In addition to the Aleutian Island extension, Project Bluegrass also included a 50 kW shot from Fort Yukon to Barter Island to connect the northern DEW line to the White Alice system.
LocationOperationalColocated withCoordinatesNotes
Shemya island, AlaskaLate-60s to late-70sAC&W / FAAShemya to Adak shot was
Adak, AlaskaLate-60s to late-70sNavy and othersEst.Adak to Nikolski shot was.