
Roosevelt Inn
RESERVATIONS
1-800-257-8923

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Hotel Phone
1-605-666-4599
Phone Hours
8 a.m. ~ 10 p.m.
Hotel email
info@rosyinn.com
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Stratobowl
| Distance |
12 miles |
| Time
Needed: |
Say a few minutes to
an hour or more |
| Best
Time To Go: |
Anytime |
| Directions: |
The bowl itself
is on private land and it is not marked on most maps, There is,
however, a overlook and commemorative plaque on an overlook above the
bowl. |
| Cost: |
Free |
| Highlights: |
The place where the
space age was born Where the first manned flights into the
stratosphere began. |
| Description: |
The
stratobowl is one of those hidden, nearly
secret, gems of the Black Hills that few people nowadays visit or even
know
about. As a geological feature it is a spectacular place with 500 foot
cliffs on three sides above as small flat plain no bigger than a few
football fields.
The best approach
is from a closed forest service road to the east rim. The road is
located about 10 miles south of Rapid City off the westbound lanes of
US Highway 16. As you approach from the east, there is a BP gas station
and RV center on the right side of the road. The forest service road is
about 2/10ths of a mile past the RV center and is closed motorized
traffic. You need to walk in about 3/4th mile from the gate.
At the overlook, you will be at the spot where the
national press corps and thousands of spectators gathered in the mid 1930s to
watch America's first high-altitude balloon flights. The altitude
records
set in these flights (72,395 feet) stood until the dawn of the space
age
in the late 1950s. The flights were sponsored by the National Geographic Society
and the U.S. Army Air Corps.
An account of the record-setting flight by the pilot, Capt. Albert Stevens, can be found here.
More recently Steve Fossett launched hist first
around the world attempts from the Stratobowl in January of 1996. You
can read an account of that adventure at balloonlife.com
It is
also possible to drive down into the bowl itself, but the field is located on
private property which is fenced off and posted.
You can also learn more by visiting the
South Dakota
Air and Space Museum at Box Elder, South Dakota.
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