Details for Pilot's Lounge at Bandera Airpark

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5000023134

Data

Marker Number 23134
Atlas Number 5000023134
Marker Title Pilot's Lounge at Bandera Airpark
Index Entry Pilot's Lounge at Bandera Airpark
Address Airport Rd.
City Bandera
County Bandera
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 495622
UTM Northing 3287000
Subject Codes transportation; aviation; recreation; military topics; design and construction
Marker Year 2016
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark Yes
Marker Location Flying L Ranch Resort, Airport Road near Bottle Springs Road. Restricted access.
Private Property No
Marker Condition Access Restricted
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Colonel John Henry "Jack" Lapham (1885-1956) was a son of a co-founder of the Texas Company (later Texaco). He was living in San Antonio by 1920 and had many business interests. Jack, his wife, Julie Edna (Capen), and their four children all had pilots' licenses and were known as "The Flying Laphams." Jack's second wife, Lucy Jane (Thomas), was also an accomplished pilot. Jack Lapham, a WWI and WWII veteran, was a retired Army Air Corps colonel with a dream to create the first "dude ranch airpark" in the United States. In 1945, he bought a 486-acre ranch near Bandera from Dr. J.O. and Ethel Butler and established the Flying L Ranch. By late 1946, the site featured an airstrip, villas, lounges, a pool and flight training school for WWII veterans. From the air, the villas were designed to appear as planes flying in formation. The Pilots' Lounge was designed as a two-story concrete block quonset hut trimmed with handmade oak arches and cedar siding with a concrete roof. The second story has a horseshoe-shaped balcony with wooden floors and handmade oak railing and stairs. A large southeast-facing window provided a view of the landing strip and grounds. A May 1947 "Fashion Rodeo" at the Flying L Ranch was featured in several magazines, including an article in LIFE. Photographer Cornell Capa captured the event with more than 100 pictures of the fashion show hosted by Stanley Marcus of Neiman Marcus. Col. Lapham's dream of establishing a series of similar properties never materialized, and he and three others were killed in a 1956 plane crash near the airpark. Several national brands including Coca-Cola and aircraft manufacturers have filmed commercials here and guests have ranged from families to celebrities. Western movie star John Wayne stayed at the ranch when he was filming The Alamo near Brackettville in 1959-60. Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 2016

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