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The Flying L became a 542-acre “dude ranch” in 1946, when Jack Lapham (the “L” in Flying L) purchased it from the original polish settlers. At that time, Lapham was a retired Air Corps colonel. His dream was to create a place “where modern people can go and find themselves in the midst of yesterday.” Flying was his love, so the colonel built an airstrip and ran a flight school here. New aircraft was also tested here and new aircraft designs were introduced at the Flying L. http://www.airfields-freeman.com/TX/Airfields_TX_SanAntonioW.htm#flyingl The Ranch Villas were designed by associates of the famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright and are rich in history. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Take a look back in history. Article from 1947 Life Magazine on the Flying L Guest Ranch: America's first dude ranch airpark opens with a rollicking round up of new fashions designed for rides and fliers. On retiring from the Army Air Forces two years ago, wealthy Texas Oilman Colonel Jack Lapham conceived the idea for a unique kind of dude ranch. A 7,000 hour flier, he had always deplored the inconvenient and unsightly airports private fliers had to use. Lapham decided to build one that was both practical and pleasant and make it into a resort. The result was the Flying L Ranch, opened last month, the first dude ranch airpark in the U.S. Thoroughly equipped with runways, repair shops and expert mechanics, the Flying L offers its guests turkey hunts, black-bass fishing and excellent riding, all for $15 a day. The 12 cottages are built to resemble airplanes and the pilots' lounge, right on the landing field, serves as a dance pavilion. Colonel Lapham and his wife run the ranch, less concerned with realizing a profit on their $750,000 investment than with making the Flying L the first of a series of air ranches all over the country. A show of specially designed flying and ranching clothes marked the airpark's formal opening. Nostalgic pictures from the Flying L Guest Ranch 1947 from the Life Magazine article.
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