Missile Master[2] was a US Army surface-to-air missile control complex/facility.[1][3][4][5] It controlled Project Nike missiles. Virtually all Missile Masters had a bunker housing the Martin AN/FSG-1 Antiaircraft Defense System,[6] as well as additional structures for "an AN/FPS-33 defense acquisition radar (DAR) or similar radar, two height-finder radars," and identification friend or foe secondary radar[7] (e.g., AN/TPX-19 radar interrogator). The radars, along with Automated Data Links (ADL) from remote Nike firing units, provided data into the AN/FSG-1 tracking subsystem with the DAR providing surveillance coverage to about 200 miles (320 km).[7][8]
Missile Master | |
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CA IL MA MD MI NJ(2) NY PA WA | |
Type | military installations |
Siting
editMissile Master radars and the control bunker were usually co-located. Sometimes they were co-located with a USAF radar station such as the Arlington Heights Army Installation.[9][3] Conversely, the Fort MacArthur Direction Center used radars ~3 mi (4.8 km) away at San Pedro Hill AFS. The single-site Camp Pedricktown Army Air Defense Base was later reconfigured[when?] to use radar data from Gibbsboro AFS[10] 15 mi (24 km) away.[11]
Nuclear bunker
editThe Missile Master's two-story fallout-proof & blast-resistant "main building" housed the AN/FSG-1 crew consoles in the "Blue Room" (tiered Antiaircraft Operations Center, AAOC).[2][12][13] The bunker also included an entrance room with decontamination shower,[6] commander's office; separate rooms for the AN/FSG-1 computer (rows of racks/boxes), storage, ADL, and other system equipment; utility rooms for HVAC and other support systems,[12] and a decontamination water storage room under the AAOC. "Our radar must be kept above ground. If that goes, we are out of business anyway" (BGen Robert A. Hewitt), so a less expensive and more vulnerable partially exposed bunker was acceptable for the AN/FSG-1. "Autonomous Operations" allowed remote missile batteries surviving a nuclear strike to launch without AADCP inputs.[14][13]
Construction
editInstallation of a Missile Master took approximately 18 months[15] and required an AN/TSQ-8 Fire Unit Integration Facility (FUIF) be installed at each Nike fire unit to provide the ADL interface between the AN/FSG-1 and the fire control system.[specify] The Highlands Army Air Defense Site was completed at an existing SAGE radar station and cost ~$2 million for the new equipment and ~$2 million for the structures: 170 ft × 90 ft (52 m × 27 m) bunker, power[clarification needed] building,[16] and 4 radar towers[4] (a Missile Master at a new radar station was $9 million).[17] Additional equipment and facilities included tankage for electricity generator fuel, storage for drinking & decontamination water,[18] telephone lines, etc. In addition to the Martin Company's AN/FSG-1 subcontractors, the Corps of Engineers hired local construction contractors for the facility structures, e.g., Kirkland Construction for Ft Heath[19] and Rust Engineering for the Oakdale Army Installation[20][21] (the Corps tailored the bunker to each site from the "baseline standard drawings".)[16] Each Missile Master had 200 total personnel, and maintenance of the AN/FSG-1, the radars, and other systems was provided by an Army "Signal Missile Master Support Detachment"[17] of 10-15 soldiers.[22] All of the vacuum tube AN/FSG-1 computers were replaced prior to the end of Project Nike.
Closure
editExternal image | |
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Ft Meade building | |
empty Highlands bunker in 2008 | |
bunker floor plan | |
Arlington Heights AI bunker | |
1961 Arlington Heights site (5 radars) | |
Ft MacArthur bunker | |
sketch of Oakdale complex |
Army Air Defense Command Posts (AADCPs) were still at 5 Missile Masters on July 1, 1973 (CA IL MD NJ WA—all with AN/TSQ-51 CCCS except the Ft Lawton BIRDIE)[23]: C-24 prior to the Army's February 4, 1974, announcement to end Project Nike.[24] The Camp Pedricktown site was designated an historic site in 1998 by the Salem Historic Preservation Office,[25] and documents regarding the Selfridge site have been entered in the Historical American Engineering Record.[12] In 1999 a romantic comedy set at a midwest US Army missile post was published as a paperback with the name Missile Master[26] (the Kansas and Nebraska AADCPs had BIRDIES and never had bunkers.)
References
edit- ^ a b FM 44-1: U. S. Army Air Defense Employment (PDF). Headquarters, Department of the Army. October 11, 1965. Archived from the original (field manual) on March 9, 2013. Retrieved 2011-09-06.
The Missile Master includes…defense acquisition and height-finding radars… The Missile Master may receive automatic data link input from SAGE … FM 44-10…AN/FSG-1…FM 44-13 U.S. Army Air Defense Fire Direction System, AN/MSG-4 (Missile Monitor)…FM 44-14 U.S. Army Air Defense Fire Direction System, AN/GSG-5(V) and AN/GSG-6
- ^ a b "Magic in the Skies: The Missile Master" (PDF). The National Guardsman. August 1956. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
- ^ a b Freeman, Paul (June 4, 2011) [2002]. "Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields: Illinois, Northwestern Chicago area". Airfields-Freeman.com. Archived from the original on June 22, 2011.
On April 6, 1959, BG Peter Schmick, Brigade CG, announced the purchase of the land,along with plans for the construction of the Command Post, 5 radar towers and supporting buildings, to house the Missile Master.The official dedication of the nation's first [sic] operational automatic electronic weapon system to coordinate all elements of antiaircraft defense was made on October 28, 1960.
- ^ a b "Missile Master Defense System to Cost Millions: Army Opens Bids" (PDF). Red Bank Register. Red Bank, New Jersey. June 12, 1958. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 2011-09-06.
- ^ Weidlich, Robin J.; Gettings Smith, Kathryn A.; Trieschmann, Laura V. (2000). Recordation of the Nike Missile Master Complex Pedrickstown U.S. Army Reserve Support Facility Pedrickstown, New Jersey (Report). Retrieved 2011-09-19.
- ^ a b Morris, Earl (2009). "Missile Master Roof Bulges". Yahoo.com. Archived from the original on 2013-01-05. Retrieved 2011-09-30.
- ^ a b "Chapter 3" (PDF). Army Air Defense Control Systems. Hillman Hall, Fort Bliss, Texas: U. S. Army Air Defense School. January 1965. Retrieved 2011-09-28.
The term "radar netting" (fig 43) describes the process by which track data derived from several additional or remote radars are gathered at a single center to produce an integrated set of meaningful target information
Ch. 2, p. 17 NOTE: The p. 36 image with scrub brush ("Figure 34") titled "Missile Master" is identified differently in the text as "SAGE (fig 34)" - ^ Fay, Elton C. (March 24, 1956). "'Missile Master' Revealed by Army" (Newspaper Archive). Lake Charles American Press. Lake Charles, Louisiana. p. 14. Retrieved 2011-09-19.
- ^ Bender, Donald E. "Cold War at Campgaw Mountain". BergenCountyHistory.org. Retrieved 2011-09-27.
the Army Air Defense Command Post at Highlands, New Jersey opened during 1960 … co-located with the Highlands Air Force Station…
- ^ Page, Tom (2004). "The Gibbsboro AFS - Pedricktown AI Relationship (and Associated Trivia)". Radomes.org. Retrieved 2012-01-26.
- ^ "Air Defense on the Delaware: The Pedricktown Missile Master Site, 1960-1966". Archived from the original on 2011-08-06. Retrieved 2012-04-01.
- ^ a b c Selfridge Field, Building No. 1050… (Report). Library of Congress: Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record. Retrieved 2011-09-27. NOTE: The labels on one of the HAER floor plans are for after the AADCP when the bunker was used for air traffic control (rooms for RAPCON, ATCALS, etc.)
- ^ a b "Base is Dedicated: 'Blue Room' at Missile Master Gives Eerie But Secure Feeling" (PDF). Red Bank Register. Red Bank, New Jersey. June 7, 1960. pp. 1–2. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 23, 2012. Retrieved 2011-09-30. (photograph caption).
- ^ Stephens, Gary (October 1999). "Three Hours from Armageddon: Life at a Cold War Nike Missile Site". ADA Magazine Online. AuthorsDen.com. Archived from the original on 2013-06-23. Retrieved 2011-10-04.
The EWPB operator starts calling out and plotting hostile inbound tracks. … An AADCP-generated "foe" symbol is around each radar return on the scope. One of these symbols indicates that our battery is to engage that target.
- ^ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Google News Archive Search
- ^ a b Brown v. Jersey Central Power and Light Co. (New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division). "The power building at Highlands was "in a 25' x 17' cinderblock building, designated on the plans as "Switch Gear Room Bldg. 118." The equipment in this small building permits the missile site to switch back and forth from external commercial power to its own internal power from diesel generators. …van housing the computer"
- ^ a b "New Firing Control System: Army Unveils Missile Mentor" (PDF). Red Bank Register. Red Bank, New Jersey. February 1, 1967. p. 13. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 13, 2011. Retrieved 2011-09-15.
faster, more reliable and less expensive … replaces the Army's six Missile Master systems…and four…BIRDIE…employed almost five years. …the original cost of the Missile Master…was in excess of $9 million for each site, while the Missile Mentor costs less than $1 million each. …[annual] operating and maintenance costs…would be $250,000, cf. $1 million…of Missile Master. …50 to 60 persons [cf.] approximately 200 [for] Missile Master … Missile Mentor…fits compactly into two trailer vans. One van holds the battle station, display consoles for the defense commander and equipment operators, the other houses the computer and circuit panels …[At] the Highlands Defense Site, the Missile Mentor [is] in the…building once occupied by [the] Missile Master. …built under a $10 million contract with the Army Missile Command (MICOM).
- ^ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Google News Archive Search
- ^ "Nike Missile Boston Defense Area". Nike. TheMilitaryStandard. Retrieved 2011-09-27.
- ^ ""Missile Master" System Planned" (Google News). The Washington Observer. July 12, 1958. Retrieved 2011-09-30.
- ^ The Pittsburgh Press – Google News Archive Search
- ^ Unit Histories
- ^ McMaster, B. N.; et al. (December 1984). Historical Overview of the Nike Missile System (PDF) (Report). Environmental Science and Engineering, Inc. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-02. Retrieved 2011-09-16.
*NOTE: Estimates for AN/FSG-1 dates with asterisks are from the annual July 1 maps in McMaster's report, which don't show a symbol near the Pedricktown NJ site but instead mark a Missile Master north of Philadelphia near Allentown/Bethlehem PA. Also, although Berhow 2005 claims 7 of the 10 AN/FSG-1 systems were replaced with AN/TSQ-51 systems, the maps only show 6 AN/TSQ-51 Missile Mentors in 1966 at former Missile Master sites, with Ft Heath instead shown with an AN/FSG-1 Missile Master in 1964 (near a separate Massachusetts BIRDIE), then a Ft Heath BIRDIE in 1966 & 1967, a Ft Heath Missile Mentor in 1968 & 1969, and no Ft Heath AADCP in 1970 (a Rhode Island Missile Mentor was depicted in 1970; but not in 1971.) Likewise, the report's maps show the replacement Lockport BIRDIE subsequently switched to a Missile Mentor between July 1, 1967 & July 1, 1968 (as did Homestead-Miami.) - ^ McGrath, John J (historian, Center of Military History) (1998–2002). "Continental Air Defense Collection" (Finding Aid). USAHEC. Retrieved 2011-09-28.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places" (PDF). NJ DEP - Historic Preservation Office. 2011-06-09. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-12-04. Retrieved 2011-09-27.
Oldmans Township Nike Missile Master Complex (ID#3720) Delaware Road, Camp Pedricktown SHPO Opinion: 6/22/1998
- ^ Kirts, D. K. (May 1999). Missile Master. Pulpless.com, Incorporated. ISBN 158445105X.