Col. William Lawrence shares experiences at northwest Indiana Nike sites
Subj: Info on Northwest Indiana Nike Sites
Date: 8/23/99 1:56:09 PM Central Daylight Time
From: wmjlrnc@erols.com (William J. Lawrence)
I was assigned to HQ, 79th AAA Missile Battalion (soon to be
redesignated
HQ, 1st Missile Battalion, 60th Artillery) at the Gary Airport in
July of
'58. I had just finished both the Nike Ajax and Hercules
Maintenance
Officer Courses in the preceding eighteen months. As the
Battalion Missile
Officer, I stayed at Fort Bliss to attend Nike Hercules Package
Training
with B Battery, Site C-32. I actually arrived in Gary in late
October. I
stayed at the Gary Airport site, C-45. The following spring,
after a six
week stint as an evaluator at the Red Canyon Missile Range, I was
sent to A
Battery, Site C-47, the Wheeler site, to take command. Halfway
through the
process, our higher Hq, 22d Air Defense Group in Orland Park, IL,
decided
that they needed the D Battery CO on their staff, so I detoured
to C-48, the
Glen Park site, and took it over, leaving C-47 to be commanded by
its XO.
In November of '59, I was given command of C-32, the Porter Nike
Hercules
site. I left there in September of '61 to attend the Artillery
Officers'
Career Course.
Given the above experience, I feel that I can make some relevant
observations about operations at these sites.
Site Location
Site C-45, the Gary Nike Site, was located near the Gary Regional
Airport.
Its largest area, the administrative area, was at the southwest
end of the
airport. It could be reached by an unimproved road leading
southwest from
U.S. 12 next to a railroad embankment. The area was originally
built to
house both a firing battery and a full HQ & HQ battery. By
the time I
joined the battalion, however, the headquarters had been
downsized and most
of its administrative functions moved to HQ 22d ADA Group at
Orland Park,
IL.
This left a fair bit of extra room for billeting, recreation, and
such
requirements. The site consisted of prefabricated metal
buildings, some
connected by unheated corridors. Latrines were in separate
buildings, which
made night trips there through unheated corridors a brisk walk in
winter.
The launcher area, consisting of two underground launching
sections, was
about a half mile further down the road away from U.S. 12. The
fire control
area was about a mile further down that same road, which had
turned directly
south. It had no radar towers.
Site C-48, the Glen Park Nike Site, had two areas just off Grant
Street.
The fire control system was in a small, fenced in area on the
east side of
Grant
Street, I think about halfway between W. 36th and W. 37th Aves.
It was
right behind a Midas Muffler Shop. This site also had no radar
towers.
This caused the Missile Tracking Radar some problems as it
attempted to hold
lock on either a missile or the test responder located directly
across the
line of traffic which ran along Grant Street. We hoped that the
traffic
would stop when
the war started. The administrative and launcher area was located
off of W.
37th Ave. to the west of Grant Street and behind a large shopping
center
containing a Montgomery Ward store. The construction was the same
as C-45,
and it too had only two launching sections.
Site C-32, the Porter Nike Site, had its administrative and fire
control
area just north of U.S. 20 on Mineral Springs Road. It was of
cinder block
construction, and had 40 foot radar towers. The launcher area was
on Wagner
Road, also north of U.S. 20 and across the street from a VFW
club. I
visited the site in the summer of '98 and found the
administrative area in
excellent shape under the ownership of the National Park Service.
Its
buildings had all received new siding and were in an excellent
state of
repair. All were in use, except the towers, which had been razed.
Even the
lawns were newly mowed, always a problem for us. When I journeyed
to see
the launcher area, however, I became as depressed as I had been
elated at
the sight of the other area. The above ground buildings had all
been
vandalized. The cyclone fences all had weeds growing up their
entire
height. I suddenly felt like I had come upon a jungle.
Site C-47, the Wheeler Nike Site, is where Mr. Hedges described
it. I
attempted to locate it from memory using a current map, but
simply could not
recall the roads that I used to get there in the old days. I note
the
efforts to keep C-47 as a tribute to the Nike program, and I hope
they will
be successful. I'll check that out when I'm back that way next.
My late
wife was from Gary, and her brother and his family run a car
dealership in
Chesterton, so I still visit.
Evolution of the Chicago-Gary Defense.
Nike sites are deployed in a ring around the defended area, to
the extent
the terrain warrants. Obviously, the planners did not want to
build sites
offshore into Lake Michigan, so the plan was modified.
Originally, the
defense consisted of 24 Nike Ajax fire units, organized into two
groups of
three battalions each. When the Nike Hercules missile system was
deployed,
its greater range and lethality permitted the area to be defended
with less
sites. I believe that the 24 sites were downsized to seven prior
to their
final inactivation. The sites were inactivated when it was
determined that
the major threat to the Chicago-Gary area was no longer
air-breathing
aircraft but rather InterContinental Ballistic Missiles. A
logical
progression would have been to replace the Nike Hercules system
with an
Anti-Ballistic Missile System: the Nike Zeus or its successors
(Sentinel,
Safeguard), but these systems had not yet reliably solved their
technical
problems. Later, a treaty was signed with the USSR which limited
such
deployments, effectively killing the initiative. Hawk, the Army's
other
major ADA missile system, was kept as a defense of tactical
forces in the
field in such places as Germany and Korea, with one exception,
the Homestead
AFB, FL defense which was installed after the Cuban missile
crisis..
The Life of a Nike Missileman
There is no doubt about it. Life was tough for the officers and
enlisted
men assigned to the Northern Indiana Nike sites. The major reason
for that
was the tremendously long hours that they put in. Work weeks of
eighty to
one hundred hours were not uncommon. Of course there was the
normal work
day, spent training to increase teamwork and proficiency and
maintaining the
equipment to keep it at a high state of readiness. Beyond that, a
number of
the defense's sites were maintained on 15 minute status. That is
to say,
the site should be able to launch a missile at a hostile aircraft
within 15
minutes of being put on battle stations. It was common that at
least one of
the sites of 1/60 would be on 15 minute status at any given time.
Unannounced drills were performed frequently to determine if this
state of
readiness was achieved. As a matter of fact, that was my major
job during
my first months there, to run the battalion's Operational
Readiness
Evaluation (ORE) team. My orders were simple: to run the most
firm, fair,
and chicken---- evaluations there were. We did.
The 15 minute status requirement applied to all defenses on the
periphery of
the United States. Since the expected direction of aircraft
attack of
Chicago was from the north, we were included in that requirement.
The
distinction between 15 minute status and 30 minute status for a
Nike site is
significant. On 30 minute status you can have your equipment off
while on
15 minute status, not only must the equipment be on, but
maintenance checks
must be run on it every four hours. (Incidentally, at C-32 we
never turned
off our fire control equipment, never. We discovered early on
that the DC
power supplies were much more stable if they were just left on.)
Beyond staying operationally ready, much of the rest of the time
was spent
in housekeeping chores. There was grass to keep cut in the summer
and snow
to shovel or plow in the winter. Eventually, some of the sites
got help
from John Deere-like tractors, but not all were so equipped, I
think. That
was a big help at C-32 especially in the winter, as we were in
the area that
got hit frequently by lake-effect snows. I can remember one time
in
particular when we were undergoing an ORE, that ice was forming
on the
sideways launcher rails as fast as the crewmen could scrape it
off. The
drill was cancelled due to safety considerations, but only after
giving it
the old try.
Additional time was spent participating in community affairs.
While the
Nike Ajax sites could hold periodic open houses, such activities
were not
allowed on the Hercules sites.
When a unit was on 15 minute status, there was a minimum manning
level
specified by numbers of each specialty. Early on in my command
period, I
decided that I needed more personnel on duty than were on the
minimum
manning list.
Specifically, I added a driver, a cook, and a duty officer for
the launcher
area, plus a couple of others. In those days, none of my launcher
officers
or WOs were really qualified to be battery control officers (they
later were
required by regulation to be), so they split the duty, acting as
launcher
control officers during drills, a job the manning level allowed
to be filled
by an NCO. I thought it worked well, and our results showed that
the extra
effort was worth it. But then Brigade HQ liked the idea so much
they
one-upped me and the rest of the defense in a big way. They
decreed that
when a battery was on 15 minute status that all of its
present-for-duty
strength, officers, WOs, NCOs, et all, be on site. That
arrangement lasted
for two months, with great instant improvement in ORE scores at
first but
followed by rapidly decreasing returns. Fortunately, no one ever
called it
the Lawrence plan, because it wasn't.
Living conditions on site
I have already touched a bit on the differences in construction
that made
sites C-32 and C-47 much more comfortable for the troops than
C-45 and C-48.
The metal prefabricated buildings just didn't have as many of the
creature
comforts, and that cold walk to the latrine was a real downer.
The latter
sites also didn't have as many semiprivate rooms for the single
Sp4s and
Sp5s.
And there were a number of single specialists living on site, as
the
percentage of those ranks who were married was noticeably less
during this
period than it was later when I commanded a Nike Hercules
battalion at
Travis AFB,
CA ( '70-71).
Each site had a very small PX and a craft shop. The latter ranged
from very
good to great, depending on how dedicated the assigned operator
was. There
were also day rooms, equipped with pool tables and TVs, but of
the black and
white variety, color having just come on the scene then. In no
way could a
site offer its personnel all of the amenities one could find on a
full-sized
Army post. The nearest commissary was at Fort Sheridan, IL,
nearly a
hundred miles away. Even having our drivers, who went there from
time to
time on administrative runs, pick up articles for individuals was
not really
feasible. The unit fund was available to improve these
facilities, but its
income was not large because the present-for-duty strength of an
individual
site was not large.
Many of the personnel were exposed to hazardous materials as part
of their
duties. For the Ajax system, bad stuff included the missile's
liquid fuel,
its oxidizer (almost pure red fuming nitric acid), starting mix,
and even
the electrolyte in the missile batteries. The Hercules was solid
fueled,
but early models had a hydraulic system pump operated with a gas
turbine
fueled by ethylene oxide. Later models had turbines powered by
one shot
batteries. In later fire control systems, the danger from
electromagnetic
radiations increased. There was always the danger of injury from
mechanical
devices. At C-32, our launcher platoon sergeant was killed when
he chose to
bend over a launcher rail to disconnect a phone cable while the
missile was
descending above him.
Not all of the danger was to the site personnel. Each site had a
booster
disposal area designated, where the empty boosters would land
after the
missile was fired. On some sites, an easement had been worked out
with the
property owners, but on others the matter was just kept quiet. It
was felt
that if the missiles were fired in anger, then falling empty
boosters would
be the least to the nearby population's problems.
Manning levels
As time passed, it became harder and harder for the Army to
maintain the
sites at their authorized strengths. In particular, to maintain
C-47 and
C-32 at close to their authorizations, C-45 and C-48 manning
levels were
especially low. This was true both quantitatively and
qualitatively. C-47
and C-32 had at their disposal a number of Army Regulations on
personnel
reliability that could be invoked to get rid of bad apples
quickly. Those
regulations did not apply to the other batteries, though.
It can be argued that the Nike sites should have received
additional
personnel to allow for day-in and day-out shift work, but if they
had
obtained additional authorizations, then their manning levels
would have
been lower for the same net effect. The Army just did not have
the
resources to add to the Nike program, or at least it perceived
that it did
not. To keep the Army Air Defense Command up to strength as much
as
possible in those days, the Army even decided to do away with its
divisional
Air Defense Artillery battalions. Fortunately, cooler heads have
since
prevailed and the battalions returned to the divisions, this time
armed with
newer and more effective weapons.
Retention of good personnel was a problem because of the long
hours they
worked and the Spartan conditions in which they lived. Those who
enjoyed
the work but not the living conditions, especially young
specialists, were
also tempted to leave the active Army and join the National
Guard, which
operated a number of sites in the Defense. There they could be
paid as a
state employee and work reasonable hours.
In summary
I have a lot of memories of my service with the Northern Indiana
Nike sites.
A lot of them are pleasant ones. For example, I met my late wife
there (a
Gary girl) and we were married a few months thereafter. I have
also some
less than pleasant memories. And I have a lot of respect for the
officers,
WOs, and enlisted men who worked their tails off day after day to
keep the
systems ready to go to war. And we were indeed ready to do that.
William J. Lawrence, COL (R) ADA.
(C) 1999, Christopher C.
Hedges, All Rights Reserved
All images by Christopher C. Hedges unless otherwise noted
Last update: August 25, 1999