Louis Blotner Radar Bomb Scoring Site
Louis Blotner Radar Bomb Scoring Site | |
military radar station | |
Country | United States |
---|---|
State | Maine |
County | Aroostook |
Nearest AFB | Loring Air Force Base |
Location | Blotner barracks |
- coordinates | 47°00′30″N 68°01′07″W / 47.00833°N 68.01861°W [1] |
Blotner area Ashland area |
1 acres (0.4 ha) 6.59 acres (2.67 ha)[2][3] |
The Louis Blotner Radar Bomb Scoring Site was a bomb scoring site in Connor, Maine at the former NIKE missile launch site. Activated in June of 1963 and operational until after 1979, the site was a AUTOTRACK radar site operated by Detachment 7 of the 12th Radar Bomb Scoring Squadron. [4] The station simulated Electronic Countermeasures for the Ashland Training Range's low-level training route "over Bangor north to Houlton, Maine.[3]
History
The site was constructed at a former 1957 NIKE battery control area (radar site) which, had been conveyed to Blotner Trailer Sales in 1962,[1] the SAC radar station was initially a mobile site with temporarily-emplaced systems.[5] In 1975, the site was planned to become permanent,[3] but instead groundbreaking in June 1979 was for the nearby Ashland Radar Station.[5][6] The "Blotner Site" was subsequently used for Louis Blotner Communications Facility No. 1 of Det 2, 1000 SOG in 1987-1993, and the enlisted men's barracks operated as a general store in August 1992.[1] In 1996 the former Ashland site was planned for civilian transfer.[7]
References
- 1 2 3 "Locations of Former NIKE MISSILE SITES (text)". Retrieved 2013-04-01.
GPS 47-00-41, 68-01-11…16-unit housing area at was transferred to the Air Force and became Loring Family Housing Annex No. 3, NRCX
- ↑ "Off-Site Parcels [map]". Community Relations Plan - Loring Air Force Base (LORNG_AR_2069.pdf) (Report). AR File Number 2069 (Installation Restoration Program). Cambridge: WPI, Inc. May 1995. p. 37.
Ashland Radar Bomb Scoring consists of 6.59 acre parcel in Ashland, southwest of Loring AFB.
(map shows "Blotner Site" northeast of the "Det 7, 1st CEVG" site.) - 1 2 3 Spruce, Christopher (September 5, 1975). "Ashland radar site aids Air Force training" (Google News Archive). Bangor Daily News. Retrieved 2013-04-10.
The Ashland radar site complex consists of a power production plant, a maintenance and supply area, a communications room, an operations area, administrative offices, and the radar scoring and ECM areas. Although the local RBS site is now permanent…We'll be having a full water supply and a sewer system. [Lt. Col. James H. Tiller, after being stationed at the Bismarck Bomb Plot, assumed] his first command at the Ashland site
- ↑ http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:bcx5Oy5tnlUJ:groups.yahoo.com/group/combatevaluationgroup/message/11782+blotner+%22bomb+plot%22&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us
- 1 2 "Permanent radar site construction begins" (Google News Archive). Bangor Daily News. June 4, 1979. Retrieved 2013-04-10.
Lt. Col. Gene Riggs, Chief of Radar Bomb Development, Headquarters, 1st Combat Evaluation Group at Barksdale AFB, La.; Col. Anthony Papaner 1, Deputy Commander for Radar Bomb Scoring, Headquarters, at Barksdale …
- ↑ http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=DAU1AAAAIBAJ&sjid=JE8KAAAAIBAJ&pg=2912,5447875&dq=combat-evaluation&hl=en
- ↑ http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2457&dat=19960314&id=8atJAAAAIBAJ&sjid=fw4NAAAAIBAJ&pg=3343,3722979