Missile Master


Missile Master was a type of US Army Missile Command military installation for the Cold War Project Nike, each which were a complex of systems and facilities for surface-to-air missile command and control. Each Missile Master had a nuclear bunker housing the Martin AN/FSG-1 Antiaircraft Defense System, as well as additional "tactical structures" for "an AN/FPS-33 defense acquisition radar or similar radar, two height-finder radars," and identification friend or foe secondary radar. The radars, along with Automated Data Links from remote Nike firing units, provided data into the AN/FSG-1 tracking subsystem with the DAR providing surveillance coverage to about.

Siting

Missile Master radars were usually at a single area with the nuclear bunker such as the purchased for the Arlington Heights Army Installation. Conversely, the Fort MacArthur Direction Center used radars ~ away at San Pedro Hill AFS. The single-site Camp Pedricktown Army Air Defense Base was later reconfigured to use radar data from Gibbsboro AFS away —then closed when the Philadelphia Defense Area was consolidated with the New York Defense Area.

Nuclear bunker

The Missile Master's two-story fallout-proof & blast-resistant "main building" housed the AN/FSG-1 crew consoles in the "Blue Room". Additional rooms in the nuclear bunker included an entrance room with decontamination shower, commander's office; separate rooms for the AN/FSG-1 computer, storage, ADL, and other system equipment; utility rooms for HVAC and other support systems, 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" ], 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.

Construction

Installation of a Missile Master took approximately 18 months and required an AN/TSQ-8 Fire Unit Integration Facility be installed at each Nike fire unit to provide the ADL interface between the AN/FSG-1 and the fire control system. 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: bunker, power building, and 4 radar towers. Additional equipment and facilities included tankage for electricity generator fuel, storage for drinking & decontamination water, 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 and Rust Engineering for the Oakdale Army Installation 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" of 10-15 soldiers. All of the vacuum tube AN/FSG-1 computers were replaced prior to the end of Project Nike.

Closure

Army Air Defense Command Posts were still at 5 Missile Masters on July 1, 1973 prior to the Army's February 4, 1974, announcement to end Project Nike. The Camp Pedricktown site was designated an historic site in 1998 by the Salem Historic Preservation Office, and documents regarding the Selfridge site have been entered in the Historical American Engineering Record. In 1999 a romantic comedy set at a midwest US Army missile post was published as a paperback with the name Missile Master