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Churchill Rocket Research Range
93.81579W 58.73512N Fort Churchill spaceport
Complex seen from Landsat 7 in June 2013
Location Near Churchill, Manitoba
Coordinates 58°44′03″N 93°49′13″W / 58.73417°N 93.82028°W / 58.73417; -93.82028Coordinates: 58°44′03″N 93°49′13″W / 58.73417°N 93.82028°W / 58.73417; -93.82028
Short name Fort Churchill
Operator Defence Research Board (1954-1958)
United States Army (1959-1970)
National Research Council (1970-1989)
Canadian Space Agency (1998)
Total launches 3,500
Launch pad(s) 4
National Historic Site of Canada
Official name Churchill Rocket Research Range National Historic Site of Canada
Designated 1988

The Churchill Rocket Research Range is a former rocket launch site located 23 kilometres (14 mi)[1] outside of Churchill, Manitoba.[2] The facility was used by Canada and the United States beginning in 1954 for sub-orbital launches of sounding rockets to study the upper atmosphere. The site was scientifically beneficial due to lying in the center of a zone containing high aurora activity.[3] The last launch from the facility was a Canadian Space Agency Black Brant IXB ionosphere research rocket which took place on April 28, 1998.

The site is sometimes referred to as Fort Churchill after the nearby military base (now Churchill Airport) and is connected by an all-weather gravel road to the town of Churchill itself. The site is no longer used for launches and is currently the location of the Churchill Northern Studies Centre, a non-profit and multi-disciplinary research facility that is also open for educational tourism.[1]

History[]

Fort Churchill fusee-nike

A NASA Nike-Apache rocket preparing for launch at the Churchill Rocket Research Range, c. 1960-64

The complex was first built in 1954 by the Canadian Army to study the effects of auroras on long distance communications. The programme shut down in 1955, but the site was re-opened and greatly expanded in 1956 as part of Canada's participation in the International Geophysical Year. Launches for the IGY experiments started in 1957, and the site was closed again in December 1958 when the IGY, which was actually two years long, ended.

The site was reopened again in August 1959 by the US Army as part of its network of sounding rocket stations. In September 1959 it was used to test CARDE's new solid fuel propellant systems with PVT-1, the vehicle that would evolve into the Black Brant. However, in late 1960 a fire destroyed many of the facilities. It was announced that the Black Brant test series would be continued with an additional twelve launches at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility during 1961-62, while the facilities at Churchill were rebuilt.

The US Army ended its involvement at Fort Churchill in June 1970, and the site was taken over by the Canadian National Research Council to support the Canadian Upper Atmosphere Research Program. The site was used sporadically during the 1970s and 1980s, and was inactive by 1990.

After 1985 the facility was largely deserted. Nearby, however, at the site of Fort Churchill and the town of Churchill were an airport, a railway, some offices (Chamber of Commerce office), an eco-tourism centre and a geomagnetic observatory. Over the years over 3,500 sub-orbital flights were launched from the site.[4]

In 1995 Akjuit Aerospace, a private company, announced it would spend $300 million to develop the site as Spaceport Canada, offering it as a commercial site for polar sounding rocket launches.[5] The company signed a 30-year lease for the old Churchill rocket test site in 1994, and put together a "technical team" of 21 firms led by the American aerospace contractor Raytheon.[5] In 1996 they signed an additional deal with the STC Complex of Russia.[5] to launch commercial polar-orbiting loads on surplus Soviet-era SS-25 ICBMs which were being re-purposed as small orbital launchers known as START-1 (so named as they were made surplus by the START treaty). Churchill's location in the "western hemisphere" combined with its range-safety for firing northwards made it an ideal location, with the exception of the extremely cold weather which would limit launch seasons. Akjuit Aerospace closed down operations in May 1998 due to a lack of financing and the collapse of the space launch market in 1999/2000.[5]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Kives, Bartley (July 26, 2011). "Visitors safe in Churchill's new centre". Winnipeg Free Press. http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/visitors-safe-in-churchills-new-centre-126160013.html. Retrieved March 26, 2017. "The centre, located at a former rocket range about 23 kilometres east of the town of Churchill, has offered research space to scientists and education programs to travellers since 1976." 
  2. "Churchill Rocket Research Range National Historic Site of Canada" (in en). Parks Canada. http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=12776&pid=0. Retrieved March 26, 2017. 
  3. Godefroy, Andrew B. (2011). Defence & Discovery: Canada's Military Space Program, 1945-74. Vancouver, B.C.: UBC Press. pp. 41. ISBN 978-0-7748-1959-6. 
  4. CSA - Fort Churchill – a landmark in Canadian space research Archived 2011-07-04 at the Wayback Machine.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Braga, Matthew (September 25, 2014). "The Failed Plan to Build a Commercial Spaceport in the Subarctic". Motherboard. http://motherboard.vice.com/read/the-failed-plan-to-build-a-commercial-spaceport-in-the-subarctic. Retrieved 2016-04-15. 

External links[]

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