The Salt Lake City Radar Bomb Scoring Site[1] ("Salt Lake Bomb Plot")[1] is a Formerly Used Defense Site that was an automatic tracking (AUTOTRACK) radar station during the Cold War. Operated by Detachment 6 of the 11th Radar Bomb Scoring Squadron[1] which had relocated from the Phoenix semi-mobile RBS station in December 1964,[2] the military installation evaluated practice bomb runs by Strategic Air Command simulating attacks on the metropolitan area (e.g., during the 1955 Bombing and Navigation Competition)[3] and on the Hill Air Force Range[4] which had been the Salt Lake City Army Air Base Gunnery Range in World War II.
Originally part of the Salt Lake City Army Airfield, the 0.34 acres (0.14 ha) site at "Salt Lake City Municipal Airport No. 1 (now Salt Lake City International Airport), on the corner of Second Street and E Street"[1] was leased by the USAF from the Salt Lake City Corporation for the site. Equipment included tracking radar ("radar bomb scoring device") which mistakenly resulted in "a dropping of practice" bomb on one occasion,[5] and the 1960 Salt Lake B-58 crash occurred while on a bomb run tracked from the site.[2] Det 6 also provided technicians for the first SAC RBS Express train created in 1961 from "existing U.S. Army stock" at the nearby Ogden General Depot[6] (the Tooele Army Depot's[7] "Army Rail Shops" serviced the train.)[8]
Designated FUDS J08UT092700,[when?] in May 2005 the site was part of the 135 acres (55 ha) Utah Air National Guard installation.[1]
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Prepared by EMASSIST, INC. (May 2005) (No DoD Actions Indicated document). Salt Lake City Air Reserve Center: DERP-FUDS site no. J08UT092700 (Report). U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. http://www.corpsfuds.org/reports/NDAI/J08UT0927NDAI.pdf. Retrieved 2012-07-17. "The site has formerly been known as Salt Lake City Air Base, Salt Lake City Army Air Field, Salt Lake City Bomb Scoring Site, Salt Lake City Radar Bomb Scoring Site, and Air Force Installation No. 2247. The site is 0.34 of an acre. … Bldg No. 1305 [was used] After renovation, the Air Force used it as an airman dormitoryfor the radar bomb scoring detachments." (includes p. 5 site map has a designator mark corresponding to 40.781126,-111.956327 on the newer Google image)
- ↑ "title tbd" (biography). http://howertonheritage.com/HowertonHeritageSummer2001.htm. "About May 1954 he was assigned to a semi-mobile Radar Bomb Scoring/Electronic Counter Measures Unit (SAC) at Phoenix, Arizona – in December 1954 that unit relocated to the municipal airport at Salt Lake City, Utah."
- ↑ http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1338&dat=19550502&id=XPpXAAAAIBAJ&sjid=rPYDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4206,164978
- ↑ http://books.google.com/books?id=w55U-YtutS8C&pg=PA249&lpg=PA249&dq=%22salt+lake%22+%22bomb+scoring%22&source=bl&ots=P-nBLYY5nF&sig=VK4abt2k3vyVL4-WdY2YOsnJyic&hl=en&sa=X&ei=GogFUPzQIsqU2AWKy62qBQ&ved=0CEMQ6AEwATgU#v=onepage&q=%22salt%20lake%22%20%22bomb%20scoring%22&f=false
- ↑ "Error: no
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specified when using {{Cite web}}" (NewspaperArchive.com transcription). March 17, 1950. p. 24. http://newspaperarchive.com/salt-lake-tribune/1950-03-17/page-24. Retrieved 2013-07-16. - ↑ "Bombers To Descend Near Alto Series of Mock Air Attacks". Rusk, Texas. December 28, 1961. http://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth150424/m1/7/zoom/. Retrieved 2012-07-09. "At the target area near Greenville, radar bomb scoring equipment mounted on an Air Force train"
- ↑ "The Tooele Army Depot". UtahRails.net. August 5, 2011. http://utahrails.net/utahrails/tooele-army-depot.php. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
- ↑ Livingood, Jay. "Rail Bomb 'Scorer' Gets Overhaul At Hill Air Base". http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=kqpSAAAAIBAJ&sjid=1n8DAAAAIBAJ&pg=3280,6378078&dq=bomb-scoring&hl=en. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
<ref>
tag with name "J08UT0874" defined in <references>
is not used in prior text.The original article can be found at Salt Lake City Radar Bomb Scoring Site and the edit history here.