About: Niagara Falls Air Force Missile Site   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/iSuBELKKm8lFbt-JqrThhQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The Niagara Falls Air Force Missile Site was a Cold War USAF launch complex for Boeing CIM-10 Bomarc surface-to-air missiles. Equipped only IM-99Bs (46 missiles: solid-state, solid-fuel booster), the site had 48 Model IV "coffin" shelters, after an initial design with a secure area of ~ to have 28 shelters (the planned site had additional area for 84 "future shelters"). Launch control for the site's missiles was by central NY's "Hancock Field combined direction-combat center" (CC-01/DC-03) at Syracuse, New York. The Syracuse Air Defense Sector had been designated by CONAD "effective April 1, 1958" as 1 of 4 sectors in the "26th SAGE Division" (cf. Bangor, Boston, & New York Air Defense Sectors). DC-03 was operational on December 1, 1958; and the division was the 1st operational in the SAGE

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Niagara Falls Air Force Missile Site
rdfs:comment
  • The Niagara Falls Air Force Missile Site was a Cold War USAF launch complex for Boeing CIM-10 Bomarc surface-to-air missiles. Equipped only IM-99Bs (46 missiles: solid-state, solid-fuel booster), the site had 48 Model IV "coffin" shelters, after an initial design with a secure area of ~ to have 28 shelters (the planned site had additional area for 84 "future shelters"). Launch control for the site's missiles was by central NY's "Hancock Field combined direction-combat center" (CC-01/DC-03) at Syracuse, New York. The Syracuse Air Defense Sector had been designated by CONAD "effective April 1, 1958" as 1 of 4 sectors in the "26th SAGE Division" (cf. Bangor, Boston, & New York Air Defense Sectors). DC-03 was operational on December 1, 1958; and the division was the 1st operational in the SAGE
sameAs
Mark
  • Red_pog.svg
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
Garrison
  • 20(xsd:integer)
Partof
float
  • right
Name
  • Niagara Falls Air Force Missile Site
Type
  • surface-to-air missile base
Caption
  • The "Niagara Falls AF Msl Site" was 1 of 2 BOMARC bases in New York . NE New York defenses protected Cold War industrial complexes of the eastern Great Lakes . A nearby BOMARC Radio Site was for transmitting ground-controlled interception commands generated at DC-03 to launched missiles based on tracking data from SAGE radars such as Z-49 & Z-21 .
  • Z-21 at Lockport AFS was co-located with the Project Nike Army Air Defense Command Post for the 1961 Niagara Falls-Buffalo Defense Area which included numerous missile sites .
Width
  • 300(xsd:integer)
marksize
  • 6(xsd:integer)
Image
controlledby
  • 1961(xsd:integer)
  • 1968(xsd:integer)
Location
  • Location
  • E of Tuscarora Rd, W of drainage ditch along Niagara Falls Air Force Base, ENE of the city
abstract
  • The Niagara Falls Air Force Missile Site was a Cold War USAF launch complex for Boeing CIM-10 Bomarc surface-to-air missiles. Equipped only IM-99Bs (46 missiles: solid-state, solid-fuel booster), the site had 48 Model IV "coffin" shelters, after an initial design with a secure area of ~ to have 28 shelters (the planned site had additional area for 84 "future shelters"). Launch control for the site's missiles was by central NY's "Hancock Field combined direction-combat center" (CC-01/DC-03) at Syracuse, New York. The Syracuse Air Defense Sector had been designated by CONAD "effective April 1, 1958" as 1 of 4 sectors in the "26th SAGE Division" (cf. Bangor, Boston, & New York Air Defense Sectors). DC-03 was operational on December 1, 1958; and the division was the 1st operational in the SAGE Air Defense Network—1 January 1959 (CC-01 was the "first SAGE regional battle post", beginning operations "in early 1959".) F-102 manned interceptors defended the Niagara-Buffalo area in 1959 when missile site construction began, e.g., the Missile Support Area with IMSOC (the "BOMARC missile was brought to the Installation in 1959".) The missile site and squadron were activated on 1 June 1960, and missiles were operational on 1 December 1961. In January 1962 from Wright-Patterson AFB, the Brookfield GF Site (gap filler ") in Ohio became a "Major Off-Base…Installation" of the Niagara Falls missile site and in 1962, command of the BOMARC base which had a commissary transferred from Col. John A. Sarosy to Col James L. Livingston. Other officers included John T. Farrington, Capt John Frezza, and in 1993: Major George Kovaks, Capt Dario Marchetti, and 2nd Lt. Albert Mitchell Jr. The site was the 1st BOMARC B launch complex to close—31 December 1969 as part of a DoD realignment of "307 military bases". The missile base was vacant until turned over to the Niagara Falls Municipal Airport ("international airport" 1 July 1985) which had been civilianized in 1946. The 1959 "Access Road" is now Johnson Street of the "NFARS Fuel Depot" (built over the area of the BOMARC shelters, which are still visible), and the former northwest corner of the missile site is the current Tuscarora Road military gate.
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software