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Highlands Army Air Defense Site
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The Highlands Army Air Defense Site (HAADS) was the Army Air Defense Command Post (AADCP) of the Cold War for the Nike fire units in the New York Defense Area, replacing the Nike missile "manual operations center" at Fort Wadsworth on Staten Island. The Missile Master Army Installation was built adjacent to Highlands Air Force Station and cost ~$2 million for the new equipment (Martin AN/FSG-1 CCCS and AN/FPS-6 & -90[citation needed] height-finders) and ~$2 million for additional structures such as the nuclear bunker, 4 radar towers, diesel power plant, and cinderblock electrical switch building. Isaac Degeneers Construction Co. was the general contractor for the $1.71M construction (C. W. Regan was the lowest bidder at $1.5M.)[1] The 1957 site plan was for ; construction began July 10, 19
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Nike Memorial The 1958 memorial for the 1958 "Nike Ajax Explosion" was moved to HAADS in 1963 after the nearby Chapel Hill launch site NY-56 closed .http://209.212.22.88/DATA/RBR/1950-1959/1958/1958.08.07.pdf The memorial was in front of the HQ building near the Portland Rd entrance and was moved to Ft Hancock in 1974.http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/saho/guardian_park.pdf.http://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=22642
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Highlands Army Air Defense Site
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The AADCP networked local Army radars and Highlands Air Force Station radars to direct Nike fire units--each which had a local network of 3 radars for acquiring the target, tracking the target, and tracking/guiding the Nike missile.
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--07-01 --11-30 1960
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Missile Master nuclear bunker
n50:abstract
The Highlands Army Air Defense Site (HAADS) was the Army Air Defense Command Post (AADCP) of the Cold War for the Nike fire units in the New York Defense Area, replacing the Nike missile "manual operations center" at Fort Wadsworth on Staten Island. The Missile Master Army Installation was built adjacent to Highlands Air Force Station and cost ~$2 million for the new equipment (Martin AN/FSG-1 CCCS and AN/FPS-6 & -90[citation needed] height-finders) and ~$2 million for additional structures such as the nuclear bunker, 4 radar towers, diesel power plant, and cinderblock electrical switch building. Isaac Degeneers Construction Co. was the general contractor for the $1.71M construction (C. W. Regan was the lowest bidder at $1.5M.)[1] The 1957 site plan was for ; construction began July 10, 1958; the Missile Master was accepted in May 1960; and the dedication was on June 5. The Army assumed control of the USAF site after the DoD had announced its closure for July 1966 (the USAF squadron inactivated on July 1, 1966.) The AADCP became the direction center for the combined New York-Philadelphia Defense Area when the AADCP near Philadelphia was closed in September 1966. AADCP operations ended in 1974 under Project Concise in conjunction with the region's 7 remaining Nike fire units closing in April at Orangeburg/Mount Nebo, New York (NY-03/04), Amityville/Farmingdale, New York (NY-24), Fort Tilden (NY-49), Livingston, New Jersey (NY-79/80), Lumberton, New Jersey (PH-23/25), Erial, New Jersey (PH-41/43), and Woolwich Township, New Jersey (PH-58). The Highlands Army Air Defense Site was decommissioned on October 31, 1974 (17) The U.S. Department of Agriculture had made plans to put an animal quarinetine station on the site in the early 1970s when the Highlands Army Air Defense Site was declared excess by the GSA. The Monmouth County board of Freeholders was opposed to the plan.(13) Representative James J. Howard (D-NJ) was instrumental in getting the Highlands Army Air Defense Site turned into a park in 1973 with the acquisition of 161 acres of the site property.(14)and 10 years later the GSA turned 63 acres of the operations area was turned over to the Monmouth County Park system.(15) On July 3, 1984 the Monmouth County Park system signed for the deed to the remaining land.(16) USAF structures were demolished in the early 1990s,[2] the Missile Master nuclear bunker was razed in 1995,(12) and a few building foundations remain in a small clearing within the site's overgrowth of vegetation.