Lowry Bombing and Gunnery Range
The Lowry Bombing and Gunnery Range (LBGR) was a World War II and Cold War facility that included 4 of the 6 HGM-25A Titan I missile launch complexes southeast of Denver, Colorado.[1]
Army Air Force range[]
The area of the Lowry range was initially part of the 1937 Buckley Field's 102.4 sq mi (265 km2) that became an Army Airfield in 1942.[1] In World War II, bombing with " and HE bombs", training in "fixed and flexible gunnery", and rifle training were conducted at the range.[1] The 1st of the Army Air Forces Bombardier Schools was at Lowry from July 1940 through March 14, 1941,[2] used the Buckley range and graduated 3 instructor classes of graduates who opened the bombardier school at Barksdale Field.[3]
- Camp Bizerte
- [4] was a World War II training facility for simulating an overseas Army field camp.[5] Part of the 12-week AAF Photography Course at Lowry Field in 1943 was conducted at Camp Bizerte.[6] Camp Bizerte at the range
Lowry Bombing and Gunnery Range was designated after the "Tech-Division Air Training Command" on September 20, 1946, transferred[7] 93.5 sq mi (242 km2) to the custody of Lowry Field, and the cleared the 1st site at LBGR--1,920 acres (3.00 sq mi)—of munitions, and the site was certified along with the "BT1" site as clear on November 16, 1948.[1] Post-war the west end of LBGR was used as an explosives demolition site.[1]
The "Air-to-Ground Bombing and Gunnery Mission" at LBGR terminated in 1956,[1]: 2–1 and RBS by the redesignated (1955) Detachment 1, 11th RBS Sq, continued until it moved to the former La Junta Army Airfield (La Junta Bomb Plot, 1959-1990).[8] In 1963, a portion of LBGR (Lowry Missile Site No. 1) had been "cleared of surface MEC"—munitions and explosives of concern).[1] From 1960 and 1980, ~63,600 acres (99.4 sq mi) of the LBGR were transferred to various other state and federal agencies and private owners.[9]
Missile complexes[]
Lowry Missile Site No. 1 ("Lowry Air Force Missile Site" before being renamed in 1960) of 85.1 sq mi (220 km2) included a large portion of the LBGR[1] and began in September 1958 with the start of construction prior to excavation[7] for the eventual 4 complexes (1 off of LBGR,--additional Site No. 2 also had a complex on the former range). Construction on the 1st operational complex, Titan I Missile Complex 1A, began in April 1959, mining excavation of 1/2 million cubic yards of rock[10] was completed by 4 June 1961, and the site was finished in December 1961[7] (the dedication was on April 18, 1962). Complex 1A was on 442.42 acres (179.04 ha) with ~36 acres (15 ha) "bounded by a chain-link fence".[7] Missiles were assembled at the Glenn L. Martin plant southwest of Denver (the co-located test site with 4 stands had been transferred to the Air Force),[10]: 48 and Lowry AFB's 724th Strategic Missile Squadron (April 26, 1961 – June 25, 1965) commanded the Site No. 1 complexes. Site No. 1 was adjacent to the Lowry Landfill on the west and Complex 1A was privatized on January 31, 1969.[7]
In January 1964 the Secretary of Defense informed congress the Titan 1 bases would be closed in 1965,[10] and the last Lowry missile was taken off alert status March 26, 1965 (all Titan 1s were in storage by April 18).[11] (Titan 1s were stored at Mira Loma Air Force Station, California, until being scrapped in Spring 1966.)[11] Titan I Missile Complex 2A on the former LBGR was transferred to the Department of the Army on October 12, 1977.[7]
Denver area complexes[]
A total of six missile complex sites operated in the Denver area from 1960 – 1965.
- On the Lowry Bombing and Gunnery Range
- 724-A, SW of Watkins, Colorado 39°38′52.57″N 104°41′24.54″W / 39.6479361°N 104.6901500°W[12]
- 724-B, SSW of Watkins, Colorado 39°36′16.89″N 104°34′46.64″W / 39.6046917°N 104.5796222°W[13]
- 724-C, S of Bennett, Colorado 39°39′55.30″N 104°29′34.58″W / 39.6653611°N 104.4929389°W[14]
- 725-A, 14 miles SE of Watkins, Colorado 39°35′15″N 104°27′42″W / 39.58750°N 104.46167°W
- Outside the LBGR
- 725-B, 4 miles NNE of Deer Trail, Colorado 39°40′06″N 104°01′41″W / 39.66833°N 104.02806°W
- 725-C, 5 miles SSE of Elisabeth, Colorado 39°18′54″N 104°33′43″W / 39.31500°N 104.56194°W
Lowry Training Annex[]
In 1969, Lowry Training Annex adjacent to the former LBGR area was established after the Department of the Navy transferred ~3,700 acres (5.8 sq mi) to the U.S. Air Force[9] (the Navy had nearby land as early as July 30, 1948, and used the bombing range in 1952 for training).[7]
Bennett Army National Guard facility[]
The Bennett Army National Guard facility of 242 acres (0.378 sq mi) at the former Complex 2A (southeast corner of LBGR) was a Colorado Army National Guard military installation used for training.[1] In 2006 the Bennett facility was excessed by the government and was the "last federal property transferred"[1]: 2–1 of the former Lowry Bombing and Gunnery Range.
In 2012, oil was struck on the Former Lowry Bombing and Gunnery Range.[15]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j Former Lowry Bombing and Gunnery Range: Final Five-Year Review Plan (PDF) (Report). Omaha District, US Army Corps of Engineers. April 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-02-06. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^ "Bombardier Training: …Overview". Ancestry.com. Archived from the original (transcribed text from various sources, including St. John) on 2012-06-14. Retrieved 2012-07-10.
- ^ St. John, Philip A (April 15, 1998). Bombardiers in WWII. Vol II. Turner Publishing Company.
Fifty instructors arrived [at Barksdale] from the first three classes at Lowry Field, in February 1941.
(from Volume I--cited by ancestry.com) Archived 2012-04-19 at the Wayback Machine - ^ Camp Bizerte… (photo caption)
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(help), Wings Over the Rockies Air and Space Museum - ^ "Camp Bizerte Prepares Soldiers For Duty at the Front". The News and Courier. July 25, 1943. Retrieved 2013-03-24.
…you may come, quite suddenly, on Bizerte. Not the to be sure--but Camp Bizerte, an army training post designed to give soldiers, battle-bound, a taste of life in Tunisia or some overseas war area.
- ^ "Camp Bizerte photo class". 2010-03-16.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Summary of LAFB Activities since 1937, Lowry Area History 29 September 1958 to 16 December 1961, as-built drawings (Word document)
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requires|url=
(help) (Report). asuwlink.uwyo.edu/~jimkirk/Lowry1A.doc.A portion of the FLBGR, then known as the Lowry Missile Site No. 1 and covering 54,446 acres, was cleared of surface MEC in 1963.
CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ "Townsfolk Hope to Shoot Down Military's Bombing-Range Plans". Deseret News. February 21, 1995. Retrieved 2012-07-06.
- ^ Jump up to: a b 1995 US Army Corps of Engineers report (Report). St. Louis. cited throughout the Five-Year Review Plan
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Lauber, John F; research by Hess, Jeffrey A.; both of Hess, Roise and Company (December 1993). Titan Missile Test Facilities (HAER No. CO-75) (Report). Martin Marietta. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
Newsweek...1955...the IBM [Intercontinental Ballistic Missile]
[permanent dead link] - ^ Jump up to: a b http://www.astronautix.com/fam/titan.htm Archived 2010-09-14 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Titan I 724-A Missile Silo Lowry AFB Colorado".
- ^ "Titan I 724-B Missile Silo Lowry AFB Colorado".
- ^ "Titan I 724-C Missile Silo Lowry AFB Colorado".
- ^ "Anadarko hits oil on old Lowry bombing range in Denver area". 2012-05-31.
- Bombing ranges
- Cold War military installations of the United States
- Colorado National Guard
- Closed installations of the United States Army
- Military history of Colorado