Sunday, April 27, 2014

Locations of interest, an index of sorts

This post will act as a stickied 'index' of sorts, this features all the sites I've been made aware of - even if I may not have visited or yet researched them. Some of them come from one-off mentions from newspaper articles in the 60's, so going looking for a 'lost' radome facility in The County may prove to be pursuing a wild ornothoid.

Anywho....

This is a list of abandoned, run-down, out of use or repurposed sites in the state of whose existence I have been made aware. The "Access" column will contain

5 categories
  • Undocumented means that the place exists, and others may have been there/documented it, but I haven't for this site. Just because it's undocumented, doesn't mean that there are no links/information available, necessarily. 

  • Unexplored means that I don't know where it is and I don't know of anyone who knows where it is. 

  • "Link" indicates that I've covered this location already. Click the link in the column to open the story. 

  • Restricted. Sometimes the General Services Administration (the government agency that provisions when federal land changes hands) sells off old military sites to private businesses. Loring AFB's subterranean "alert pilot" bunker/mole hole is an example. Restricted means I can't get there, and you probably shouldn't either. 

  • Repurposed - Nothing, or very little, original to the site remains. The site has been turned into something else.
Also, the "site type" column will tell you:
  • Military means that the site used to be an active military facility during or after the Cold War.

  • Pre Atomic Military means that the site used to be an active military facility before WWII.

  • Industry/Commerce means that the site used to be used in industry. This includes logistics.

  • Municipal/Other means that the site used to be owned by local government, or commercial entities.

  • Civil Defense means that the site was used by FEMA's grand dad.

You are free to use the information presented here in your own explorations. If you use any content from this blog, please credit me as I've credited those who have come before me.

Special thanks (for showing me I'm not crazy) to Cold War Relics , the Bangor Urban Explorers Guild (defunct) and The Abandonment of Maine
  

Site TypeSite NameTown/LocationAccess
MilitaryRadar Bomb Scoring SiteAshlandLink
MilitaryDow AFB "Proper"BangorUnexplored
MilitaryDow AFB Weapons Storage AreaBangorLink
MilitaryDow AFB Missile Defense Site (Bomarc)BangorLink
MilitaryDow AFB Water Treatment SiteBangor (Finson/Pushaw Rds)Link
MilitaryNaval Ops Support CenterBangorLink
MilitarySAGE System: Bridgewater AFSBridgewater (#9 Mtn)Unexplored
MilitaryCaribou JSSCaribou(Albair/Baird Rds)Link
MilitaryLoring AFB Missile Defense Site (Nike)CaswellLink
Military SAGE System: Caswell AFSCaswell"Expedition" Pending
MilitarySAGE System: Charleston AFSCharlestonRestricted
MilitaryLouis Blotner Bomb Scoring SiteConnor ("Blutner Site Rd")"Expedition" Pending
MilitaryDow AFB GATR SiteGlenburnLink
MilitaryLoring AFB "Proper"LimestoneRestricted
MilitaryLoring AFB Weapons Storage AreaLimestoneLink
Military Loring AFB Missile Defense Site (Nike)LimestoneLink
MilitaryDow AFB Aux Landing Strip/Bombing RangeMilfordLink
MilitaryLoring AFB Communications Annex #2PerhamLink
Military Loring AFB Missile Defense Site (Snark)Presque IsleLink
MilitarySAGE System: Topsfield AFSTopsfield (Musquash Mtn)"Expedition" Pending
MilitarySAGE System: Deboulie Mtn AFSUnorganized TerritoryLocation Unknown
Pre Atomic MilitaryCaswell Training FacilityCaswellLink
Pre Atomic MilitaryFt BaldwinPhippsburgUndocumented
Pre Atomic MilitaryFt Kent...Ft KentUndocumented
Pre Atomic MilitaryFt KnoxProspectUndocumented
Pre Atomic MilitaryFt PophamPhippsburgUnexplored
Pre Atomic MilitaryGreat Diamond Island Army BarracksPortlandRestricted
Pre Atomic MilitaryBangor State ArsenalBangorLink
Civil DefenseCommand CenterStillwater Ave, Old TownLink
Civil DefenseCommand CenterHigh St, South WindhamLink
Civil DefenseCommand CenterMilo, Sargent RdLink
Civil DefenseCommand CenterCaribou - Location UnknownUndocumented
Civil DefenseCommand CenterAuburn - Location UnknownUndocumented
Civil DefenseShelterBucksport Paper MillPrivate Property
Civil Defense(Artifacts) Air Raid SirensVariousLink
Civil Defense(Artifacts) The Doomsday ShitterVariousLink
IndustryAshland StationAshlandUndocumented
IndustryBangor Mall of the 80sBangorLink
IndustrySpaceport - Bangor MallBangorLink
IndustryKenduskeag MillBangorUndocumented
IndustryEagle Lake Steam EnginesUnorganized TerritoryUndocumented
IndustryAyer's Island ComplexOronoRestricted
IndustryBanks Auto SupplyBangorLink
IndustryCanadian Pacific Railway Passenger StationGreenville JunctionUndocumented
IndustryDemeritt Forest SawmillOld TownLink
IndustryGhost Towns of the Aroostook Scenic HwyPatten/Stacyville/Mt Chase/MasardisLink (One of many)
IndustryKatahdin Iron WorksMilo (roughly)Undocumented
IndustryLily-Tulip FactoryOld TownUndocumented/Demolished
IndustryOld Town CanoeOld TownUndocumented/Demolished
IndustryOld Town Train StationOld TownLink
IndustryOld Town LumberOld TownLink
IndustrySpool MillLincolnLink
IndustryMerrill Trust BankOld TownRepurposed
IndustryWoolen MillOld TownRepurposed
IndustryInternational Paper/Striar TextileOronoLink
IndustryUnknown Textile Mill StackOronoUndocumented/Demolished
IndustryEngine 470WatervilleUndocumented
IndustryLombard Log HaulerWatervilleUndocumented
Municipal/Gov't Other.Lombard Log HaulerAshlandUndocumented
Municipal/Gov't Other.Cushman Ridge CemeterySpringfieldPending
Municipal/Gov't Other.Passing Aid Test System TrackPalmyraLink
Other AbandonmentsBuck's MillsBucksportLink
Other AbandonmentsMercer'sBucksportUndocumented
Other AbandonmentsThe Woodland CastleCostiganLink
Municipal/Gov't Other.Houlton Border Crossing StationHoultonUndocumented
Other AbandonmentsBishop's "Junkyard"LevantRestricted
Other AbandonmentsRiceville/39 TanneryGreenfieldLink
Municipal/Gov't Other.Milo Elementary SchoolMiloUndocumented
Roadside RelicAGM 28 Hound Dog MisslePresque IsleLink
Roadside RelicM60 Patton TankLincolnPending

Friday, April 25, 2014

The Vault (ayuh): Maine's Fallout Shelters

This is a rough list of Fallout Shelters/Bunkers in the area, and associated media reports regarding them. 

I will update this as I find more. 

Updated 11/8/14

Maine has had stints of importance through its history leaving us with a wealth of abandoned, disused, and in some cases decaying defense infrastructure. Among our derelict missile bases and radar stations there are also many shelters we built for ourselves ranging in size from concrete closets to communications bunkers to be used in the event that the Soviets were to send bombers/missiles to Limestone or Bangor. In 1961 the need was identified to conduct a survey of fallout shelters in Maine under the administration of then Governor Reed. 1961 was also the year that Maine residents within a seven mile radius of Portland, Loring AFB, and Bangor heard the recommendation that they build underground fallout shelters near their homes, as 'cellar' shelters would be ineffective due to the likelihood that either Loring, Bangor or Portland would take a hit directly.

In addition to shelters, Civil Defense command/communications bunkers were established in five localities in the state to co-ordinate evacuation of those in 'risk' areas to 'host' areas.
  • Civil Defense Command bunker areas. (Windham is the only one that's currently active.) 
    • Old Town
      • Its Civil Defense bunker had been built in '61, used during various emergencies, turned into a prison and sealed permanently in '95. A more detailed writeup is here.
    • Auburn
      • All I can find on this one is an article in the Lewiston Daily Sun from 1960, stating that the 'bunker' would be a grassed-over quonset hut located at the Lewiston-Auburn municipal airport. I have not been able to determine the bunker's location. 
    • Milo
    • Caribou
      • I have not been able to find any information on this factility. 
    • South Windham
      • This CD Bunker is still in use, in its original capacity. A building has been added to the top of the original bunker, and a modern comm tower has been erected. Note, though, the bright orange low frequency towers surrounding the facility that are identical to those observed in Orono. Might the bunker have the same layout, too?
Civil Defense bunker in Milo
A 1967 study indicated that Maine had 392,000 fallout shelter "spaces." The article goes on to list a fallout shelter 'space' as a ventilated space of 10 square ft or more, that provides a predefined level of protection. The Civil Defense authority, in 1967, had estimated that the State of Maine could provide space for 192,000 persons in the event of a nuclear attack. This number was increased to 646,000 people by late 1972.

In addition to quantifying spaces for shelters, CD authorities provided locals with radiological measurement tools that were supposed to be tested/calibrated annually. Very few individuals retained knowledge of how to use the testing equipment.

Using Google's news archives, and my local library, I've been able to put together a short list of 20th century shelter/bunker facilities documented throughout the state. Many of the private shelters I found were in Northern Maine, near the site of former Loring AFB.
  • Augusta
    •  The Sun Journal reported that the Blaine House has a 50's era shelter, but it is in disuse..Several newspaper clippings from the Lewiston Evening Journal (12/31/1960) show the shelter under the Blaine House from before it had been closed up & forgotten.
    Photo from Lewiston Evening Journal, 1960
    /

    • A 1967 article from the Lewiston Evening Journal states that a 'hotline' was installed in the Governor's office, that would allow the President of the US to address all state governor's simultaneously.
    • A fallout shelter was also built in the Maine State House in 1983, and remains stocked/ready to protect officials to this day. 
    • Additionally, the Capital Building also had a shelter, capable of holding a few hundred people. It was the first State owned building to be a licensed public fallout shelter. 
    • A private shelter on Mt Vernon Ave had to be demolished in 2011 to make way for sewer renovations -- according to The Kennebec Journal.
  • Greater Bangor Area (Incl. Old Town, Orono, Milford, Brewer, etc...)
  • Roof ventilation, Old Town Emergency Operations Center (ue-bangor.tripod.com)
    • The Old Town Civil Defense Bunker. Built in 1964 and permanently sealed in 1995. Minimum security woman's prison between 1986-1988. 
    • The Pelletier House was reported on by the Bangor Daily News as being under a "house on a hill outside Bangor." This facility was a personal fallout shelter, and was abandoned after the owner moved to Bridgton, to get farther away from Loring AFB and the SAC activities at Bangor International Airport. 
    • There are a handful of old Civil Defense spec fallout shelters throughout the city. 
  • Bridgton
    • On Dec 7th, 1981, it was reported by the Bangor Daily News, that a rather extensive private fallout shelter with capacity for up to 30 people exists in Bridgton. The facility reportedly sported a 190ft freshwater well.
  • Fort Kent
    • The Fiddlehead Focus reported that a Cold War era bomb shelter was uncovered in 2012 on Main St in Ft Kent when they noticed "that a room in the cellar had a thick concrete ceiling." The story stated the shelter was built in the mid 1960s, and that residents in the region suspect more homes may have shelters. The photo accompanying the article clearly shows it's a cinder-blocked room in the basement. Their site is behind a paywall -- so I'm not linking to it. If only there were a way to monetize visits...
  • Gray
    • A house in gray sports a hidden 'panic room'   constructed out of granite in the late 1700s; the area was known for attacks from natives, but the protection offered by the stone walls would have been sufficient to protect from nuclear fallout -- provided the area was properly sealed.
  • Houlton
    • A local relator describes having a Cold War era bomb shelter beneath radio station WHOU, which must have had communications capabilities as he recalls "I thought if there was ever a nuclear attack at Loring Air Force Base in Limestone, no one locally would know until it came over the wire. News locally went unreported unless called in to the AP and re-routed back to the announcer. If they took the time to check the wire."
  • Madawaska
  • Milo
    • The Sun Journal recently reported that a "1950s era" bunker, identcial to the one in Windham, exists but is not maintained nearly as well and is used primarily for storage. 
  • Norway
    • A reader has informed me that there is a shelter under both the Key Bank, and the Masonic Hall.  
  • Piscatiquis County
    • Early Warning System points were added to the Piscatiquis (and Washington) Sheriff's department offices in 1966.
  • Presque Isle
    • Local realty listings indicate there are several homes in the area with subterranean bomb shelters. One such listing, of an old farm house, shows at least the entrance to the shelter-- located underneath a barn. 
  • Greater Portland Area
    • The Lewiston Evening Journal reported that Androscoggin county had an Emergency Operations Center, similar to that in Old Town, Milo, and Windham. 
    • The same paper reported, in 1964 that the city was to have around 80 public fallout shelters, equipped with medical supplies, rations, and geiger counters. 
    • Lewiston/Auburn
      • In 1981, the journal reported that Lewiston/Auburn officials were in the process of re-identifying fallout shelters in the area. The locations of shelters given are:
        • Androscoggin County Coalbunker
        • The Centennial Block. 
      • Central Maine Medical Center -According to paywalled content by the Lewiston Sun Journal, CMMC used to blast the civil defense air raid siren periodically.
      • Bates College - In 1963, the Lewiston Daily Sun reported that two shelters may exist on the Bates College campus. They are described as "large concrete and steel underground chambers" each 120ft x 33ft x 10ft high. The school stated that they were for storage, but the paper reported that they were ventilated, screened per Civil Defense specs, contain a fresh water source, and electric generators. They were reported to have existed "under the maintenance building on Andrews Rd" and under the administration building -- both were connected by a 100ft tunnel. The report also states that a 'decontamination room' was adjacent to the entrances. Storage indeed. 
      • The Lewiston Armory contains a fallout shelter, that has since been turned to storage space. 
  • Rangeley
    • The Rangeley Public Library had a CD spec fallout shelter in its basement, in the mid 1960s. 
  • Seal Harbor
    • A newspaper article sourced from 1978 indicates that a "blue-blooded patriot" had built a 30x15x12 cinder block fallout shelter 'beside' their summer home, complete with stored food, water, and really expensive booze. The person who built this shelter in the shadow of a swanky summer home, has unfortunately been dead as of September of 1995. I've contacted a relative of the previous owners and received a response stating that the shelter was built during the Cuban Missile Crisis, and that when the house was sold in 1996, the new owners tore down the shelter.
  • Unknown/Unidentified
    • An article from November of 1965 reports the existence of a "State Calibration Range." Which is described as an underground concrete room designed to aid in the calibration of radiological detection instruments. The article does not specify the location of this facility. 
    • This Video from WCSH shows a private shelter somewhere in Maine. Definitely worth a watch.
    • A glurge from the Empower Network tells a pretty unlikely story of a bomb shelter being lived in by a homeless man in Southern Maine.
  • Windham
    • A Civil Defense center is present beneath the state prison. This story from 2005 indicates that it is/was (as of 2005) active, stocked, and prepared to serve as a communications station in the event that it is needed. This story from 1981 describes it as a 'command bunker.'
    • The compound proximate to the prison is mentioned in this article from 1965 as an Emergency Operations Center for the county.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Fates of Civil Defense Bunkers - Old Town vs Windham.

This post is pretty low effort...admittedly. I just wanted somewhere to compare the CD post sites. Frankly, I'm just excited that they might be THE SAME layout.

Old Town's was turned into a prison, sold to the University and then more or less abandoned since 1995. (click to enlarge)
Notice, in the above photo, the two concrete hallways leading into the hillside, as well as the low frequency communications towers in orange, behind the facility.

Let's compare that with Windham's site, which had been turned into county dispatch (something Old Town wanted to do in 1989, but the county said no) and subsequently maintained by the Maine Emergency Management Agency.

Look to the left, you can see the concrete hallways, leading into the hillside -- spaced like Old Town's and complete with low frequency orange towers. The aerial photo above shows that the building you see in the photo below had been added to the top of the bunker structure.


That's really about it. 

Now...to see if I can find two concrete hallways somewhere in Milo or Caribou....

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Abandoned wastewater treatment for Dow AFB Housing (Capehart) | Bangor

On August 1st, 1964, Bangor town manager proposed a cleanup project that would help turn the Kenduskeag stream from an open pit sewer into a stream again, with the help of some Air Force infrastructure; this included connecting a Dow AFB's sewage treatment plant to the rest of the system -- that would service a big chunk of the west side of Bangor. 

The proposal to connect the Air Force waste water treatment facility to the rest of the city's system gave a project start date of 1965, local records indicate the sites inclusion in the city's sewer system in 1973 and then the sale of the facility itself in 1980. Connecting this facility to the rest of the city's system did help to clean up the Kenduskeag significantly, but nobody has done anything with the site since 1980. Save for some creative redecorating. 


Nestled in a wooded area, far past the end of a subdivision road that goes nowhere, lay the ruins of Dow AFB's wastewater treatment area. Built in the mid 1950s to manage waste from adjacent Air Force housing, and connected to the rest of the city's systems in the early 1970s to address concerns of rising pollution in the Penobscot river and surround bodies of water (and to 'help' the City of Bangor build a 400 acre park along the banks of the Kenduskeag), the facility stands disused and hidden among brush today.

Major investments were made as late as 1973, when the city connected the facility to the rest of the sewer; the project had a price tag of $2m (downgraded from $2.5m in 1971)...which, adjusted for inflation would be $10,643,828 in 2014 dollars. However, that figure also includes all of the other "interceptor" lines, a system of which this site was only a part.

Courtesy ue-bangor.tripod.com
The facility's connection to the rest of the city's sewer system was a result of national pressure to meet anti-pollution standards as early as 1971; and honestly, the Kenduskeag stream was quite literally full of shit prior to these improvements. Neighboring towns even wanted to pay to use the facility, and records show that by 1978, the plant was still in use.

Not surprisingly, it had its origins (much like many other neat things standing around here...) as an Air Force related facility from back when Uncle Sam turned some of the swamps on the city limits into 530 units of Air Force housing back in 1963. The facility was built to handle waste from airmen and their families. I reached out to a local who had been a student studying wastewater treatment at Eastern Maine Community College (then EMVTI) in the late 1970s. This was their response:
"Actually, our class toured it several years after it was shut down. The instructor we had who gave us the tour used to work there as an operator in the air force. It was owned and operated by the air force, as it’s function was to treat the sewage outflow from the Capehart Housing development. (which was Air Force housing for airmen and their families ) The treatment plant was built long before 1973, I think in the 50’s. I visited there in the spring of 1979, and it was long abandoned then. You could still see the large “clarifier” tank, and the pumps and valves in the “control house”.
An interceptor line was installed when the city sewer system was extended to that area, MAYBE that’s the 1973 date that you found."
 - Local man who toured the area as a student, in 1979.

The site in the early 2000s.
A treatment pit -- Early 2000s
 According to this article from February 25th, 1971, this secondary treatment site was designed to disinfect water after it had been processed by the primary system. It even got increased federal funding that year for some retrofitting thanks to Senators Muskie and Chase-Smith.
"Secondary treatment would remove the remaining bacteria from sewer water. This is accomplished by several systems, the addition of chemicals and air bubbles being two of them....completion of the secondary treatment system will bring the Penobscot River up to a "B" classification, safe for swimming."
-Bangor Daily News
"Bangor Must Build Secondary Sewage Treatment Facility by the end of 1974"
Appearing February 21st, 1971

As soon as 1972, local media was already hypothesizing about how cleaning up the area could help revitalize it. And even copy from 1973 reported that the project was going well and also indicated the presence of a 'collection terminal' near an I-95 overpass, proximate to the Kenduskeag stream. The project was finished by late November/early December of 1973. The facility was designed to take waste from the area of Broadway and Ohio street and process them, rather than letting them drain into the Kenduskeag.
In the photo above, you can see construction crews on State St in Bangor working to connect the "interceptor" line facility to the rest of the system in February of 1973. In the photo below, you can see crews working farther up toward the Kenduskeag treatment facility.
Less than ten years after the $2m investment, in 1981, the Bangor Daily News ran an advertisement indicating that the facility was to be sold.


The only thing that looks like it's been done since the time it was sold off is the demolition of an 800 square foot concrete office building shell.  All that is left now are the concrete treatment areas, a few building shells and the rusting steel roof of one of the facilities' tanks.


Site photos from 2000's credited to ue-bangor.tripod.com. For more information, please visit their site. 

Update: 04/24/13

I had contacted Bangor's old civil engineer, he was gracious enough to send a reply. I'm scrubbing name and contact information, as I felt guilty about looking him up to bother him with my weird curiosities.
 "Yes, that water treatment plant was constructed to serve the so-called Old Capehart housing project, located south of the Davis Road. I believe that your dates of 1962-63 are probably correct.  At that time, that area was not served by the City sewer system, which did not extend much beyond Griffin Road.  At about the same time, we were just in the process of building Bangor's wastewater treatment on lower Main Street, and extending interceptor sewers up along the river; all of Bangor's public and private sewers were still dumping into Kenduskeag Stream and thePenobscot River untreated. It wasn't until the mid-70's that the interceptors were finally extended up the stream, first to Griffin Road, and a short time later to the Capehart plant.  The City had taken over the Capehart housing by then, and didn't want to have to continue the operation of the Capehart plant. In fact, when all the interceptors were in place, we were able to increase the sewered area of the City by 40%, including the Bangor Mall - Hogan Road area, and many of the new outlying residential areas. "
Update: 04/29/2013

It is important to note that the sewer interceptor project was a significant factor in cleaning up the Penobscot. The Capehart facility is just one piece of a puzzle that did a great service to this area.

Photos sourced from ue-bangor.tripod.com -- the site is currently posted no trespassing.

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Civil Defense Bunker | Old Town


Awhile back, I wrote about The Doomsday Shitter , a commode/barrel that my father had acquired from his father back when his father worked at the University of Maine in Orono. I think we found where the Doomsday Shitter came from....

Away from Bangor, you've got the somewhat peaceful bedroom community (ex mill town...) named Old Town. It's got everything you'd need in a slightly dated suburban community attached to a metro area that has been on the decline. Including a subterranean civil defense bunker (turned womans prison and later abandoned.)


It's been such a great local 'mystery' fixture that there are several sites/resources if you're interested in seeing more:

  • Here is a great Flickr set someone put together while visiting the site during winter months.
  • The Bangor Explorers Guild is the site that really got me interested in this kind of thing. It's got a great set of pictures, some of which I have taken the liberty of using here. All credit for interior shots go to these nameless explorers. 
  • Here's the Photostream of a local who has taken some great pictures of the site.
  • A University Student has found the site of interest.

In the woods right out behind the Hannah Ford Clinic (also known as The Hannafids, Hannafids, or Hannaford), on a piece of University property there stands a hill. In the side of that hill, are  two blocked up doorways that would lead to an 8000 square-ft (or 3500 square-ft, depending on source) subterranean civil defense bunker built in 1965, complete with very low frequency communications equipment, to house Penobscot County Commissioners and other officials in the event of a nuclear attack.

According to this story from 1982, the bunker is 3500 square feet, built at ground level and has concrete walls that are 18 inches thick. In addition, dirt is piled on the outside walls which would mean that less than 1/1,000th of outside radiation would penetrate the bunker walls. The linked story lists the facilities sheltering capacity as 350 people, mostly government and law enforcement officials who would communicate with federal authorities and relay information to communities. However a story from 2004 would go on to state that there were only working and living quarters for 60 full time staff and officials.

Below is a map made by the adventurers behind UE-Bangor.tripod.com, credit for the map goes to the anonymous explorer behind that site. Given the entrance doors, it's easier to visualize the bunker's size. I've added red text to highlight certain areas of the bunker with information gleaned from news stories (linked later on in this post) as well as from testimony reprinted by UE-Bangor. I've marked what I can say with some degree of confidence is correct -- it is unclear if the 'infirmary' is a cluster of small rooms near the bathrooms or if it is a singular room. Also, many of the rooms that aren't labeled may be offices or sleeping quarters -- sure looks like a tight squeeze for between 60-350 people.


Officials who had to report to the bunker in the event of a nuclear strike on Bangor would be charged with coordinating relocation of thousands of citizens in the Bangor area to safer areas (host towns), according to a story from 1983.
Civil Defense Workers Drill in the bunker (BDN Archive Photo, 1982)
This is corroborated by an "informant" on a Bangor Urb-Ex page (that has not been updated in many years) the rooms within the bunker are very small and it was designed to support individuals for quite some time. This note was apparently penned by a party who was part of the team responsible for 'sealing up' the place.
"Now a little about the layout. The whole bunker while it looks impressive is really quite small in size and the many rooms that line either side of the halls are could only fit a bed(cot) and maybe a small table etc. The door closest to the "garage door" is the main entrance and the large room off of the garage door was the common area where people ate and the like. The L shaped room with the many compartments was used mainly for storage. There was a Kitchen where you guessed on the map and the old upright milk machine and metal trays are still there waiting to be used. Directly across from the kitchen and a little to the left was where the infirmary was and many of the sleeping quarters, bathrooms and showers were located. The large room nearest the air vents is where the generators still reside. Big floor mounted generators that look like the front part of a bulldozer. The next room down from it is where the fuel for them is stored and as of 94-95 they were still topped of and ready to rock....who knows, we never got the courage to flip the switch. The towers (haven't been by in a while to see if they are still there) held LOW band antennas operating at around 50Mhz which was what the CD used back then before VHF took off."
-Anonymous "Informant", ue-Bangor

http://ue-bangor.tripod.com/bunker/bunker.html
Main Hallway
During the mid 1980s it was used to house low-security female inmates from the Penobscot County Jail, but was only a prison for the duration of construction elsewhere. According to the Bangor Daily News, using this facility as a prison caused a "furor" as it's near a bicycle trail and the YMCA. It was also at this time that the site was renovated to the tune of $20,000.

The Bangor Daily News reported that this was because of:
  • The need for new walls/partitions to create four dormitory style rooms that each would hold four prisoners. 
  • The building of two individuals cells. 
  • The need for a holding cell
  • "The day room" 
  • A new door to the exterior of the bunker. 
  • The need to move the fences from the old jail to the bunker. 
This would mean that the floor plan has been changed quite significantly...While on the topic of the bunker's years as a prison, below is a news photograph from the mid 1980s, showing the newly remodeled facility ready to start its time as a minimum security women's prison. The comm towers are visible at the top of the photo, and the 'cage' for the recreational area is seen in the foreground. Compare to the photograph below, taken from a similar perspective in 2014. (The area was too overgrown to get far enough away from the entrance to provide the exact perspective.)

If you look past the leading edge of the concrete entrance (in the photo below), you can see where the sliding glass doors were boarded up.

http://portfolio.uma.edu/Jordan/ethanjordan/OT_Shelter.html#6
There were also many interior changes made during this time, below is the common area. Note the sliding glass doors leading to the external courtyard. Those glass doors are right behind the tire in the picture above. In the map earlier in the post, those glass doors are referred to as "a cemented-over garage door sized opening."
From the Bangor Daily News - 10/08/1986
Also, during the bunker's time as a jail, the kitchen was expanded.

This is what the kitchen looked like when explored by the ue-Bangor(.tripod.com) group:

After having been a jail for some time, the site fell into disuse in 1988. It was briefly considered by the county to be used as a 911 dispatch center in 1989, and was courted by a local nonprofit as an HQ in 1991. Somewhere between 1991 and the mid-to-late 1990s, some vandals took their toll. According to a local interviewed in 2004, some vandals had broken in because they thought (for some reason) that the Penobscot County Sheriff's department stored all of their confiscated pot down there.

Image from ue-bangor.tripod.com
The Indiana Jones of cannabis.




http://portfolio.uma.edu/Jordan/ethanjordan/OT_Shelter.html#10
Hurrr
In 1995, police received an anonymous tip that someone was 'breaking in' to the bunker, the Bangor Daily News reported that a police officer was dispatched and saw two individuals on the roof of the structure, while the police blotter indicated that ten individuals were issued a summons for trespassing. What the article (linked below) doesn't state is whether or not the ten who were nabbed for breaking in had actually managed to get inside before authorities could respond. Considering the graffiti, it's possible that those ten people were among the last in the bunker, as it was sealed shortly thereafter. This is conjecture...there's no way I can know whether or not the ten from the police blotter are the same who vandalized the site.

Photo from ue-bangor.tripod.com
Additionally, with the help of the Bangor Daily News, I've been able to piece together a little bit of a timeline of the Civil Defense Bunker's history.
  • September 23rd, 1963 - before the Old Town Civil Defense Bunker was even built, the Lewiston Evening Journal reported that two men (one of Auburn, the other of Windham) were to organize meetings to develop contingency plans and to teach fallout shelter management. 
    • I am including this article on the Old Town site as the "Bangor-Orono" area was listed as one of the prospective sites for a shelter.
  • March 9th, 1971 - The CD Bunker participates in a statewide exercise designed to simulate bomb drops for fallout tracking and reporting readiness purposes. This was called Operation Pinpoint, and while the Old Town CD bunker is not mentioned directly on the page, scroll to the bottom of this post for a comment relating to the bunker's role in this exercise. 
  • Sunday, February 6th, 1973, the Lewiston Sun-Journal, in an article focusing on Civil Defense improvements in the area, referenced the building of "multi-purpose Civil Defense Emergency Operation Centers...with the help of federal monies in Van Buren, Lewiston, the University of Maine at Orono and Lincoln County." The Old Town Bunker is one such center.
  • On a Sunday, May 1st, 1973, the Lewiston Daily Sun reported that due to flooding in the region, individuals from Costigan/Milford took shelter in the "municipal civil defense bomb shelter" with several families.
  • July 12th, 1979, the BDN reported that "Penobscot CEP prepared to use Old Town bunker" as a precaution in the face of the deteriorating orbit of Skylab as it passed over Maine. The Old Town bunker was on 24 hour alert, until Skylab had passed over the state. The facility was notified by teletype, and one CEP Director Bill Hunt spent the night in the bunker.
  • On January 30th, 1980, the BDN ran a story called "Action on park, civil defense unit reflect mandate for budget cuts." The story gives us two pretty interesting facts about the bunker. 
    • It was still in use in its original capacity as late as 1980, as the story copy indicates that Penobscot County ran its Civil Emergency Preparedness Department office out of the bunker. 
    • The story copy also states that "Less than a year ago, the University of Maine at Orono occupied a portion of the underground bunker for a research project. I have not been able to find records elsewhere referencing this research project. 
  • June 3rd,  1981, the BDN ran a story called "Bunker Use Sought" which described the freshly out of use facility as "Available: One bunker. 100 ft by 50ft. Underground. Located in Old Town woods. Can be the home of 60 government officials and communication equipment in the event of a nuclear disaster."
    • This story reports that the University of Maine at Orono contracted with the county since July of 1979 to use part of the bunker for a "special research project." 
    • This story also indicates that between 1980 and 1981, Penobscot county eliminated the Civil Emergency Preparedness director position. 
    • This story also states that the bunker was still in use as a communications hub at the time it was written.
  • On April 26th, 1982, the BDN ran a story called "The bunker is there but no orders" which stated that the bunker was 'the area's civil defense operations center, from which officials will direct emergency operations if the Bangor area comes under enemy attack.' The story then states that in the event of nuclear attack, county officials were supported to report to the site.
  • On February 3rd, 1983, it was reported in the BDN article titled "Balky towns, communication gap mar nuclear crisis drill" that the site was used in its civil defense capacity during a drill which included a scenario related to evacuation of the Bangor area, as it was then classified as a "likely target for Soviet missiles." 
  • July 9th, 1986 - the BDN reports on 'progress' in the bunker project. 
  • July 18th, 1986, the BDN reported that "Prisoners to move to bunker by fall" , pending approval from boards representing Old Town and the University of Maine.
  • September 10th, 1986, BDN reports "CD bunker given final approval as jail facility."
  • October 3rd, 1986, it was reported that the first nine prisoners were to move to the bunker; the story also contains information on the renovations required.
  • The Bangor Daily news reported, on December 11th, 1986, that the "Civil Defense bunker prison has septic system problems" ...which is interesting. None of the BDN issues archived with Google News make any mention of the facility being turned into a women's overflow prison. Speaking of overflow, the leach field collapsed and started marinating the bunker in shitwater.
    • "The waste problem, according to county officials, was that the septic system, which was supposed to be suitable for use by large numbers of people in an emergency, had been used only occasionally over the past several years."
    • This story, for some reason, was also re-run by the Bangor Daily News on December 12th, 1986.
  • On October 17th, 1987, "Lack of inmates causes jail annex to shut down" is published as an informational, four paragraph piece.
  • October 29th, 1987, the BDN ran "Bunker shutdown brings up doubts concerning future." which told us that by the late 1980s, there were only five inmates and two 'boarders' living at the facility. The county had apparently considered other uses for the bunker, which would include letting inmates from other prisons stay there. This article closes with hints that the county may be considering shuttering the bunker. 
  • On December 16th, 1987, it was reported that the bunker was once again being used to house female inmates.  "Temporary occupants of old town bunker try to keep busy" ran along with a very poorly preserved photo of the 'courtyard' added to the bunker in this time frame.
  • April 11th, 1988 - the BDN reports a Jail Fund Raiser in which the Old Town "civil defense bunker" is a footnote. 
  • A June 30th, 1988 article in the BDN states that the bunker is still housing prisoners, and that they're well behaved....
  • September 14th, 1988 - It's noted in the BDN that the bunker may close. May. The idea of the civil service bunker as a prison died a long slow death, apparently. 
  • On May 24th, 1989, the Bangor Daily ran a story titled "Survey finds county towns leaning to central dispatching" about rural towns pooling resources to handle 911 and other emergency calls. The bunker was mentioned as "one possible location in...in Old Town, which in 1986 was converted into temporary housing for women inmates while the Penobscot County Jail remained under construction. It served that purpose until last year." Whats somewhat exciting about this story is that the county was considering using the facility as it was intended to be used.
  • April 25th, 1990, the BDN ran the story "Dirigo Search, Rescue Association requests use of former Old Town Civil Defense bunker." in which it was rather enthusiastically stated that the site "may get a new life as the home of Dirigo Search and Rescue Association." Penobscot County comissioners did not make a decision, and the plan to use the bunker did not materialize.
  • March 7th, 1991, the story "Register of county deeds organizes real estate group" had mentioned the bunker as a potential storage facility for "original photostatic record books" related to deed documents. The story in the paper makes no mention as to whether or not the plan was put into motion. 
  • March 27th, 1995, 10 University of Maine students were charged with criminal trespassing after an anonymous phone call reported that someone was "breaking" into the building. This may have been prior to the thing being cemented in/sealed.
  • September 28th, 2004 is the last reference to the bunker made in local media. In a piece called "Civil defense bunker falls to time" , the writer highlights bits of the history of Old Town's Civil Defense Bunker. 
    • Report indicates that the bunker has had doors welded shut, duct holes filled with concrete, and its entrance shafts filled with earth to prevent further damage by "vandals" and to prevent injuries to those seeking to gain access.
    • University VP (as of 2004) states that it's improbable, but not impossible for the school to make use of the site.
    • The food stores in the bunker were found to not have survived, they were "bug infested" and unfit.
 I have made an effort to contact two of the ten persons listed in the police blotter from 1995. From the graffiti photographed by the ue-Bangor group, a bunch of the graffiti that now marrs the place was from that year.

Everything's been sealed. However in the 2004 article linked above, the president of the university did say that it was only improbable, but not impossible that the university would once again make use of the bunker.



"Interest in maintaining the bunker was also waning in the 1980s as America prospered and communism faltered and the Berlin Wall fell. "The whole picture changed...we stopped watching for the flash." 
-The Bangor Daily News, September 28th, 2004.


Friday, April 11, 2014

Bomarc Missile Battery Site: Part II of II

The gate at the Bomarc missile base, circa early 1960s. The guard house and building to the right still stand, the water tower has been replaced. 
I previously wrote about scouting around the perimeter of the Dow AFB's missile defense site in this post and delved some more into how these supersonic unmanned (nuclear capable) interceptors in Bangor's backyard had fit into the greater scheme here.

I ended up re-visiting the rows of actual missile launch houses at the site, daring to get a bit closer to the businesses who occupy the "business park."

Blast doors that will likely never open again.

Where this is my final post on the Bomarc missile defense site, let's take a look at a snippet from the Lewiston Daily Sun, from November 16th, 1957:
"PORTLAND, Nov. 15 AP - A 10 million dollar installation to be built at Bangor will be equipped with the Bomarc guided missile which boasts a range of 300 miles. Brig. Gen. Alden Sibley, commander of the New England district of Army Engineers said the defense installation would be constructed near Dow Air Force Base. He didn't say when the construction would begin."
According to Air Force Magazine, Bangor was one of the very first Bomarc bases to have been built, along with Cape Cod, Long Island, and the ill-fated (and still largely irradiated) McGuire AFB in New Jersey. Continuing along, toward the current day, let's dip into this snippet from the Bangor Daily News, from May 1st, 1958:
BANGOR --- The Army Engineers, New England Division, informed US Sen Frederick G Payne that about 750 men will be employed on the construction of the Bomarc site in Bangor. They expect that probably some 800 to 900 men will be needed on the construction during the summer months.
The John A. Volpe Construction Co. of Malden, Mass, has been awarded the contract for the Bangor Bomarc Missile site. 
The property where Boeing Airplane Co's missiles will be located covers more than 50 acres of land and runs from Burleigh Rd to Broadway and Essex St. 
J.R. Cianchette Sr. has the work of clearing land in preparation for construction and work has already been in progress on this phase of the program. 
The Bomarc base, such as the one to be built at Dow, consists of a lunching area where the missiles will be kept in a "ready status", a support area where missiles are maintained and inspected, and a "cantonment" area which will provide the necessary housekeeping activities.
I've looked up the number for Volpe Construction in Malden, if I have any luck I'll update the post.

But in the mean time, let's have a look at what's left of the missile launch houses in bangor.

Bomarc Launch Buildings in Bangor
The above image was taken while standing between two rows of missile launch buildings. I took that photo while standing on a mound of grass indicating a conduit/utility tunnel between the missile prep building and the readiness area. Here's a photo of the vent for the 6x6 tunnel:

$10 to put your head in there.

Below is what the buildings would have looked more like if they were left untouched.
Courtesy Urbexobsession - Bomarc site in Ontario - I did not take this photo




These buildings have been modified nearly beyond recognition. But while we're on the topic, below is what one of them would have looked something like, had the site not been turned into a business/self storage park.

Same site in Ontario - I did not take this photo
Notice the folding roof that would have allowed vertical launch. It's very sad that very little is left onsite in Bangor.



-T