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Nike Nuclear Missile En Route To Everglades National Park

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Published Date

August 23, 2012

This defanged Nike missile is destined for Everglades National Park, where it will go on display at a 1960s-era missile base built in response to the Cuban Missile Crisis. Anniston Army Depot photo via NPS.

Everglades National Park soon will have its very own nuclear missile. A decommissioned one, that is.

The 41-foot-long missile, once its rust has been scrubbed free, a fresh coat of paint is applied, and military markings restored, is destined for a once-active missile pad in the Everglades that now is part of the national park.

The missile base was one of four the United States built in south Florida during the Cuban Missile Crisis that was sparked in 1962 when the Soviet Union and Cuba were spotted building missile launch facilities on the island nation.

Military use of the Everglades site ended in 1979 and the facility, dubbed HM69 Nike Missile Base, was turned over to the NPS. In January 2009 the Park Service began offering visitor tours of the Everglades base.

The obsolete Nike missile was obtained from the Anniston Army Depot in Alabama. This past week it was delivered to a Miami high school where students were to begin work on cleaning up the missile. It is expected to be at the Everglades' site in time for the 50th anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis in October.

Public tours of the site are expected to resume in December.

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Comments

Finally, they're going to wipe out the pythons.


Finally, they're going to wipe out the pythons.


Are the echoes in here caused by the new Captcha operation?


Are the echoes in here caused by the new Captcha operation?


Interesting....


Sorry, Kurt. It was just my warped sense of humor at work.

But I really do like the new method.

But I really do like the new method.


The Nike is/was NOT a nuclear missle. Rather, it an antiaircraft missle.


According to a quick Google search, the Nike Hercules was indeed capable of being armed with a nuclear warhead, Carl.

http://alpha.fdu.edu/~bender/N-view.html


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