Sievers Sandberg Reserve Center

Coordinates: 39°45′12″N 75°27′00″W / 39.753393°N 75.450068°W / 39.753393; -75.450068
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Sievers Sandberg Reserve Center
Wilmington, Delaware, Philadelphia Defense Area, New Jersey
The Camp Pedricktown command post controlled fire units in the Philadelphia Defense Area.
Coordinates39°45′12″N 75°27′00″W / 39.753393°N 75.450068°W / 39.753393; -75.450068 [1]
Typemilitary command and control facility
Site history
Built1959-60*
September 1966

The Sievers Sandberg Reserve Center is a U.S. Army Reserve training installation in New Jersey. It occupies 39 acres (16 ha).[2]

It was previously Camp Pedricktown an Air Defense Base[2][3] Construction under the Philadelphia District of the Army Corps of Engineers transferred to the New York District on July 1, 1960.[4] The station had a Missile Master installation with an Army Air Defense Command Post, and associated search, height finder, and identification friend or foe radars. The station's radars were subsequently replaced with radars at Gibbsboro Air Force Station[5] 15 mi (24 km) away.[3] The obsolete Martin AN/FSG-1 Antiaircraft Defense System,a 1957-vintage vacuum tube computer, was removed after command of the defense area was transferred to the command post at Highlands Air Force Station near New York City. The Highlands AFS command post controlled the combined New York-Philadelphia Defense Area.[3]

The air defense station, with an intact bunker was designated an historic site in 1998 by the Salem Historic Preservation Office.[1]

External images
image icon modern oblique overhead images of bunker
image icon 1970s ground view of bunker, p. 151

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Pedricktown Missile Master bunker" (Google Maps). Retrieved 2011-09-17.[1]
  2. ^ "AN/FSG-1 Missile Master and AN/TSQ-51 Missile Mentor". The Historic Atlantic Highlands Military Reservation (MR). Fort Tilden. November 11, 2005. Retrieved 2011-09-15.
  3. ^ a b "Nike Site PH-64DC Army Air Defense Command Post Pedricktown, NJ". LiveJournal.com. November 29, 2005. Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  4. ^ "Military Construction and Supply [Pages 145-156]" (PDF). The District: A History of the Philadelphia District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 1866-1971. January 1974. Retrieved 2011-09-21.
  5. ^ "title tbd". Radomes.org. Retrieved 2011-09-21.

External links[edit]

The 2000 environmental report for the station is the Recordation of the Nike Missile Master Complex Pedrickstown U.S. Army Reserve Support Facility.[1]

  1. ^ Weidlich, Robin J.; Gettings Smith, Kathryn A.; Trieschmann, Laura V. (2000). Recordation of the Nike Missile Master Complex Pedrickstown U.S. Army Reserve Support Facility (Report). Retrieved 2011-09-19.