JohnB wrote:
whistlingdeathcorsairs wrote:
Took this photo about a week ago at the great New England wings and wheels show. It was held at west over Air Force reserve base. It was a major point for b-52s during the Cold War and Vietnam before it closed and switched to different aircraft. This building Is where crews would live in case of a nuclear strike,( survive,) and possibly strike back. Notice the 2 tunnels, one going up and the other going straight under ground. The ma. State police use the building now. Really wish I could have taken a tour
I hate to disagree with you, but you've got the story a built incorrect.
Rather than post-attack, that's the alert facility where crews would live while the were standing alert....back in the old days about a (secret percentage) or 5-6 bombers and several tankers from each wing would be on ground alert for a week at a time. That is where crews had to live. They could travel to select places on base (Wing/squadron HQs, CBPO, Combat Crew Comm/planning, BX/barber shop, Dining hall, chapel, O' Club) but only as group in specially marked vehicles. You had to have a special pass to go in it, and families were not allowed. Most places had "family centers" and a playground just outside the fence. Each alert facility had its own dining hall.
It really had nothing to do with post-strike environment...because beginning in the 60s, SAC knew the base would be targeted by ICBMs...so I don't think they expected the half buried shelters to do much good.
I've been in several, and many were half-buried...why I don't know.
Spot on, I can attest, having spent six years of my life pulling SAC alert duty at McConnell AFB, Kansas. I don't know when our alert facility was built but, it's two-story construction was all above ground which would leave me to believe by the time it was constructed, building it even one story below ground would prove fruitless in a nuclear exchange.
In our facility, each crewmember had their own room, sharing a bathroom with the adjoining room. Indeed we had our own dining facility, rec room, briefing room, etc. as well as a family center outside the secure area where we could spend time with our families. We could access many of the facilities on base and at McConnell, that included a few holes on the golf course. It was all predicated on how quickly we could return to the alert facility during a klaxon.