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| While there are no missiles currently stored at the base, these are images of missiles that were once commonplace on this site. |
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This missile base was built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in 1965 at the height of the Cold War, immediately following the Cuban Missile Crisis of October, 1962.
At a time when national security against Soviet attack was America’s main priority, the United States Army chose this strategic site within Everglades National Park, located 160 miles from the Cuban coast, to build a missile site.
The base was listed on the U. S. Department of the Interior’s National Register of Historic Places on July 27, 2004 as a historic district. The area includes 22 contributing buildings and structures associated with events that have made a significant contribution to American history and embodies distinctive characteristics of the period.
Some of the structures that are part of the tour include three missile barns built to contain 41-foot missiles (some with nuclear warheads), a missile assembly building, a guard dog kennel, barracks, control centers within berms that served as blast protection, and a number of other features.
This base is one of four Nike Hercules missile
sites that were built in South Florida. The others were located in north Key Largo
on SR905 near Card Sound Road, one in the Hialeah / Miramar area
near Red Road and Miami Gardens Drive, one that is now the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Krome Detention Center
near Tamiami Trail and Krome Avenue, and the site in Everglades National Park.
Become a Nike site volunteer
at Everglades National Park:
Email –
Jackie_Dostourian@nps.gov
Conduct an telephone interview with a professional NPS
Interviewer about your Nike experiences in south Florida: Email -
Bonnie_Ciolino@nps.gov
Last Updated: September, 27, 2009
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