Hopedale Air Station

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Hopedale Air Station
Part of Pinetree Line
Mid-Canada Line
Hopedale, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
Station in the mid 1960s
Coordinates55°27′59″N 060°13′47″W / 55.46639°N 60.22972°W / 55.46639; -60.22972 (Hopedale AS N-28)
TypeRadar Station
CodeN-28
Site information
OwnerUSAF
Controlled byNortheast Air Command
Aerospace Defense Command
Conditionabandoned
Site history
Built1953
Built byUnited States Air Force
In use1953-1968
Hopedale AS is located in Newfoundland and Labrador
Hopedale AS
Hopedale AS
Location of Hopedale Air Station, Labrador

Hopedale Air Station (ADC ID: N-28) is a General Surveillance Radar station that the USAF closed in 1968. It is located north of the community of Hopedale, Newfoundland and Labrador 147.8 miles (237.9 km) west-northwest of CFB Goose Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.

History

The site was established in 1953 as a General Surveillance Radar station, funded by the

923d Aircraft Control and Warning Squadron
at the station on 1 October 1953.

The station was reassigned to the USAF

Goose AFB
, Labrador.

It operated the following radars:

  • Search Radars:
    AN/FPS-93
    A
  • Height Radars: AN/TPS-502,
    AN/FPS-90

In addition to the main facility, Hopedale operated an

AN/FPS-14
manned Gap Filler sites:

N-28A was built in 1957 about 50 miles east-southeast of the main station and was closed in 1961. It was serviced year round by a helicopter landing pad midway between the dock and the main site and by a small dock where supply ships apparently provided logistical support to the station during the summer months.

USAF Military Personnel stationed at Hopedale lived in barracks interconnected and guyed into the bedrock. Canadian non-military personnel lived in the village of Hopedale, about half a mile south-southeast of the site. An airstrip on Ribback Island provided air support to the station. There was no airstrip support for the site in 1964. The squadron was inactivated on 18 June 1968, and the station was closed on 30 June. All US Air Force personnel lived in barracks at the station itself. There were three "tiers" of barracks: Enlisted, NCO and Officer. There were a few[quantify] Canadian nationals employed at the base. They lived in the village of Hopedale.

In 2009, a serious PCB contamination was identified at the former Hopedale station.

Other than civil communications towers presently in use, the hilltop site has remained largely unused and abandoned since its closure. It is accessible via a maintained gravel road originating from the village of Hopedale, NL. This road branches into two directions: southwest to the former radar station site and north to the former barracks. Large concrete foundations remain intact at both locations.

USAF units and assignments

Units:

  • Activated as 923d Aircraft Control and Warning Squadron at Grenier AFB, New Hampshire, 13 June 1953
Moved to Hopedale Air Station, 1 October 1953
Inactivated 18 June 1968.

Assignments:

Mid-Canada Line

In 1956, a bistatic radar transmitter was constructed at Hopedale as the Sector Control Station (Site 200) for the Mid-Canada Line.

North Warning System

Since 1992, the Canadian Forces have operated a Short Range Radar facility at a nearby site, as part of the North Warning System.

See also

  • List of USAF Aerospace Defense Command General Surveillance Radar Stations

References

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency

  • A Handbook of Aerospace Defense Organization 1946 - 1980, by Lloyd H. Cornett and Mildred W. Johnson, Office of History, Aerospace Defense Center, Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado
  • Winkler, David F. (1997), Searching the skies: the legacy of the United States Cold War defense radar program. Prepared for United States Air Force Headquarters Air Combat Command.
  • Information for Hopedale AS, NL