This
March 27, 1968 newspaper article was taken from the Democrat Herald of Baker
City, Oregon.
Last chance for people to
see radar in operation
Operating facilities at the 821st Radar Squadron Beaver
Mountain Site will cease operation following an open house tour this weekend,
U. S. Air Force officials have advised.
The tour is set for Saturday and
Sunday from 1-5 p.m. both days. It offers the last opportunity for Baker area
residents to see the radar equipment operating.
The facilities are located off from
State Highway 7 at the top of Dooley Mountain. The highway was reported clear,
but visitors were urged to use caution on the dirt and gravel road to the radar
facilities. There will be traffic uphill and downhill during the tour.
Military aids will conduct visitors
around the site and answer all questions.
Closure of the Baker base is
expected to be completed by July. No plans have been announced for future use
or dismantling of the Beaver Mountain facilities, Baker base facilities, and
Baker off-base housing development.
Word on these latter plans will
likely be made through Oregon congressional sources, it was stated.
First word indicating the radar base
would be phased out was in January of 1965, as part of a military cutback.
Construction of the base began in 1957. Several years later while still under
construction the Beaver Mountain facility was expanded to become semi-automatic
instead of following the original plan for manual control radar.
The number of personnel at the base,
both Air Force and civilian, has ranged from 130 to 175. Counting dependants,
the squadron population in Baker has been estimated at a total of about 550
persons.