Vanity Fair Magazine Articles
The Atlantic Monthly Articles
The Outlook Articles
People Today Articles
American Legion Monthly Articles
Sea Power Magazine Articles
Confederate Veteran Magazine Articles
flapper magazine Articles
La Baionnette Articles
PIC Magazine Articles
Outing Magazine Articles
Stage Magazine Articles
Life Magazine  Articles
National Park Service Histories Articles
Punch Magazine Articles
Men's Wear Articles
Current Literature Articles
The New York Times Articles
Hearst's Sunday American Articles
Click Magazine Articles
Creative Art Magazine Articles
Rob Wagner's Script Articles
The New Republic Articles
American Legion Weekly Articles
The Smart Set Articles
Photoplay Magazine Articles
Leslie's Magazine Articles
Ken Magazine Articles
PM  Articles
Saturday Review of Literature Articles
The Dial Magazine Articles
Theatre Arts Magazine Articles
The North American Review Articles
Direction Magazine Articles
'47 Magazine Articles
Film Spectator Articles
Film Daily Articles
Trench Warfare History Articles

Not long after the U.S.S.R. successfully tested their first atomic bomb, the brass hats who work in the Pentagon saw fit to take the first step in preparing to fight an atomic war: they gave the order to create an isolated subterranean headquarters to house a military command and control center for the U.S. and her allies.

“The finished chamber, according to local observers, will be 3,100 feet long, contain four suites for the top brass (the Joint Chiefs of Staff, among others), and provide operational quarters for some 1,200 technicians in peacetime, or 5,000 if atomic bombing threatens the Washington command.”


Commonly known as “Site R”, it is located not terribly far from the presidential retreat, Camp David, and in the subsequent years since this article first appeared, the complex has grown considerably larger than when it was first envisioned. Today, Site R maintains more than thirty-eight military communications systems and it has been said that it was one of “undisclosed locations” that hosted Vice President Dick Cheney (b. 1941) shortly after the September 11th terrorist attacks.


We were startled to learn that the initial tunneling duties were not trusted to the Army Corps of Engineers, but rather the P.J. Healy Company; a construction firm that was highly praised at the time for having engineered the Lincoln Tunnel in New York City.


A related article can be read here…


Additional magazine and newspaper articles about the Cold War may be read on this page.


KEY WORDS: Pentagon nuclear war HQ Raven Rock Pennsylvania,site R nuclear war HQ Raven Rock Pennsylvania,Pentagon Nuclear War preparations,Defense Information Systems Agency Site R,PJ Healy Company created the Raven Rock atomic bomb shelter 1951,atomic bomb-proof nuclear HQ,RRMC information,Raven Rock Complex was one of VP Dick Cheneys undisclosed locations after 9/11

Read The Pentagon Prepared for W.W. III (Pathfinder Magazine, 1951) for Free