Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Raven Rock Mountain Complex

Last updated: 4/26/2019                   

Raven Rock Mountain complex logo - Site R logo seal
If you search for Camp David on the internet, you are bound to stumble across information about the Raven Rock Mountain Complex, also known as Site R.  A popular theory floating around is that there is a secret tunnel between Camp David and Site R.  I had never heard of the RRMC, so I decided to look into it.

Site R is a deep underground relocation facility for the Department of Defense located in Pennsylvania about six miles from Camp David. It is a nationally critical communications facility and serves as the Alternate National Military Command Center (ANMCC). It is also known as the "underground Pentagon".


CONSTRUCTION AND EXPANSION OF SITE R

The best source of information I found about Site R came from the Department of Defense in response to a 1999 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request submitted to the Joint Staff. The FOIA documents released included the following information about Site R:

President Truman approved the secret project in 1950 and one half million cubic yards of superhard greenstone granite rock was blasted out and hauled away in ten months. Three underground buildings A, B, and C (each 3-stories tall) were completed in 1953. Ten years later, buildings D and E were added.  

In 1989, work began on a $13.5 million dollar project to improve the cooling systems for the computers in the command center. A new tunnel was built for access to a second underground reservoir. Additional water cooling towers were added along with structural bracing and a fire detection/sprinkling system. A 1990 article in the Gettysburg Times provides additional information about this project.

Site R cutaway released by the Department of Defense in response to a 1999 FOIA request

Raven Rock Mountain Complex Layout  (from the Department of Defense in response to a 1999 FOIA request)


EARLY NEWS COVERAGE OF SITE R

If you have spent any time on this blog, you will know that I like to reference old newspaper articles. The Raven Rock Mountain Complex was built during the cold war and I find it interesting to read articles about it that were written during that time period. Some of my favorites:

Click here to read the entire article



Click here to read the entire article


RAVEN ROCK MOUNTAIN COMPLEX AERIAL PHOTOS  (View more Site R photos)

Bing Maps has a feature called Birds-eye that displays aerial images of a location that were shot from low-flying airplanes overhead. Here are some screenshots from the Birds-eye view of the Raven Rock Mountain Complex map:

Site R:  A Portal (on right) and B Portal.  (Bing Maps)

Site R portal and Security Building
Close-up view of A Portal with Security Building on the right (Bing Maps)

Site R - portal and pedestrian entrance
Close-up view of B Portal and what looks like a pedestrian access adit at lower right  (Bing Maps)

Site R:  C Portal and D Portal   (Bing Maps)

Site RT - antenna site located on top of the Raven Rock Mountain Complex   (Bing Maps)

Site R :   A, B, C, and D Portals  and Site RT   (Google Maps)

Site R diagram overlay on Google Maps

Raven Rock helipad and fire station
Raven Rock Mountain Complex helipad and fire station (Bing Maps)

RRMC satellite communications facility at Site C   (21st Signal Brigade netcom.army.mil - full-size photo)


View more Raven Rock photos on my other blog: About Site R


PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION OF SITE R 

The FY 2013 DOD Base Structure Report lists the Raven Rock site in Pennsylvania as having 69 buildings totaling  almost 640,000 square feet on 716 acres. For FY 2012, the numbers were 66 buildings totaling around 615,000.  In 2001, there were 59 buildings with a total of 452,000 square feet on the same number of acres.

There are several different areas that make up Site R.  The glossary page in the unclassified 1994 Army Regulation 190-15 Physical Security of the Alternate Joint Communications Center (AJCC) defines these three locations:
  • Site R - the Alternate Joint Communications Center 
  • Site RT - the limited area at Site R where antennas are located (Read more about Site RT)
  • Site Creed - the limited area on the west side of the AJCC with an underground building complex 
In addition, there is also Site C, which is a satellite communications facility located atop Quirauk Mountain in Washington County in Maryland supported by the 302nd Signal Battalion. Someone living nearby captured the nighttime glow from Site C in this Flickr photo. The Raven Rock Mountain Complex received approval in August 2012 to construct two additional generators at this location.

website about America's Cold War Infrastructure  describes Site Creed as a microwave radio tower that was part of a Presidential emergency communication network built in the late 1950s - early 1960s.  The tower consisted of nine floors below ground and two floors above ground that housed the microwave/antennas equipment. The Creed tower is located a short distance away from the main complex and access is via a separate entrance tunnel.  According to that same website, the tower is no longer in use.  Read more about the Creed Tower and view the diagram at full-resolution.


Site Creed (tower at lower right) on  Bing Maps                                  Cross Section view of the Creed Tower               

In 1991, the "mayor of Raven Rock", Lt. Col Art Maxwell, described the underground facility in an unclassified briefing. Site R has four portals going 650 feet below the 1,529 foot summit of the Raven Rock Mountain.  It has living quarters, a fitness center, a medical facility, the Granite Cove dining facility, a barbershop, a chapel, legal services, and a convenience store. The underground reservoirs hold millions of gallons of water. There are 35 miles of cables on 180 telephone poles. The inside of Site R looks like a typical office building except that there are no windows. Site R also has a wastewater treatment plant.

There are two underground power plants - East and West plants.  A fully redundant system is required to power the HVAC and emergency generators in the event of an extended lockdown. The "Recent Changes to Site R" section below describes some major upgrades to the West power plant. In January 1990, an explosion occurred at RRMC due to a soot build-up in the exhaust system which blew the top off of the vent house located at the top of the mountain. The Pennsylvania Bureau of Mines made a recommendation related to some antiquated equipment in the power plants to prevent this from recurring.

declassified document from the Nuclear Vault of the National Security Archive described the underground buildings at Site R:
"The ANMCC and Presidential quarters were in Building D. Buildings A, B, and C provided quarters, administrative space, and the operational facilities that the services planned to use as primary emergency centers. The ANMCC was designed to accommodate 3,000 persons in an emergency and could operate at least 30 days in a "buttoned up" position."
A Baltimore Sun article describes Site R's five 3-story underground buildings: "The five buildings at the site are separated by thick rock walls because each was erected inside its own mountain cavern." A 2012 employment ad described the facility as operating 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.


The Site R Security building was built in 1994 outside the A Portal


LOCATION OF SITE R

The location of the Raven Rock Mountain Complex is unclassified and the Pennsylvania address of the underground facility often appears in public solicitations on the FedBizOps website. The various areas of Site R can be viewed interactively by clicking and dragging the Bing map below. For a more detailed view, click on "View Bird's Eye" and then zoom in and rotate the map.





SITE R ENTRANCE

Main entrance gate at Site R

Close-up of main gate and Visitor Control Center/Remote Delivery Facility (Schungel Bldg)



Signs posted outside the gates at Site R



PERSONNEL ENTRY CONTROL PROCEDURES FOR RAVEN ROCK / SITE R

Site R is a secure facility and  personnel must follow the security procedures outlined in USAG Raven Rock Regulation 380-1.

The RRMC Security & Intelligence Office is responsible for validating requests for entry to the installation. Entry is controlled by an exchange badge system consisting of an external pass and internal badge.  The external pass must be worn whenever someone is on the installation.  Upon entering the Security Building, a person must exchange the external pass  for an internal badge.  The internal badge must then be returned to the entry control point in the Security Building upon exiting.

The Security Building serves as the entry control point for the Raven Rock Mountain Complex

Entry to the roof, cavities, and wells is limited to persons having a strict operational requirement.  The Special Access authorization for these areas is controlled programmatically by the Visitor Access Security System (VASS).

Family members are allowed access to the facility for holiday meals and special award ceremonies. Guest tours of the site are not permitted. The only approved areas for family members are:
  • Granite Cove Dining Facility
  • Building F
  • Pavilion  
Site R is a Continuity of Operations relocation facility for the Department of Defense.  Current rosters of relocation personnel are provided to the Military Police for granting access to the site. During an actual relocation or a relocation exercise, special "Hasty Access" procedures are followed to expedite entry.   Large groups traveling by bus will enter through the main entrance gate and proceed to the Security Building upon validation by the guards.  Relocating personnel arriving via helicopter will follow Blue Light and Iron Gate procedures.

The entry procedures are documented in the following USAG-RR Reg 380-1.

Reg 380-1 Personnel Entry Control Procedures for Raven Rock Mountain Complex Site R
USAG-RR Reg 380-1  Personnel Entry Control Procedures for the Raven Rock Mountain Complex - Site R



STAFFING LEVELS AT RRMC

The people who work at Site R come from multiple areas. The basic day-to-day support for the facility is staffed by the Washington Headquarters Services (WHS).  The FY 2013 WHS budget report listed 135 FTE positions at RRMC funded by the Pentagon Reservation Maintenance Revolving Fund.

The Pentagon Force Protection Agency provides security for the installation. An online resume of a Supervisory Police Officer at Raven Rock put the military police force there at around 148 as of 2007.

A 2010 Fort Detrick Defense Technology & Intelligence Career Fair ad describing the composition of the workforce at Ft. Detrick refers to "support services being provided to an additional 739 at Raven Rock Mountain Complex."

This blog and my other RRMC-related website have received visits from over 325 different IP addresses assigned to the Raven Rock Mountain Complex. While many of them are assigned to a generic RRMC hostname, the ones belonging to the "Alternate Joint Communications Center - Emergency Relocation Group" are quite specific: DAMI (Army Intelligence), SADCINT (Sector Air Defense Commander - Intelligence), DCSPER (Deputy Chief of Staff - Personnel), OTJAG (Office of the Judge Advocate General), OTSG (Office of the Surgeon General), ASAIE (Assistant Secretary of the Army Installations and Environment), ODA (Operations Duty Officer), IG (Inspector General), PAO (Public Affairs Officer), XO (Executive Officer), LOCSUR (Logistics Operations Center Army Surplus), LOCSUPMAINT (Logistics Operations Center Supervisor Maintenance), ASACW (Assistant Secretary of the Army Civil Works), ASAMRA (Assistant Secretary of the Army Manpower & Reserve Affairs), VCSA (Vice Chief of Staff of the Army), MOSOSOD (Special Operations Division) and many others.


SITE R TENANTS

A 2012 press release about a newly minted 114th Signal Battalion coin refers to the "more than 30 federal, civilian, and military agencies that occupy" Site R. The following partial list of Site R tenants were included in the 1999 FOIA documents: Naval Operations Support Activity, Joint Staff Support Center, Air Force Manpower Readiness Flight, National Military Command Center, Air Force Operations Group, Air Force Emergency Operations Center, Defense Intelligence Agency, 1111th Signal Battalion (now the 114th), Department of the Navy, and Office of the Secretary of Defense. A current list of DOD components (many if not all are tenants) are listed on the Pentagon's website.

In addition, a DOD Directive defines RRMC tenant units as including both the above DOD components and "other Executive Departments and Agencies located at the AJCC by agreement."  The financing of Site R operations is shared by tenants via the Defense Working Capital Fund.


RECENT UPGRADES TO SITE R

Raven Rock Mountain Complex Fire Station

The RRMC Fire Station was built in 2005. The E-One website has a photo of a commercial pumper truck delivered there. For more information, visit Raven Rock Fire and Emergency Services on my related blog About Site R.

The FY 2011 budget provided for the reconfiguration and consolidation of the Emergency Operations Center.

Power Plant Modernization Project

A multi-year effort is currently underway to modernize the power plants and double their generating capacity to support future facility mission loads and the Continuity of Operations Planning (COOP) for the U.S. Government, the Office of the Secretary of Defense and the Joint Staff. The four-phase effort began several years ago with the construction of a temporary power plant outside the facility and the installation of larger fuel storage tanks.

Phase 3 involves the complete replacement of the West Power Plant. According to an IBEW contractor website, the construction is scheduled to begin in Spring 2013. The $45 million project will install new generators, larger chillers, pumps, air handling units, and miscellaneous supporting infrastructure upgrades including the construction of a new control room and the excavation and enlargement of the cavern. Upon completion of the new West Power Plant, the diesel generators and all of the associated infrastructure from the temporary power plant will be relocated as part of the East Power Plant renovation. The West Power Plant modernization contract was awarded to Grunley Construction Co., Inc located in Rockville, MD for $44,854,000. The scheduled completion date is May 2016.

View the MILCON Project Status Report March 2013 - RRMC Power Plant Modernization


LIST OF CURRENT PROJECTS AT RAVEN ROCK MOUNTAIN COMPLEX

The Department of Defense uses a 4-digit Program Project Activity (PPA) code to track approved funding for programs and activities within various departments. Below is a list of projects related to RRMC that are being tracked by the Washington Headquarters Services (WHS). The source of information for this list was found here.  You can view the complete PPA report here.




RAVEN ROCK UPGRADE NEEDED TO SUPPORT CONTINUITY OF GOVERNMENT





The 2014 Military Construction budget for the Washington Headquarters Services includes a new $32 million "Administrative Facility" renovation project to provide additional space for the Office of the Secretary of Defense and mission partners in direct support for Continuity of Government and Continuity of Operations. The additional tenant space requirements are defined in a memo from the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and America's Security Affairs (HD&ASA) written in January 2011 titled “Raven Rock Mountain Complex Tenant Requirements.”

According to the budget document, the additional space is located within the existing underground facility but will require infrastructure upgrades including HVAC, lightning, voice and data cabling, power, plumbing, intrusion detection, and fire alarm systems. The renovated facility will house an accredited Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility (SCIF) within the new 24-hour operational space. Although the details of this new facility are classified, the budget document states that the proposed site will be located within 1,000 feet of existing RRMC telephone service.

There is an old underground tower at Site R that housed microwave equipment during the Cold War. The Creed tower had nine floors underground including living quarters and office space. It was deactivated in 1977 and lacking power, it flooded. There is no indication whatsoever that the old Site Creed is being renovated for this project, but I included this theory as a nod to the old-timers and Cold War history buffs that occasionally visit this blog.

The detailed requirements statement within the budget document states: "This project supports RRMC mission readiness established in DoDI 5110.11 Raven Rock Mountain Complex and DoD S-5100.44 Defense and National Leadership Command Capacity." Construction is scheduled to begin in July 2014 and be completed by July 2016.



MISSION OF THE RAVEN ROCK MOUNTAIN COMPLEX

The DOD Washington Headquarters Services (WHS) website describes RRMC as: "The Nation's Premier Secure Strategic Battle Command Platform – assuring senior leader's ability to execute their mission essential functions.  RRMC's elite workforce provides a unique capability to meet requirements of a nation at war."

A 2012 WHS employment ad contains the following mission statement:
"The Raven Rock Mountain Complex (RRMC) is a unique hardened, survivable, deep underground command center and relocation site with rigorous redundancy, reliability, and security standards charged with a mission to support the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, select DoD components, and as appropriate, non-DoD agencies of the Federal Government to enable the execution of DoD mission-essential functions in support of the National Defense. The Installation includes Site C and encompasses at least 25 distinct tenant activities with varied mission peculiar requirements and representing OSD, JCS, and all branches of the military services with specialized infrastructure and buildings spread out over a 700-acre campus and several distinct and remote sites." 
According to the DoDI 5110.11, the mission of RRMC is to support the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, select DOD Components and, as appropriate, non-DOD agencies of the Federal Government, and to enable the execution of DOD mission-essential functions (MEFs) in accordance with DoDD S-5100.44 Defense and National Leadership Command Capability (DNLCC) and Continuity of Operations plans and operational orders.

The 2013 Department of Defense Budget documents state, "The RRMC" provides the DOD Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP) for the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff and Senior DOD Leadership".


114TH SIGNAL BATTALION

The Army's 114th Signal Battalion runs the communication and computer systems at Site R. Their 2011 employment ad states: "The 114th Signal Battalion assists our nation by planning, installing, operating, maintaining and defending Information Services to enable Command and Control for the National Military Command Center (NMCC) Raven Rock Mountain Complex (RRMC), Combatant Commanders, DoD, other Federal agencies and the RRMC during daily and COOP operations."

The mission statement also proclaims "114th Signal Battalion members are proud to be 'Signal Masters of the Rock'" and according to their Facebook page, "Rock Steady Hooah!"


114th Signal Battalion mission statement from www.netcom.army.mil

Prior to the 114th Signal Battalion, the 1111th Signal Battalion was responsible for the communication support at Site R. The 1111th Signal Battalion's old website provides a detailed history of the unit at Site R. Their mission statement also proclaimed them proud to be "Signal Masters of the Rock".



1111th Signal Battalion mission statement from asc.army.mil


JOINT STAFF SUPPORT CENTER

The Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) supports the computer operations at Site R for the Joint Staff Support Center (JSSC), which has a primary location at the Pentagon and an alternate one at Site R.  Employees of the DISA JC6 division of the JSSC were called the "Guardians of the Rock".  An excerpt from their rather lengthy 2003 JC6 mission statement:


Provides operation, administration, maintenance, and direct customer support of Information Systems to satisfy the C3 and analytical requirements of the Joint Staff at the Alternate Joint Communications Center - Site R. 
GCCS screen
Installs, maintains, and supports hardware and software for Global Command and Control System (GCCS), GCCS-Top Secret (GCCS-T), Global Management Center (GMC), National Command and Control System (NCCS), Nuclear Planning and Execution System (NPES), Communications Support Processor (CSP), and Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) Network systems at Site R. 
Manages JSSC Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP) to include COOP facility management and relocation reception. Serves as on-site liaison to Headquarters DISA and the Global Network Operations Support Center for their COOP plans.


AIR FORCE at SITE R 

The Air Force Instruction 10-208 released in December 2011 describes the Air Force's Continuity of Operations Program and includes information about COOP planning policies, requirements and responsibilities.

Responsibilities include providing "weather support" to RRMC; acting as a tenant representative on RRMC boards; and providing a "slate of nominees for the position of Commander of Raven Rock Mountain Complex".

The FAS Secrecy News blog noted that previous releases of this document made no direct mention of Raven Rock. However, a previous version of this document lists one of the Emergency Planning Coordinator's responsibilities as "Schedule and coordinate orientation visits to Site R and Site M for all staff members assigned primary or alternate positions" and refers to the AFEOC (Air Force Emergency Operations Center) facility management at Site R.

The FY 2010 Air Force budget included $267,000 in funding for Site R "hardware, computers, storage, local and long-haul communications, infrastructure, data replications, and other networking equipment to improve/expand both the classified and unclassified AF C4 systems" there along with the development of a "Continuity of Operations (COOP) web portal, designed to track personnel in route to alternative sites, their training status and pertinent COOP documents".

A 2010 FedBizOps solicitation sought microphone bids for 28 workstations for members of the Air Force Crisis Action Team (AFCAT) at the Raven Rock Mountain Complex.



Site R -  2011 DOD nuclear handbook
NUCLEAR COMMAND AND CONTROL FACILITY

The 2011 Nuclear Matters Handbook published by DOD lists the Alternate National Military Command Center at Site R as one of three fixed-location facilities for the NC3 (nuclear command, control and communications system).

The other fixed command centers are located in the Pentagon and underneath the U.S. Strategic Command Headquarters (USSTRATCOM) at Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska.

The mobile nuclear C3 facilities include the tractor trailer-mounted Mobile Consolidated Command Center (MCCC) and the airborne Boeing 747 E-4B National Airborne Operations Center (NAOC) and Boeing 707 E-6B Take Charge and Move Out (TACAMO)/Airborne Command Post (ABNCP).



RAVEN ROCK MOUNTAIN COMPLEX ORGANIZATION CHART

The Washington Headquarters Services Organization Chart shows the management structure at Site R:


From the Washington Headquarters Services Organization Chart as of May 2011


RRMC COMMANDER

There was a change of command for Site R in July 2018 (Col. Larry Niedringhaus). The previous Commander of the Raven Rock Mountain Complex was Col. Kolin V. Bernardoni  who assumed command in July 2015. He replaced Col. Ramona Plemmons who assumed command in July 2012. She replaced Col. Jeffrey Brlecic who had been in charge since July 2010. According to a story in the Washington Post, Col. Brlecic retired in 2012. Previous commanders were Col. Daniel S. Roper. (2005 - 2007) and Col Sherry L. Carpenter (2001? - 2004).

If the current Commander listed above has changed, please share it in the comment section below or email me.

For more information about the responsibilities of the Installation Commander, read the Commander of the Raven Rock Mountain Complex post on my related blog About Site R.


FEDERAL PROCUREMENT ACTIVITIES AT SITE R

The FedBizOpps.gov website displays federal procurement opportunities over $25,000.  Users can search by agency, location, and keyword.  No login is required; the information on this website is unclassified and is open to vendors and citizens.  Here are some recent solicitations related to operations and projects at the Raven Rock Mountain Complex:




WORKING AT SITE R

A former soldier gave this description of Site R in an interview with a local PA television station:

"You just drove into a tunnel and then eventually you come into a point that's hollowed out. And there's a couple of buildings in there. I was awed. I couldn't believe it. It was something -- the engineering." He went on to say that Site R looked like the inside of a giant igloo with office buildings inside. The hollowed out area inside the mountain was big enough that buses and even big rigs could be driven in and parked.
Truck entering the D Portal at Site R

In 2004, a former soldier stationed at Fort Ritchie in the early days of Site R published a detailed description of his experience in an essay in a Canadian literary magazine.  An excerpt from the essay was published on the Sadly, No! blog. Several others who were stationed at Site R over the years also described their Raven Rock experience in the comment section that followed the blog post:

  • "My tour consisted of 4 days in, 7 days off, 3 days in, 7 days off. My watch was 12 hours on, 12 hours off. Handkerchiefs were almost pitch black after 4 days of breathing dirty air."
  • "A readiness posture was ALWAYS expected, and I was there for a few “Slam Door” and “Button Up” events, Three Mile Island, the Chinese invasion of Vietnam, and two Norad computer errors indicating a Soviet missile attack."
  • "The presidential suite was located above our computer room. Lots of stories about each president, Nixon supposedly had the suite done for his daughter completely in pink."
  • "I liked the faux windows in the mess hall, it did my heart good to see “outside” whilst Happy Jack dished up food…"
  • " Does anyone recall the “submarine drills” conducted at the reservoir for the newbies?"
  • "Boy what memories of things like the dome area, nine and three shifts, submarine watch and blowing the valves."


On another message board, a guy who worked "in the crypto section" described Site R as having a complete war room, a room for the President, bunk rooms for several hundred, enough food to last six months, and complete medical units.

Pedestrian adit (next to B Portal)

A blogger overheard a conversation between two guys where one of them described his "interesting" experience gaining access into Site R as a civilian contractor:

 "That meant a long elevator ride with an armed escort in an elevator car with only two buttons, and he's the only one allowed to push them. I keep thinking we're almost there but it keeps going and going!  When it finally does stop... read more"



Another person who visited Site R while stationed at Fort Detrick wrote an interesting article about the inside of the facility:
"As we walked into the tunnel I felt like I was passing into another world. The tunnel walls and ceiling were rough-hewn rock. There was a pedestrian sidewalk on both sides of the roadway that sloped gently downward. The roadway angled to the left before making a sharp turn back to the right and another sharp left turn back to our original direction."
He went on to describe passing through steel blast doors and an airlock into an office building with low ceilings and narrow hallways. He passed by fire trucks and an ambulance and got to see one of the generators. His tour also included one of the underground reservoirs:
"We climbed a steel ladder to a catwalk over an enormous, deep, greenish-blue pool of water that stretched back into a black distance. Underwater lights showed the same rough-hewn rock walls as the rest of the cavern. It was one of the most unusual sights I have ever seen."

Site R challenge coin




Job notices for RRMC are frequently posted online.  They often come with warnings such as:
"Work is performed in an office in a deep underground hardened command and control facility with no daylight and with breathing air subject to the successful operation of mechanical air intake devices.  Daily ingress and egress from office requires walking through industrial and storage areas via concrete roadways and hallways up to a mile in length."
"Going to and from work on a daily basis requires exposure to exhaust fumes created by diesel engines as well as other industrial irritants such as loud noises and dust.  Because of the great likelihood of a major smoke event and total darkness during  a fire, selectee must maintain a flashlight and also be issued and trained to use an emergency escape breathing apparatus."
"May be required to stay for longer than duration of workday and multiple days due to emergency lockdowns."

Like most organizations, the Raven Rock Mountain Complex sponsors some recreational events for their employees like the Commander's golf tournament and the RRMC Tunnel to the Top 5k run/walk.


RRMC event listing on Metropolitan Washington USO calendar




EMPLOYMENT ADS AND RESUMES

Employment ads are frequently posted online for the Raven Rock Mountain Complex and provide a good insight into some of the activities and areas of responsibility within the facility. Likewise, former employees sometimes post resumes detailing their Site R work experience on job search websites.

Some RRMC-related experience posted on job search sites:
  • Supervised the monitoring on over 700 circuits and 34 network systems
  • Responsible for monitoring and control of 300 communications security cryptographic keying materials and devices 
  • Responsible for end-users for more than 500 computer workstations
  • Directed integration of hundreds of relocating DIA personnel into operating routine of ANMCC during Joint Chiefs of Staff exercises
  • Supported the RRMC - Emergency Installation Operations Center during activation
This 2011 employment ad is looking for someone to serve as an agency representative at the RRMC to provide support for the Defense Message System (DMS) and the National Gateway Center-RRMC which supports messaging for DOD users, DOD Nuclear Command Control and Communications (NC3) organizations, intelligence activities, and the DOD national gateway to non-DOD and U.S. Allies.

This 2012 employment ad  is looking for someone to provide telecommunications support for the Emergency Actions Operations Center. A quick check on the Civilian Personnel OnLine system describes the skill set required for this important position: "Accurate analysis and diagnosis is of the utmost importance due to the limited redundancy in circuits and equipment and high level users served by this control i.e., National Military Command Center, Joint Chiefs of Staff, White House Communications Agency, USA/USSR Direct Communications Link, and many others".


EMERGENCY RELOCATION TO SITE R ON 9/11

Helipad at Site R - Bing Maps
Shortly before 10AM on September 11, 2001, counter-terrorism czar Richard Clarke activated the Continuity of Government (COG) plan and told the Pentagon: "We are initiating COG. Please activate your alternate command centers and move staff to them immediately".

Although the plan called for the Secretary of Defense to relocate, Donald Rumsfeld sent his deputy Paul Wolfowitz citing concerns about being out of touch during the time it would take to fly to Site R. Wolfowitz reported that "the computer and communication systems there functioned poorly or not at all". 

The Office of Army Reserve History wrote about the role of Site R on 9/11:
"Despite the attack, command and control of the nation’s armed forces never lapsed. The Chief of the Army Reserve, Lieutenant General Thomas J. Plewes, was working in his office in the Pentagon when the attack occurred. Key defense leaders, including General Plewes, participated in the building’s evacuation before they were whisked away to Site R, also known as the Alternate Joint Communications Center, a secure location on the Maryland-Pennsylvania border. For a time, General Plewes was the ranking military official at the site, considered to be the “back up” command and control center for the Pentagon."



The Army's medical response included sending surgical teams from Ft. Meade to Site R where they had equipment available to operate a 25-bed hospital.

 According to this story in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, local residents spotted helicopters and convoys of SUVs along with a "truck hauling furniture to accommodate the influx of bureaucrats".

In 2004, Time Magazine reviewed a book by James Bamford that revealed Site R as the "undisclosed location" of Dick Cheney following the events of 9/11. Shortly thereafter, The Drudge Report reported that a White House official fumed: "TIME magazine would have revealed the secret location of Anne Frank, if they knew it." However, in his recent memoir "In My Time", Cheney says his undisclosed location was at the VP Residence, his home in Wyoming, and "most often, Camp David".


The Patriot-News released a video called "9/11 Memories: The Neighbor to Site R" which described what it  was like to live near Site R during the 9/11 time frame. 


Patriot-News video - "9/11 Memories: The Neighbor to Site R"


SITE R RELOCATION COOP EXERCISES

Relocation exercises are held periodically. A 2011 employment ad for a Senior Operations Officer in the RRMC Emergency Operations Center wanted someone to "assist relocating personnel and facilitate their Joint Reception, Staging, Onward movement and Integration (JRSO&I) to their designated workspace". The position description for a Management Analyst (COOP) seeks applicants that "possess tact and forcefulness to ensure COOP and emergency preparedness programs are understood". It references RRMC as an alternate duty location along with the mysterious Site Zulu.

The Raven Rock Mountain Complex has specific helicopter evacuation procedures, code-named Blue Light and Iron Gate, that they follow during Continuity of Government (COG) events. Pentagon badges with a "3" on them are "coop badges" and allow free movement on the Pentagon Reservation (which includes Site R) during a crisis.

The Relocation Procedures and Support Handbook provides advice on what to pack for a relocation stint at Site R: two complete changes of clothes, laundry detergent, combination lock, two towels and a flashlight. The handbook advises that the Granite Cove Dining Facility there closes at 5PM and the sleeping accommodations consist of three-tier bunk beds assigned in 12-hour shifts. And leave your radio, alcohol and knives at home.


NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CHANNEL - REMEMBERING 9/11: AMERICAN DOOMSDAY

The American Doomsday documentary has a segment about Site R that starts around 34 minutes into the program. Site R is introduced as being one of Dick Cheney's undisclosed locations following 9/11. An Air Force colonel at the Cheyenne Mountain Complex who had been to Site R said it was a similar structure. "It's really an austere environment; it's essentially an office building."

The documentary describes the problems encountered with Site R on 9/11:  The relocating officials found a "cold-war relic that was far behind the times" with computers unable to connect with modern government databases, too few phone lines and no secure video or audio links. In 2002, the Pentagon requested $80 million for communication and electrical upgrades to Site R.




HISTORY CHANNEL - AMERICA'S BOOK OF SECRETS

Site R was recently featured in a History Channel documentary on the Pentagon. The introduction was a little dramatic considering the amount of information that has been publicly released about the facility:
 "Some believe there is a secret facility built into the side of a mountain in Raven Rock Pennsylvania known as Site R. Might this in fact be a top secret location of a second Pentagon?" 
The documentary describes Site R as having all of the communication systems needed to give orders to the military including the ability to launch the strategic nuclear arsenal. Below are two screenshots from the video containing stock footage from the Cheyenne Mountain Complex (NORAD) rather than from Raven Rock.  You can view the full episode on the History Channel. The Site R portion is near the end.

Screen shots from the Site R portion of the History Channel's documentary about the Pentagon


ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF THE RAVEN ROCK MOUNTAIN COMPLEX

The Raven Rock Mountain Complex won an honorable mention for the 2012 Secretary of Defense Environmental Awards for "Natural Resources Conservation". The RRMC narrative submitted for the award contains this description: "The site is 90% forested, enclosed within a fence, and comprises a magnificent forest of towering chestnut oak, tulip poplar, black oak, northern red oak, and pignut hickory trees."

        RRMC herbicide application using a modified skidder                                       Rocks used for erosion control


Some of their accomplishments cited include herbicide application for the management of the RRMC forest area and storm water management and erosion control. The narrative states that the erosion control measures are critical for maintaining site access and "help to ensure that the command is READY ALWAYS PERIOD."



The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP) provides information to the public about licensed facilities in the state. The information available online includes facility operating permits, fuel storage tank permits, wastewater/sewage  and other miscellaneous permits.  The PADEP also provides a Facility Emissions Report generator which ranks the facilities by their level of emissions.

From 1999 through 2007, the Raven Rock Mountain Complex produced the highest level of Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) emissions in Adams County, PA.  The highest level was recorded in 2003 with 376 tons of NOx emitted.  The diesel power plant generators  at Site R are the main source of the NOx emissions.

2003 Emissions Report for Adams County for NOx



A 2007 notification in the PA Bulletin referenced an expected decrease in emissions with the construction of four diesel generator sets to replace older units. By 2010, RRMC dropped to fourth place in NOx emissions with 9.7 tons.

A new facility operating permit was required in 2011 to reflect the new fuel storage facility along with multiple 2012 permits for the related increased number of storage tanks.

Detailed information about the hazardous waste permits for the Raven Rock Mountain Complex can be found on the Raven Rock page on the Right to Know Network.

A recent posting on a German forum about bunkers includes a link to the Site R imagery on Google Earth highlighting the area of the west vent. The person observed that the Google image appears to show smoke coming out of the vent. The PADEP facility information for Raven Rock lists the west vent as a point of air emission.

Google image of west vent labeled in German ("Site R exhaust");      Bing Maps closeup view of west vent (without smoke)           



PUBLIC TOURS OF THE RAVEN ROCK MOUNTAIN COMPLEX


Parody photo of Raven Rock entrance sign
There are no public tours of RRMC except for the fictional Raven Rock Mountain Complex Site R Tour offered up on a parody website.

According to the Brookings Institution, Colonel Mark Scuerman, a former Site R commandant, proposed opening the facility in 1992 for public tours.  That idea was rejected by officials at the Department of Defense.

However, tours are available if you happen to be a White House Fellow.

The lack of an official tour does not stop the curious from driving through the area and taking photos and posting them on Flickr.  Here's a guy who even shot a  video (although it was of Site C, not Site R as he stated). Sometimes people who live near Site R discuss strange events they see on internet message boards or what they hear on local radio forums. One person wrote about the "alarming" amount of military trucks going into Site R and coming out empty in 2008 but was reassured by someone with a friend who worked for the government and said they were "in the process of linking all branches of the military and pentagon into one communication system". This same friend also claimed she had to go down in an elevator for almost 10 minutes and then had get into another one and go sideways for 5...

Wired Magazine's blog "Danger Room" wrote the post "How to Visit a Secret Nuclear Bunker", which was about an announcement they saw on the Defense Threat Reduction Agency's (DTRA) website about the Raven Rock Hardened Facilities Managers Conference that DTRA was sponsoring at Site R. The Wired bloggers sent an email to DTRA asking for information about the conference.

Some of the items on the agenda included:


  • RRMC mission briefing by the Installation Commander
  • How RRMC works - Life Support Division
  • Logistics - clothing, rations, supply, and berthing
  • Security / Blast door designs
  • Tour of the RRMC health facility
  • Engineering terrain walk

Agenda items that might make you glad you missed this particular conference included: "Emergency Escape Mask Demonstration" and "Tunnel Collapse Briefing". The Danger Room blog noted that the Raven Rock Mountain Complex location is unclassified and posted the address and the driving directions to Site R along with other conference information.


SITE R VIDEO
This video was created using the tour feature from Google Earth



CONCLUSION:  IS THERE A TUNNEL FROM CAMP DAVID TO SITE R?

I wrote this blog post because I wanted to see if I could find any information on the internet that supports the theory of a tunnel running between Camp David and Site R. As you can see from the length of this post, the Department of Defense has published a lot of public information over the years about the Raven Rock Mountain Complex including the construction history, tenants, facility layout, photos, mission, budget, organization chart, job information, procurement solicitations and activities.

However, nowhere in this wealth of information did I come across anything about a tunnel to Camp David.  In fact, in a newspaper article cited above, the "mayor of Raven Rock" officially denied the existence of the tunnel. As I wrote in my "About" page, I do not have any connection to Camp David.  The same goes for Site R. I have never been there and don't know anyone who has.

12/22/2011 UPDATE:  Like most bloggers, I periodically review the visitor log stats for my blog. Today I received a visit from the Army Operations Center at the Pentagon via a Google search: "tunnel between camp david site r".  So clearly my work here is not done...

6/8/2012:  Here's one for the conspiracy buffs out there: Today I received three possibly related (?) visits: An AOL visitor googled: "white house staff to camp david".  A White House Military Office visitor googled: "directions to camp david". And then (get this...) an "Executive Office of the President" visitor googled: "tunnel to raven rock".  And so it continues...

white house tunnel raven rock mountain complex
Taken from this blog's StatCounter report - IP address partially redacted



8/10/2012:  Apparently, I'm not the only one looking for information about this subject. Below is a partial screen print from my Google Analytics report showing a Google search by the Department of Homeland Security using the keywords "tunnel between raven rock and camp david".




Sources:  The Black Vault;  FY 2009 Defense Budget - Military Construction; FY 2012 Defense Budget - Justification; 2008 Pentagon Renovation Report; WHS PPA Codes; 114th Signal Battalion; 1111th Signal Battalionwhs.mil; Bing Maps; cryptome.orgGoogle Maps; Danger Room - wired.com; Brookings Institution; Federation of American Scientists; coldwar-c4i.net; Gettysburg Times; Pittsburgh Press; Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; coldwarcommsSpill Prevention Control and Countermeasure Plan; Federal Register; wikimapia; fbo.gov; 21st Signal Brigade; Urban Exploration Resource; Godlike Productions; Radio Reference; WGAL; Sadly, No!; 572nd Military Police - Site R; National Security Archive; AFCEA2012 Joint Staff Budget Estimates; Daily Mail; Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror; The Pentagon; Time Magazine; Code NamesThe Role of the Army Reserve in the 11 September Attacks; Global SecurityBaltimore Sun; LATimes; Marshall IndependentAdventures of Roberta X; FY2013 DOD Revolving Funds; History Channel; USOPennlive.com; National Geographic Channel; DASD Nuclear MattersKishwaukee College; White House; Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection; US Army Medical Department; Public Intelligence

50 comments:

  1. There is no tunnel running from Camp David to the RRMC Complex. That rumor started over 35 years ago when MP's used to show "newbies" the long deep and dark reservoir. New security personnel were told that high ranking officials came into the reservoir in a submarine from Camp David. That is where the "submarine watch" started. New security personnel were sometimes posted at the reservoir to watch for the submarine. The "submarine watch" duty was often accompanied by a preliminary briefing and drill related to a completely bogus protocol to be initiated in the even the submarine was spotted. Spend nine straight days in that hole with a bunch of crazy Military Police and you would have no problem understanding how the myth of the Camp David tunnel became fact in the eyes of a few who claim to be in the know.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I was a "crazy" military policeman there for several years. No tunnels, submarine duty was a magical time for newbies. Anyone would go crazy and start rumors in that place.

      Delete
    2. What i meant was there were no tunnels to Camp David. There's plenty of tunnels, just all on site.
      My initials are carved in the wall at the ammo dump.
      CBO

      Delete
  2. Tour Description
    Tour guests will arrive via the six and a half mile tunnel between Camp David and Site R. Guests will proceed to the Security Building, where they will be finger-printed, photographed, and searched.

    Staff from the Fire & Emergency Services will conduct a briefing on the fire evacuation plan and the use of the emergency escape masks. While an evacuation is highly unlikely, the safety briefing is required for all Site R visitors. Flashlights will be issued to all guests in the unlikely event the entire facility is suddenly plunged into complete darkness.

    http://whitehouse.gov1.info/raven-rock/index.html

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  3. Yup, just like there was no Agent Orange, there was no congressional ERS at the Greenbriar, and Area 51 isn't officially a military facility.

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  4. Just because someone says the government is lying doesn't mean they're telling the truth. There are conspiracies to create false claims of conspiracy to discredit actual conspiracies. It's an old trick relying on reverse psychology.

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  5. The link you posted "http://whitehouse.gov1.info/raven-rock/index.html" is a spoof site. First it is .gov1, Second, it doesn't resolve to any government IP range.

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  6. You are correct. In the "Public Tours of the Raven Rock Mountain Complex" section above, that website link is described as being a parody fictional tour. By the way, I am also the owner of the whitehouse.gov1.info parody site (as disclosed in the About section of this blog).

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  7. Actually, Site R is a major resource of and for USStratCOM; I/TWAA, NAOC, (E6B TACAMO/ABNCP.

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  8. I made an off-the-wall reference to "Dick Cheney's bunker" earlier today, and since then I've been reading various sources about Site R. This post is an excellent, well-researched and supported summary of the public information about the site.

    Speaking of Cheney - I've never read Cheney's autobiography, but I would suspect that when Cheney said he was at "Camp David," he may have been accurate within a few miles or so.

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  9. Thanks for the quote and the link! These known-but-secure sites fascinate me; FEMA did most of the videoconferences for the (somewhat flawed) National EAS Test from their facility at Mt. Weather and seemed very comfortable mentioning their location. It's not like any of us were going to just stop by.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You're welcome - it was an interesting post that you wrote.

      Delete
    2. TWA flt 514 did make an brief stop at Mt Weather in 1974.

      Delete
  10. This is a great article, good sources and information. Well written. The part at the end about being visited by "the Army Operations Center at the Pentagon via a Google search: "tunnel between camp david site r" is highly interesting.

    Why would they be searching this and checking on articles? Where in the command chain does this action become protocol.

    Also, the main reason I'm replying is to know how you check this information? I'm a blogger and would love to know who has been reading my stuff.

    More info would be great,
    Thanks again for the good article.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I use a free program called Statcounter that provides visitor-related information including search keywords and referring links. The keywords that some people use to get here can occasionally be of interest. That's what led me to the information about the new power plant being built. Of course, just because someone googles something doesn't make it true, but it can lead to the discovery of confirming information buried somewhere else on the internet.

      Delete
  11. Someone told me that there is tunnels from D.C. to Norfolk's Naval yards, pretty interesting stuff.

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  12. I was once told of a rumour re: an underground runway at a location in California. My response was that the underground runway was not a secret. The big secret was the underground air that aircraft would fly through after they took off from the underground runway.

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  13. Well researched and written. There are a few myths in your writing, but for the most part you are right on target.

    A former Mole [1983-1986]

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    Replies
    1. I can neither confirm, nor deny the information in this blog, and if you were read out of the program you should know you are not authorized to do so either. ;-)

      Delete
  14. I use to work there back in 2007and it sucked working there inside the mountain, it was no big deal, my boss was a dumb ass and the people inside were all assholes including the staff at the front office when you checked in to show your silly badge. It's all hype
    The Taliban already knows about that place it's no secret anymore. I held a Secret Security Clearance but cancelled when I quit working there, because it was a joke being around no windows and a bunch of military jar heads.

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    Replies
    1. The only dumbass I see is you..."show your silly badge"? There's a reason for those "silly badges"...and holding a "Secret Security Clearance" isn't that big of a deal, as everyone in the military holds AT LEAST a Secret clearance...and you don't "cancel" your clearance...it's revoked when it's no longer needed, like, say, when you quit working there.
      The Taliban knowing about it isn't a big deal...not like they could actually do anything to harm the place...and the Russians know about it also...that should concern you more than the taliban...

      BTW, the fact that you referred to RRMC as a "joke being around no windows and a bunch of military jar heads" shows your ignorance and tells me you're probably lying about your time there. IF you worked there, you voluntarily took the job, knowing where you would be working...no one forced you...

      Delete
    2. AMEN to that well said and put Anonymous!!! BTW I was stationed therein the late 70's

      Delete
  15. Site R, Mount Weather and Cheyenne Mtn. were all built more or less the same way, although Site R came first. Years later, they undertook substantial blast overpressure hardening. You'd have to look at an old Time Magazine photo to see it up close (Mt. Weather portal entrances are now shielded from satellite view), but the M.W. portals (one on each side of the mtn.) looked the same as the Site R ones. Two gun portals (supposedly) at the top. Tunnel straight through the mountain; build office buildings on shock springs within excavations carved into the sides of the tunnels. Protect the offices with blast doors. Allow the blast wave to blow through the mountain. You seldom see it in photos, but NORAD has one tunnel, straight through the mtn. with a portal on each side.

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  16. A couple more interesting tidbits in Eisenhower's Daily Schedule about his visits to "Fort Ritchie" from Operation Alert in 1955.

    I was reading an article in the Economist from right after Operation Alert 1955 that described Eisenhower going to his "tent city" somewhere and using the closed circuit television system. But actually he spent the 3 days driving between Camp David, Fort Ritchie, Highpoint and his farm. It reads
    like Highpoint might have been under construction at the time…like he drove to the gate and ate in a mess tent. I guess there were facilities on the mountain for a long time.

    Pages 28- 33 (it's a big file)
    June 15th – He visited High Point. And on June 16th and June 17th he went to
    "Fort Ritchie" and on the 17th had a meeting with all the people who had
    participated in the exercise at High Point and Fort Ritchie and "made a
    television broadcast". Nice list of the folks who were there with him.

    http://eisenhower.archives.gov/research/online_documents/presidential_appointment_books/1955/June_1955.pdf


    Thursday June 16th 1955 (page 32)
    11:30am The President Participated in a "Telecon Transmission" (From Fort
    Ritchie)

    Friday June 17th 1955 (Page 33)
    1:30 The President made a television broadcast. (From Fort Ritchie)






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  17. Just found your site and read everything except all the newspaper articles.

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  18. Great site. Brings back a ton of memories. Served USA @ Ft. Ritchie 4/67 - 4/69 with more TDY's than I can remember - almost every army base east of the Mississippi, 'Nam, and Korea. Ft. Ritchie was a great small base and Site 'R' was awesome. I was in the 7th Sig. Command, 1111th Sig. Bat. in the crypto center with a TSC clearence. With that clearence, us crypto guys got to go just about anyplace inside the Rock. Ft. Ritchie supported the Alternate Joint Communications Center (AJCC) @ Site R and Site R provided support as a unit of the US Army Joint Support Command (AJSC). At that time, Ft. R. had a Head & Service Co., an Operations Co., an M P Co. and a WAC Co. All the Opns personnel and about 2/3 of the MP's worked at Site R.
    There were WACS attached to all 3 service companies. Ft. R. was a nice small base with all the services and recreation of larger bases plus it had 2 lakes - one for swimminjg and one for fishing & boating. Site R was really different. Our comm center was on the 3rd floor of C bldg. and if you lifted any ceiling tile, all you could see was carved out granite rock. We always wondered if a piece of the rock "ceiling" would fall thru our tile ceiling. It was a good time, so to speak, to be at Ft. R. Us GI's could make rank pretty quick if you new your stuff when you went before the boards. "Buck" in 16 mos. was pretty common. We supported all the other branches (Air Force, Navy, Marines $ Coast Guard) crypto sites within Site R, so it was always neat to walk into their comm center and frost their nuts off with 3 stripes on your sleeve when most of these dudes had between 4 to 7 or 8 years and were E4's if they were lucky. The war rooms were unbelievable. Whoever was in charge of that military branch's war room had the power to have the room refurb'ed. Back then, aqnything that got replaced was put on the trash pile so to speak, and was up for grabs by the civilians who worked there. Some of them were recarpeting their homes every 3 or 4 years. The worst part of duty at site R was the "lock-ups" (60's term) or "war exercises". You couldn't get out of Raven Rock for maybe 4 days, a week , 2 weeks, however long it lasted. One down side for the military - there sure was an increase in pregnancies afterward. The military did try to ease the boredom though. We had continuous movies (changed everyday), plenty of rec hall type games - pool tables, ping pong, card tables, etc, and chow availavle 24/7. Those civilian cooks always out did themselves. I had a number of friends in the MP's and they always kept things amusing when they were guarding the mountain. I can remember that they had a special indoctrination for any newbie to Site R. When you arrived at Site R for your shift, you would wait in he parking lot and a bus would pick you up to take you inside the mountain. On the mid to 0800 hrs. shift they would pick the darkest night of the week, and when the bus would get to the MP checkpoint outside Portal A, it had to stop at the gate. Then maybe 3 or 4 MP's would board the bus, make a somewhat cursory check and exit the bus with maybe 3 or so newbies. Then the MP's would take them up the road a ways. All of a sudden the 2 searchlights that were on at the portal, would go out. It was so dark you couldn't see anything. Then the MP's told the newbies they were going to show them how to shoot coyotes. The next thing, you would hear the 45's rip along with a lot of yelling. There was always at least 1 newbie who came back to the bus needing a change of skivies.
    I do have one question about the current staffing at Site R: where do the military personnel billet?
    Crypto code name "VW" from Army comm center.

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  19. Military police wouldn't know.. you don't have a need to know.

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  20. I was there at Site R from may 1965 until September 1966. It was a great place to work. We were on the second floor( part of the Comm Center that was on the 3rd floor. ) , above us was Voice Secure. They handled all the incoming and outgoing communications. We would talk to them by a Walkie Talkie type box on the wall. It took many months before we ever met them on the bus to and from the Site. There were many things to do around the post. We went to DC and New York often. I saw the movie My Fair Lady at a theatre in Hagerstown MD in the summer of 1965. There was a little place called the Burger Bar right outside the gates at Ft, Ritchie, they had the best hamburgers and malts around. My best friends were Elmer Milton , Edward King , Jack Agnitsch, Brian Daigle and a few WACS Valerie Stevens and Rita Wysocki. Our friends were MP's Ross Johnson from Babylon Long Island and a guy named Shafer from Summerville New Jersey. It was cold in the winter lots of snow. But looking back it was a fun time in our lives...Someday I would love to go back and see the place. .... John Berard New Iberia ,Louisiana

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  21. I just finished a contract at Site R for their emergency preparedness, or should I say, lack there of. there is no coordination, a lack of resources and qualified personnel, in-fighting and political land grabs so much so that the project was terrible. Personnel don't know what actions to take when and even though they have these little announced fire drills where everyone walks out of the mountain to muster, (a process that takes 10-30min BTW), there was always confusion with the plans and ops folks vs PFPA.

    the site iteself is fascinating, but if there is a disaster, its definitely NOT the place to be.

    the communication systems failed constantly and took days and weeks to resolve because of junior Soldiers who could barely turn on a computer being assigned to the 114th. the medical clinic is only staffed with a RN and LPN and do no medical care unless the site is activated. Otherwise its all up to Fire/EMS, of which there are no paramedics. so if you are having a heart attack and require ACLS, good luck, you're probably going to die before mutual aid gets there AND i was specifically told that this is a risk that WHS and the Army are aware of AND accept. But the personnel generally do not know this and would shit a brick if they knew they were at risk. the pandemic plan is not up to date, their was no designated emergency manager when I was there, only people fighting over who was in charge.

    working there day to day was ok because it really is like an office complex but these folks are not mission ready for a big lockdown disaster. It would take people from the pentagon over 2 hours by car or convoy IF they can get around the beltway and up 15north, OR if they fly its still a 30-45 minute flight and the SOPs for what happens after arrival are all in disarray. It was FUBAR. Good luck to anyone who has to relocate there for real.

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  22. I was assigned to Ft Ritchie/Site R for 2 1/2 years from 1963-65. I was there when they were blasting out the two new wings of the buildings. I was also there on Nov 22, 1963 and I can assure from working in Emergency Actions that day that it wasn't a bumbling or amateur posture. essentially we went on a full war posture until events could be sorted out. Concerns were that the shooting represented an attack on the National Command Authority. There was never a problem communicating with anyone in Government, sometimes perhaps a little too well, as the day we accidentally launched SAC's runway alert force but that is another story for another day.

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  23. I spent most of 1959 in that mountain...amusing to see some of the comments. So many goofy stories. Sure there are changes...biggest is the visible bldgs. now. That was a no no before!

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  24. What happens when the antennae and above ground plants are wiped out with the blast?

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  25. My husband was stationed at was then called Camp Ritchie from September 1951-1953 when they first started building Site R. It was a very hush, hush operation and even tho I was with him (we lived right across the street from the base) he really couldn't tell me what was going on. He was a code breaker working in a communications center on the camp in a communications trailer and in charge of the WACs when we were there. Very small camp with very few other officers and not much housing even for the enlisted men. Loved the area -- interesting what the "underground hole" turned out to be.

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  26. Oh, btw, dad always said there was a railway connection from Camp David. And he knew all about the bogus "submarine watch" etc so I doubt anyone was fooling him.

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  27. I was stationed at Ft. Ritchie 1966/1967 in Tech Control. Wish there were more info from that time. To the best of my knowledge, there is no tunnel to Camp David some 20+ miles away.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Straight line, as the Raven flies, it's about 8 miles.

      Delete
  28. Served as a young MP with the 572nd fresh out of training in 79. At first the place seemed fascinating, like something out of a James Bond movie. Before long the novelty wore off and didn't seem like such a great place to spend time. Landed a gig back at the company orderly room on Ritchie and met my future wife across the street at the Troop Commanders office. Her father was also an MP who had worked at the site and set roots in the area after ETS. I have to admit I was busted on the "submarine watch" during my first visit. Fond memories.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Hey, I worked on a project at Ft. Ritchie Site B a few times. Gautney and Jones did
    a lot of contract work for the FCC, and another contract they had was to run a test
    transmitter for the Office of Emergency Preparedness / Office of Civil Defense /
    Dept of the Army on 179 KHz. They had a bunch of test receivers that were sent out to participants, and they sent messages to the effect of "The test word for today is raven. The test word today will not be repeated. Please fill out your form and drop it in the mail at the end of the week"

    Otherwise, the transmitter was on pretty much every day during daylight, and every 10 minutes it broadcast "This is radio station AAC55, broadcasting on 179 KHz from Ft. Ritchie Site B, for the Office of Emergency Preparedness / Office of Civil Defense /
    Dept of the Army." This system was never put into full operation, I think the availability of commercial broadcasters and receivers made more sense.

    We had the transmitter located in a big one-story building that was mostly vacant. I was told this was the old executive communications center, they had a huge field of rhombic antennas and the building had been filled with receivers and transmitters to keep in contact with the US president when he was out of the country. There was a huge room with a raised floor like a computer room, and forced air under the floor, cooled by a system using well water. I did find a room where a huge number of massive armored coaxial cables came into the building. They had all been sawed off at the wall.

    I worked on this during the summer of 1969. I have never figured out exactly where Site B was. I've looked at the pictures of Ft. Ritchie, and none of that looks familiar.

    Also, we went out the back way from Site B to Pizza Hut one time, and there was a facility across the road, with just concrete slabs and a microwave dish. I'm 99% certain that was the Sprint missile facility that was protecting Washington, DC from ICBM attack.

    Also, much earlier, I was in that general area as a kid at Camp Pioneer, somewhere pretty close to Camp David, between Hagerstown and Emmitsburg. Anybody remember that place?

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  30. I saw an article by Robert Reichard where he mentions a "sister site with 500 acres of antennas". That is the place I wanted to find out a bit more about, that exactly matches what I vaguely remember being told about the site I was at. Anybody know??

    Thanks,

    Jon

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  31. Well, just to correct the record, I now know where Site B was. It is about 3 miles north of Sharpsburg, at 18300 Keedysville Rd., and is now a University of Maryland agricultural research station. Apparently the major original buildings from the Ft. Ritchie Site B facility are still standing, and in use by the University.

    1969 was too early for the Sprint missile, so I'm not sure what that other site was. I'm still poking around to see if there is any more info.

    Ft. Ritchie Site B was apparently an Army receiving post for worldwide communications.
    Site A was in Pennsylvania, and was the associated transmitting site.

    Jon

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  32. One more little tidbit, the site with the fence and ominous signs had a dish antenna, and I can now figure the antenna was pointed at "Corkscrew", on a hill about 6 miles southeast of it.

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  33. When I was little my father worked at Site R and we lived on Ft. RITCHIE Army Base. I remember our housing was 4 plexes and we lived at the top of a hill and the play ground was just next to the hill. I also remember being bussed in one time for some kind of holiday dinner and we went several stories underground. If I remember it correctly it was around 1976 or 1977. It is something that I will always remember because it was such a huge adventure for such a little kid. It was so cold under ground and dark in the tunnel we were in with lights several feet from each other. It made me think that my dad was some international spy or something. Some of the greatest memories are from the time we lived on Ft. RITCHIE Base.

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  34. I was stationed at Site R during the period 1960-1963. We had govt housing on Fort Ritchie and worked at the site. I was with the Defense Atomic Support Agency. It was called the Joint Alternate Command Element at that time. Our office was directly across from the Presidents living quarters. (Harry Truman had put a lemon tree therein). The base commander was a full Col who was crazy. (long story). I really enjoyed the 3 years I spent there. I was on active duty for 25 years and inactive for 6 years.

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  35. Good to see so many great stories and for those who were there, the obvious BS some pretenders offer as facts.

    My compliments to whoever did such a good job in creating the forum.

    If you served at FRMD/Site R your friends/fellow unit members await you in some closed forums on Facebook.

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  36. These are declassified locations related to Site R

    Site A – Transmitter and Antenna Field – Primary Function - Primary Function –Transmitter Station used to communicate with SAC components – Currently used as an Army Reserve Armory
    Antrim Township, Pennsylvania
    39.757515, -77.716170
    It was reported that this site also had an ADA missile battery, but no record exists of it's actual location.

    Site B – – Transmitter and Antenna Field- Receiver Station used to communicate with SAC components - Currently being used as an extension office of the University of Maryland
    18332 Keedysville Rd; Keedysville, MD 21756
    39.511780, -77.732208
    Directly west of Site B was ground launched missile facility – These pre-dated Nike Missiles and this information could not be verified other than from speaking with a farmer who’d lived adjacent the facility his entire life. This location is now used by Washington County for agricultural purposes.
    10 W Orchard Rd; Boonsboro, MD 21713
    39.512571, -77.741525

    Site C – Antenna on Quirauk Mountain – Numerous antenna, including the primary transmitter s for local TV and Radio stations as well as cell phone and AT+T relays
    Fort Ritchie, MD 21719
    39.694878, -77.523952

    Cite D – Antenna – Damascus Md. The tower remains, but is no longer equipped with a microwave array
    39°20'49"N 77°10'16"W

    Site E – Antenna Tysons Corner, VA The tower remains, but is no longer equipped with a microwave array

    Site F –Location known, but classified due to current functions

    Site X – Location unknown. It is highly likely that this location is actually Lambsknoll which is located due east of Site B. Location known, but classified due to current functions.

    And for the record - there is no tunnel to Camp David, BUT there were Devil Worshipers at a nearby summer camp, but only a true mole knows that secret!!!!

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  37. Site x is at 39.4494 and -77.6266 and is supposed to be an FAA monitoring site. But the staffing is large and they are all dressed in black.

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  38. I live in Blue Ridge Summit right by Raven Rock and there is a tunnel to Camp David. I know of a place in the woods where you can see it(an entrance)from a nearby mountain. If you go to the tour website it also tells you that you will arrive via the 6 and half mile tunnel between Camp David and Site R. I also know where the submarine entrance is in Clarke Lake and in the Bay(yes the submarine thing is real) Ill take anyone to see it for a small 5 figure fee. ����

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  39. I'm really surprised this info is online. I was drafted and sent there from boot-camp, (civilian acquired skill). I would have re-upped if they'd let me stay there. Camp Ritchie was like boy-scout camp if you stayed out of trouble/sight, otherwise you spent most of time saluting if outside

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  40. I was a civilian photographer there from 2002-2006 and loved it and have the coin and "hockey puck" to prove it too. There are no UFO's or hidden agendas or tunnel to Camp David or White Springs, oops I mean Greenbrier Inn in Virginia.

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