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From
Brevard County, Florida: A Short History to 1955
by John M.
Eriksen
Early Base Brought Major Benefits to Brevard
It
wasn’t that long ago that Brevard County's 16,000 residents felt excited
and fortunate to hear that the Navy had plans for a naval air station
somewhere on the Banana River.
In 1939, this was a very rustic spot with only Indian River citrus
and the Dixie Highway as a claim to fame.
Local crackers were caught off guard when the Navy started
construction and demanded roads to its new naval base.
The county quickly cleared a path through the saw palmettos and
paved a narrow A1A from Eau Gallie to Cocoa Beach.
The rickety bridge west of today's Minuteman Causeway was good
enough for the 48 residents of Cocoa Beach, but too narrow for military
trucks. So in 1940, the first of the county's steel and concrete bridges
was started at Cocoa.
The half-built Naval Air
Station-Banana River was commissioned on October 1, 1940. The
following year, the new base continued to build structures, such as
hangers, sea ramps, and a water treatment plant.
The new military base was organized as two squadrons.
One was tasked with scout observation. The other was a Transitional
Training Squadron to instruct pilots to fly the latest military aircraft.
A lesser-known outfit began operation in Hanger 800. This was Project
Baker, a high-tech training program for pilots to learn instrument or
"blind" landings.
After the December attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. became involved
in the war and assigned many young aviators to the base.
One of those men was George W. Maxwell. Mr. Maxwell's son is Judge
George W. Maxwell III.
Lt.JG Maxwell, flew the Vought 02SU Kingfisher,
a beautiful two-seat, single prop seaplane with a 450 HP engine. The second seat held the radioman/gunner.
Maxwell flew many missions as a member of squadron VS-1-D7, usually flying
100 miles out, and occasionally refueling in the Bahamas.
Lt. Maxwell had a lot to worry about. During the war, German
U-boats known as wolf packs
torpedoed 25 ships between Key West and Daytona, some just offshore from
the base.
As a countermeasure, the Navy had in place auxiliary and satellite
stations at intervals all along the east coast: at Tico, NAS-Melbourne,
Malabar, Valkaria, Vero, and on down to Key West, Great Exuma, Jamaica,
and Guantanamo Bay. Certainly
many more commercial and military ships would have been destroyed without
the reconnaissance and protection of Brevard's base and men like Maxwell.
Brevard's two military bases at Banana River and Melbourne faded
away after the war. But the county was left with many improvements--most
important were the concrete bridges, paved roads, airports, and a mosquito
control program.
When future base executive officer GS-14 Al Parry drove by the base
in 1948, weeds covered the runways. All was quiet along the beach that
summer. The county's first radio station, WMMB, went on the air to play
big band sounds and the Surf Restaurant opened in Cocoa Beach. Then in
1949, predecessors of Patrick's AFTAC detected a Russian nuclear explosion
on August 29th.
Suddenly the old air station became
a critical military asset. The newly created Joint Long Range
Proving Ground stepped up its pace, establishing the old naval base as
headquarters for a launch site at the Cape, and tracking stations as far
as Puerto Rico. During that summer, local papers were referring to the
base as the Banana River Air Force Base.
Fittingly, the base was renamed Patrick AFB on Aug 1st,
1950 for the first commander of the Army Air Service, Maj.
Gen. Mason Patrick. Patrick fought for an air training academy as early as
1918. Melbourne
leaders offered ground adjacent to NAS-Melbourne as the site of the new
U.S. Air Force Academy in January 1954. But the only aviators seen were
the abundant mosquitoes they were slapping that summer when Colorado
Springs was awarded the bid.
Of all the benefits brought to Brevard by the military, the most
enduring was the electronic technology. The technology of Project Baker
continued in 1946 at the Melbourne naval base where the Electronic Warfare
Platoon trained.
At this same site in 1950, a small company named Radiation
(purchased by Harris Corp. in 1967) was organized and quickly expanded.
Also in 1950, technicians launched the first missile from
the Cape, Bumper 8.
Standing 56 feet tall, the imported rocket was a modified version
of one of Hitler's V-2s.
To demonstrate staging in flight, the original warhead nose of the
German rocket was replaced with a second-stage device, the U.S. Army's WAC
Corporal missile.
Early after the war, General Henry Arnold put a plan in place for the
military to work hand-in-hand with private enterprise. During the next
sixty years the companies started by the young biplane designers Don
Douglas, Glenn Martin, Allan Lockheed, James McDonnell, and Leroy Grumman
would come to build the future of space exploration, and Brevard County.
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