"Aquatone” was the project codename for the development of the U-2 aircraft. Funded by the CIA, this aircraft was so unconventional in design, it was not built to military specification. Instead, performance specifications were used. At that time, it was nicknamed "Angel” because of flight at high altitude. Kelly Johnson, head of Lockheed’s Skunkworks was to build the aircraft since it had such success with the P-80 Shooting Star in secrecy.
But where
could this Top-Secret project be developed and tested? As work progressed by Skunkworks on the
airframe, on April 12, 1955, CIA’s Richard Bissell, AF Colonel Osmund Rickland,
Lockheed’s Kelly Johnson flew over Nevada in a Beechcraft plane piloted by
Lockheed test Pilot Tony Levier. They
were in search of a remote and isolated location to flight test the "Angel.” A
salt flat area known as Groom Lake was spotted.
This area was near the NE corner of the Atomic Energy Commission’s (AEC)
Nevada Proving Ground. Levier put the
plane down on the lakebed near what appeared to be an old landing strip. The area was at one time used by the Army Air
Corps as an aerial gunnery range. The
team egressed the plane and walked over to the old landing strip. They took a closer look and found that it was
made of compacted earth and had turned into dust that was several inches deep
after years of unused. They could not have made a safe landing on that
strip.
The team all agreed that this isolated location would be an ideal site for testing the "angel” and training its pilots (often called Drivers by the CIA). President Eisenhower approved the use of the strip of wasteland (AEC had to annex it) which was known by its map designation as Area 51, to the Nevada test Site.
This
location acquired various names. First
by the Area 51 map designation. But, for the pilots and workers who would
reside there, Kelly Johnson called it "Paradise Ranch,” with that being
shortened to "The ranch.” Many of the
workers referred to themselves as "ranch hands.” Area 51 was also known
"Watertown” which was rumored to be the birthplace of CIA Director Allen
Dulles, Watertown, NY. But Records show
that the name often was a reference
when runoff of rainwater from the mountains nearby would flood the dry
lakebed. When that happened, the "ranch
hands” referred to it as the "Watertown strip.”
Groom Lake was also
associated with the name "Dreamland.”
According to TD Barnes, President of Roadrunners International (an
association of former Air Force, CIA, and contract personnel serving at Area 51
during the Cold War), Dreamland was a radio call sign for the base that
surfaced in the 1960’s.
The primary access to Area 51 was by aircraft. This was for security reasons. A C-124 would transport the parts and aircraft components of the U-2 from Skunkworks at Burbank to "Watertown,” for reassembly and testing. A daily air shuttle would transport the workers and other cargo between Skunk Works and Watertown.
However, the U-2 was not the only CIA aircraft that was transported, tested, and flown out of Dreamland. In 1962 the CIA’s A-12 OXCART flight test took place there.
According to the CIA News and information page, "CIA, Air Force, and private industry personnel from many specialties helped make the U-2 a reality and several lost their lives in the process (while at Area 51). Four of those were pilots who had known the risks of handling an aircraft that was difficult to fly, even in the best of circumstances. Fourteen members involved in the U-2 project also lost their lives when their transport plane enroute from Burbank to Watertown crashed during bad weather into Mount Charleston, a few miles outside of Las Vegas.”
The CIA News and information page also states:
"It was the sacrifices these pilots and U-2 project personnel made for the United States, helped win the Cold War. Along with thousands of Americans worked at Area 51, their patriotism, ingenuity, and willingness to take on project critics believed to be impossible at the time -the creation of the U-2 – allowed the US to penetrate the Iron Curtain and gain an unparalleled advantage over the Soviets in intelligence gathering.”
You can act
now to help us preserve Cold War History by donating to The Cold War Museum® at
this link: DONATE TO THE COLD WAR MUSEUM
Sources:
"The CIA and the U-2 Program” Pedlow & Walzenbach, pp 49-58.
"Area 51, U-2, and Accidental Test Flight, CIA web page, News & Information.
The International Road Runners Assn, TD Barnes President
"Aquatone” was the project codename for the development of the U-2 aircraft. Funded by the CIA, this aircraft was so unconventional in design, it was not built to military specification. Instead, performance specifications were used. At that time, it was nicknamed "Angel” because of flight at high altitude. Kelly Johnson, head of Lockheed’s Skunkworks was to build the aircraft since it had such success with the P-80 Shooting Star in secrecy.
But where
could this Top-Secret project be developed and tested? As work progressed by Skunkworks on the
airframe, on April 12, 1955, CIA’s Richard Bissell, AF Colonel Osmund Rickland,
Lockheed’s Kelly Johnson flew over Nevada in a Beechcraft plane piloted by
Lockheed test Pilot Tony Levier. They
were in search of a remote and isolated location to flight test the "Angel.” A
salt flat area known as Groom Lake was spotted.
This area was near the NE corner of the Atomic Energy Commission’s (AEC)
Nevada Proving Ground. Levier put the
plane down on the lakebed near what appeared to be an old landing strip. The area was at one time used by the Army Air
Corps as an aerial gunnery range. The
team egressed the plane and walked over to the old landing strip. They took a closer look and found that it was
made of compacted earth and had turned into dust that was several inches deep
after years of unused. They could not have made a safe landing on that
strip.
The team all agreed that this isolated location would be an ideal site for testing the "angel” and training its pilots (often called Drivers by the CIA). President Eisenhower approved the use of the strip of wasteland (AEC had to annex it) which was known by its map designation as Area 51, to the Nevada test Site.
This
location acquired various names. First
by the Area 51 map designation. But, for the pilots and workers who would
reside there, Kelly Johnson called it "Paradise Ranch,” with that being
shortened to "The ranch.” Many of the
workers referred to themselves as "ranch hands.” Area 51 was also known
"Watertown” which was rumored to be the birthplace of CIA Director Allen
Dulles, Watertown, NY. But Records show
that the name often was a reference
when runoff of rainwater from the mountains nearby would flood the dry
lakebed. When that happened, the "ranch
hands” referred to it as the "Watertown strip.”
Groom Lake was also
associated with the name "Dreamland.”
According to TD Barnes, President of Roadrunners International (an
association of former Air Force, CIA, and contract personnel serving at Area 51
during the Cold War), Dreamland was a radio call sign for the base that
surfaced in the 1960’s.
The primary access to Area 51 was by aircraft. This was for security reasons. A C-124 would transport the parts and aircraft components of the U-2 from Skunkworks at Burbank to "Watertown,” for reassembly and testing. A daily air shuttle would transport the workers and other cargo between Skunk Works and Watertown.
However, the U-2 was not the only CIA aircraft that was transported, tested, and flown out of Dreamland. In 1962 the CIA’s A-12 OXCART flight test took place there.
According to the CIA News and information page, "CIA, Air Force, and private industry personnel from many specialties helped make the U-2 a reality and several lost their lives in the process (while at Area 51). Four of those were pilots who had known the risks of handling an aircraft that was difficult to fly, even in the best of circumstances. Fourteen members involved in the U-2 project also lost their lives when their transport plane enroute from Burbank to Watertown crashed during bad weather into Mount Charleston, a few miles outside of Las Vegas.”
The CIA News and information page also states:
"It was the sacrifices these pilots and U-2 project personnel made for the United States, helped win the Cold War. Along with thousands of Americans worked at Area 51, their patriotism, ingenuity, and willingness to take on project critics believed to be impossible at the time -the creation of the U-2 – allowed the US to penetrate the Iron Curtain and gain an unparalleled advantage over the Soviets in intelligence gathering.”
You can act
now to help us preserve Cold War History by donating to The Cold War Museum® at
this link: DONATE TO THE COLD WAR MUSEUM
Sources:
"The CIA and the U-2 Program” Pedlow & Walzenbach, pp 49-58.
"Area 51, U-2, and Accidental Test Flight, CIA web page, News & Information.
The International Road Runners Assn, TD Barnes President