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Antiaircraft Defenses
During the Cold War era that followed World War II, the threat of
foreign attack on U.S. soil shifted from naval assault to air attack,
particularly by aircraft carrying nuclear weapons. Thus, the Army
Air Defense Artillery took responsibility from the Coast Artillery
branch for defending the continental United States. In the San Francisco
area, antiaircraft defenses were at a continual high state of readiness
from the Korean War and through to the implementation of the Strategic
Arms Limitation Treaty of 1972. Coastal defenses around San Francisco
during this period largely depended on the Nike antiaircraft missile
system. The Nike system was not only the most expensive missile system
ever deployed, it was also the most widespread (300 sites in 30 states)
and longest-lived (25 years nationwide). The system was deployed to
protect urban areas throughout the U.S., bringing Doctor Strangelove
to suburban backyards and into the national consciousness.

Nike-Hercules missile on launch pad, somewhere
in the Southwest.
The Nike-Ajax, and its successor the nuclear-capable Nike-Hercules,
were medium range antiaircraft missiles. Guided by a complex system
of radars and tracking computers, they had ranges of up to 37 miles
(Ajax) and 87 miles (Hercules) and could shoot down planes traveling
at two to three times the speed of sound.
Beginning in 1954, 12 permanent launch sites and their associated
control, housing, and command sites were constructed around the
Bay Area (on San Pablo Ridge, Rocky Ridge, Lake Chabot and Coyote
Hills in the East Bay; Milagra Ridge, Fort Winfield Scott and Fort
Funston to the south of the Golden Gate; and Fort Cronkhite, Fort
Barry, Angel Island and San Rafael to the north). Under the command
of the Sixth ARADCOM region (Army Air Defense Command), the missile
sites received initial targeting information from an early-warning
radar station at the Mill Valley Air Force Station on Mt. Tamalpais
(SF-90D on map above). Radars and computers in a Control Area near
each launch site would then track a formation of planes and relay
targeting information to the site and to each missile after it was
launched.
In the 1970s, changing military technology made the Nike missiles
obsolete. Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) replaced
long-range bombers as the major offensive weapons in both the Soviet
and U.S. arsenals. ICBMs fly at altitudes and speeds beyond which
AJAX or HERCULES missiles could reach, leaving them without targets.
After twenty years of constant readiness, the Nike missile system
was declared obsolete by 1974 and the last missiles were taken out
of service in 1979.

Nike missiles in launch position at Nike
base SF-88L.
The Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty of 1972 dictated that all
Nike facilities, except one designated to be a museum, had to be
totally disbanded. As such, most Nike facilities have been removed
or altered to such an extent that they lack integrity. However,
the launch complex known as SF-88L at Fort Barry in Golden Gate
National Recreation Area is the one site in the nation that serves
as a museum to this quintessential Cold War weapon system.
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