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Everglades National Park
Nike Missile Site
Aerial view of Missile Base Complex

National Park Service

Aerial of Site HM-69 shows the current state of the former Nike Missle Base. While operational is where the offices, armory, mess hall and baracks were located. In the background, you can see the missle barns.

TOURS RESTART JANUARY 2010.

  This area of the park closed through the wet season (May 1 - Dec 31). 

 The tours are free, but park entrance fees apply. The only access to the base is through these programs.

In order to join the tour, please reserve a space by signing up at the parks Ernest F. Coe Visitor Center, or by calling 305-242-7700. Reservations will be taken up to 30 minutes before each tour but we recommend making reservations far in advance as these tours fill up rather quickly. The Ernest Coe Visitor Center is located 9 miles southwest of Homestead on State Road 9336. Tours will be by car caravan. Participants must arrive in the park by 1:30 p.m. and be prepared to drive 14 miles round trip from the visitor center.

 
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National Park Service

While there are no missiles currently stored at the base, these are images of missiles that were once commonplace on this site.

The historic Nike Hercules missile base located within Everglades NP has been opened to the public for the first time since it was turned over to the park in 1979.  

The park is offering guided tours of one of the best preserved relics of the Cold War in Florida. This significant historical site is physically the best overall example of the nation’s missile defense system close to Cuba and remains virtually the same as it was when official use of the site was terminated in 1979. 

This missile base was built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in 1963 at the height of the Cold War, immediately following the Cuban Missile Crisis of October, 1962. At a time when national security against Soviet attack was America’s main priority, the United States Army chose this strategic site within Everglades National Park, located 160 miles from the Cuban coast, to build a missile site. 

The base was listed on the U. S. Department of the Interior’s National Register of Historic Places on July 27, 2004 as a historic district. The area includes 22 contributing buildings and structures associated with events that have made a significant contribution to American history and embodies distinctive characteristics of the period. Some of the structures that are part of the tour include three missile barns built to contain 41-foot missiles (some with nuclear warheads), a missile assembly building, a guard dog kennel, barracks, control centers within berms that served as blast protection, and a number of other features.

This base is one of four that were built in South Florida – one in north Key Largo (now Key Largo Hammocks State Park), one in Miramar (now a Publix shopping center), one that is now the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Krome Detention Center, and the site in Everglades National Park. 

The interpretive tours will be held every Saturday at 2:00 p.m. through March 28th. The tours are free, but park entrance fees apply. In order to join the tour, please reserve a space by signing up at the parks Ernest F. Coe Visitor Center, or by calling 305-242-7700. Reservations will be taken up to 30 minutes before each tour but we recommend making reservations far in advance as these tours fill up rather quickly. The Ernest Coe Visitor Center is located 9 miles southwest of Homestead on State Road 9336. Tours will be by car caravan. Participants must arrive in the park by 1:30 p.m. and be prepared to drive 14 miles round trip from the visitor center.

Limestone  

Did You Know?
Limestone is the porous, sedimentary rock you see in the Everglades. These rocks are made of calcium and contain fossils of sea life, evidence of ancient seas that once covered the area. The limestone aquifer under the Everglades acts as the principal water recharge area for all of south Florida.

Last Updated: August 12, 2009 at 12:16 EST