Village Craftsmen
170
Howard Street
PO Box
248
Ocracoke Island,
NC 27960
252-928-5541
info@villagecraftsmen.com
Ocracoke Newsletter
April 21,
2012
Project Nutmeg
Imagine
Ocracoke with no paved roads, no ferry service, no visitors…and no residents.
Imagine the landscape defaced with huge craters, homes and other buildings
destroyed, windows and doors blown out, roofs torn away. Imagine the lighthouse
a pile of rubble, cedars and live oaks scorched, and birds silenced.
That
might have been the scene today if the 1948 report by the military liaison to
the Atomic Energy Commission had recommended Ocracoke as their new site for
stateside nuclear weapons testing.
And
it almost happened.
1946 Nuclear Test on Bikini Atoll:

(Click on photo to view larger image.)
After World War II Sandia
Base, on the southeastern edge of
Albuquerque, New Mexico, was the principal nuclear weapons installation of the
United States Department of Defense.
In January of 1947 Secretary of War Robert
Patterson and Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal established the Armed
Forces Special Weapons Project (AFSWP) at Sandia Base. The AFSWP assumed responsibility
for all of the military functions that had formerly belonged to the Army’s
component of the Manhattan Project, the research and development program that produced
the first atomic bomb during World War II.
Within AFSWP a small group of Army
officers oversaw the post-WWII design, assembly, storage, and delivery of
atomic weapons. In early 1948 they supported atmospheric tests in the Marshall
Islands, a nation of atolls and islands in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. In
April and May of that year three nuclear tests, dubbed “Operation Sandstone,” were
conducted on Enewatak Atoll.
Still, by 1948 only a handful of nuclear
weapons had ever been detonated, including the July 1945 “Trinity” test in New
Mexico, the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki that ended World War II,
Operation Crossroads, a series of nuclear weapons tests conducted by the United
States at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands in mid-1946, and Operation
Sandstone.
Much useful data had been collected in the
South Pacific, but the Atomic Energy Commission, citing concerns about
geography, weather, security, and safety, ordered its military liaison to
prepare a secret report outlining possible US continental test sites.
The military was aware
of growing public sentiment and fear of radiation and nuclear fallout. In
May of 1948 Rear Admiral William Parsons had written to the Joint Chiefs
of Staff about what he called “substantial
public relations and political difficulties…[surrounding a] dangerous and
unjustified fear of atomic detonations.”
The search for a suitable location for
testing, codenamed “Project Nutmeg,” commenced in late 1948, under the
direction of expert meteorologist and Navy Captain Howard B. Hutchinson. The government was looking for a
place where nuclear tests would have little impact on the American people or
the American economy.
Five
primary sites were considered:
- The Dugway Proving
Ground/Wendover Bombing Range in Utah
- The Alamogordo-White Sands
Guided Missile Range in New Mexico ("a state conditioned to nuclear
work; and with easy logistics from the center of atomic bomb storage at
Sandia")
- An area in Nevada from
Fallon to Eureka
- The Tonopah-Las Vegas
Bombing and Gunnery Range (the site finally chosen)
- The Pamlico Sound area off
the coast of North Carolina, along the coastal strip between Cape Hatteras
and Cape Fear
Coastal areas in Maine, Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia had
been dismissed because of high population densities and robust fishing
industries. The Outer Banks, however, was given very serious
consideration. For a time North Carolina was considered the most favorable
location because of several factors. According to Captain Hutchinson:
“In this region population is not dense, meteorology is favorable during
two-thirds of the year between 20% and 30% of the time; and the waters of the
Gulf Stream will remove the waste products to the open Atlantic Ocean with no
possibility of second order effects through biological processes. Cape Hatteras
is a possible site for nuclear tests…. This area should be investigated first,
at least, for continental test sites….”
Consequently, the
Pamlico-Core Sound area received extensive scrutiny. Three specific locations
were considered by the research staff, as noted by Captain Hutchinson:
“Cape Hatteras….To the northwestward of Cape Hatteras and extending
northward and westward are 100 square miles of sand flats. Most of these flats
are exposed at low tide….Cape Hatteras is made up of old strand lines and is
apparently building seaward. There are Coast Guard installations and the Light
House as well as about 50 buildings in the total area. About half the total area
is covered with vegetation while the remaining area is beach sand and sand
dunes. A road exists, along the island southward from Oregon Inlet. Rollinson
Channel crosses the flats from Pamlico Sound to the little hamlet of Hatteras,
some 7 miles to the west. Rollinson Channel has a controlling depth of 6 feet
at mean low water. Avon Channel crosses the flats to Avon some 7 miles to the
north. Avon Channel has a controlling depth of 5.5 feet at mean low water. Cape
Hatteras is a possible site for nuclear tests. It is relatively accessible by
water, yet could be easily placed ‘out of bounds’ for security control.
“Ocracoke Island….extends for some
15 miles between the ocean and Pamlico Sound. It has a width ranging from a
quarter to a half mile and is bordered on its landward side by some 45 square
miles of sand flats. These flats contain Howard Reef, Clark Reef and Legged
Lump, composed of hard sand. The aerial photographs show a [sand] road along
the entire length of the strand. There are but one or two installations on this
island, except the little village of Ocracoke on the southwest end at Ocracoke
Inlet. Ocracoke Inlet has a controlling depth of 10 feet at mean low water. It
is extensively buoyed and lighted. Ocracoke village has a boat basin and two piers.
“Portsmouth Island, Portsmouth
Bank, and Core Bank. Extending from Ocracoke Inlet to Cape Lookout in a
southwesterly direction, is some forty miles of sea strand….Between this strand
and the mainland extends Core sound through which exists a dredged channel
having a controlling depth of 6.5 feet at mean low water. Core sound has an
average width of three miles or more. It is believed that an exceptionally
favorable site for nuclear tests could be constructed on Portsmouth Bank. If a
site were chosen at about 34-55N, 76-14W, a radius of 10,000 yards can be swung
without including any important installations, yet there are plenty of adjacent
points for observation of the tests. This place is of easy access by water from
the Beaufort-Morehead City rail terminus. It is adjacent to the town of
Atlantic, opposite Drum Inlet, open to the sea. Atlantic has an air field. The
large Marine Corps Air Base of Cherry Point, North Carolina, is 25 miles west
of Atlantic. The Beaufort-Morehead City air field is 18 miles southwest of
Atlantic. The extensive Cedar Island area, as well as Portsmouth Bank, is
apparently under government control since it is called a “danger area” on the
aeronautical charts. This last described area seems to hold the most promise
for sites on the southeastern Atlantic seaboard because from here southward to
Florida, the strand-like islands, separated from the mainland by sounds, are
replaced by marshy islands integral with the mainland. It is believed the
Pamlico-Core Sound area should be investigated first, at least, for continental
test sites, when the desire is paramount to avoid fall-out of radioactive waste
upon the population or the commercial fisheries of the nation.”
In spite of North Carolina’s “most favorable” status, the Pamlico-Core
Sound area was eventually dropped from consideration. The Soviet Union tested
their first nuclear weapon on August 28, 1949, and the Korean War broke out in
June 1950. Both events put increased pressure on the US government to select a
continental nuclear test site quickly.
By 1951 the Outer Banks region was no longer a candidate because of the difficulties
and lengthy delays anticipated for acquiring property for the US government.
The Tonopah-Las Vegas site was finally chosen, in large part
because the government already owned the land, and that choice would not
require the removal and relocation of entire towns and villages.
Ocracoke residents and visitors can today be thankful that
our beloved village and island is not a nuclear wasteland, pockmarked with
craters and saturated with radioactivity.
But it almost happened.
1946 Nuclear Test on Bikini Atoll:
(Click on photo to view larger image.)
References:
http://docs.nrdc.org/nuclear/files/nuc_02019401a_121.pdf
(Report on United States Nuclear Tests, by the Natural Resources Defense
Council, 1 February 1994)
An Outer Banks Reader, David Stick, editor, 1988 University
of North Carolina Press, Section: Man versus Nature, pages 55-57
http://obsentinel.womacknewspapers.com/articles/2004/03/23/top_stories/1atomic.txt
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