- Indiana Army Ammunition Plant
. It consisted of three areas within two separate but attached manufacturing plants:
* Indiana Ordnance Works Plant 1 (IOW#1): (3,564.71 acres) madesmokeless powder
* Indiana Ordnance Works Plant 2 (IOW#2): (2,757.49 acres) made rocket propellant
* Hoosier Ordnance Plant (HOP): (4,326.8 acres) manufactured (and loaded) propellant charge bagsIn 1940 it was announced that the world's largest smokeless powder plant would be built near Charlestown, as the land was close to the
Ohio River , giving it the water necessary for making smokeless powder, and the fact that the land was cheap because parts of it were unsuitable for farming, and because few individuals lived on it. The plant was built and operated as a Government-Owned, Contractor-Operated (GOCO) facility.Actual building of IOW Plant 1, a six line plant with support facilities, started on September 4, 1940, although officially it started on August 28, and was completed on May 31, 1942. The first line was put into production in April 1941. The IOW facilities were built and operated initially by E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Co. During World War II the production of this plant exceeded the total World War I production of all other smokeless powder producing plants in the US. During the
Korean War , DuPont cleaned away the excess powder and restarted production in 1950. The plant ran a maximum capacity with 3,000 employees until 1954.IOW Plant 2, designed as a three line facility for the production of double base rocket propellant, was started in November 1944 but stopped, without completion, on V-J Day. All areas except the powder storage facilities were placed in caretaker status. In September 1960 all stored powder was removed and convert|1546.62|acre|km2 were submitted to GSA as excess. The remaining convert|2757.49|acre|km2 were utilized as woodland, crop land, and the site of a new automated black powder manufacturing facility.
The Hoosier Ordnance Plant was built by W-H-M-S Construction company (Winston Brothers, Haglin, Missouri Valley and Solitt) and operated by Goodyear Engineering Corportation (GEC). Production started in September 1941 and continued until V-J Day in 1945. Layaway was completed in February 1946. Limited production resumed in 1950 until a rehabilitation of the facility was completed in 1952. Goodyear took complete control over production in July 1952 under a Cost Plus Fixed Fee contract and continued until layaway of the facility in September 1957. Employment at the HOP during this period reached a high of 8,067 in August 1953, during the
Korean War .In May, 1941, the three plants employed 27,520 people, which helped the area recover from the
Great Depression .The three plants were combined as the Indiana Arsenal under War Department Circular No. 329 on November 30, 1945, and renamed the Indiana Army Ammunition Plant in August 1963 by Department of the Army General Order No. 35.
In March 1959, Goodyear took over maintenance of all plants, and was succeeded by Liberty Powder Defense Corporation in November 1959. Olin Mathieson Chemical Corporation dissolved Liberty Powder (an operating unit) and assumed control effective October 1, 1962 and continued operations until April 1972, when it was succeeded by ICI Americas. After disposal of Plant 2, the plant had convert|10655|acre|km2|0, 1,700 buildings, convert|30|mi|km|-1 of fence, convert|84|mi|km|0 of railroad track, and convert|190|mi|km|-1 of roads. ["A Brief Informal History of Clark County, Indiana" by Gerald Haffner (1985), pg 191.]
In June 1960, 67.26 acres of Plant 1 was turned over to Clark County, which uses it as the site of the 4-H Center. The ammunition manufacturing facility, placed into modified caretaker status in 1992, was operated by ICI Americas as Facility I (an industrial park), and approved for transfer to the INAAP Reuse Authority (a Local Reuse Authority, or LRA) by congressional action. It is presently called the River Ridge Commerce Center. Title to convert|3000|acre|km2 has transferred to the LRA (Oct. 2007), with transfer of another convert|3000|acre|km2, located in Plant 1, awaiting cleanup for transfer. The other convert|4500|acre|km2 was transferred to the State of Indiana and is operated by the Indiana Department of Natural Resources as
Charlestown State Park .References
External links
* [http://homepages.ius.edu/RVEST/INAAP.htm Local historian's view]
* [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/S?ammem/hh:@field(SUBJ+@od1(INDIANA--Clark+County--Charlestown)) American Memory From the Library of Congress] the INAAP entry
* [http://www.abandonedonline.net/index.php?catid=153 Indiana Army Ammunition Plant at Abandoned]
* [http://riverridgecc.com/ River Ridge Commerce Center]
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