Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Strange Timing & Motive In Polanski Arrest
#44
Jan Klimkowski Wrote:I'm going to be self-indulgent and quote myself:

Jan Klimkowski Wrote:Synopsis of the 1940 film of Maeterlinck's Blue Bird, starring Shirley Temple:

...

Candy Tate

Sharon Jones

The Bluebird of Happiness.

The Blue Bird of Synchronicity.

When is a coincidence a synchronicity?

... ......

Possibly related: Operation Blue Jay? Centered around the construction of Thule Air Force Base in NW Greenland ca. 1949 (agrees with a Fred Lee Crisman presence, not the first US base in Greenland however) with Space Command crew (originally just satellite tracking?).

http://www.bwcinet.com/thule/bm.html
Quote:A view of Thule in 1949
Email received from Bill MacDowell:

If it wasn't for the Navy, you guys would never had the opportunity to be there. Nice to hear from you on the net. Regards, Bill Macdowell

Maybe you're interested in the real beginning of the base. I was on the USS Wyandot, AKA 92 (Cargo ship) when we entered North Star Bay in 1949. There was absolutely nothing there except eskimos, the Danes and weathermen.

The Wyandot's mission was top secret and classified the original Operation "Blue Jay". We brought the first material to start the base. On board were our compliment of Navy personnel, the Seabees, the Marines, with amphibious equipment, etc.

What you call Mt. Dundas, we called Perry's Peak (or Mountain).

There were no hangers for airplanes and equipment and food stuffs were under tarpolins. We had to examine each and every eskimo for TB and other problems and more important, if anyone of us had a cold we were restricted from going ashore. To get ashore we used M-Boats. We also worked 12 hour shifts in order to beat the ice flow. There is much more to tell, but you get the picture.

Your site was very interesting and brought back many memories. Thanx Bill Macdowell...e-mail: norska@gate.net .

http://www.thuleforum.com/blue-j.htm
Quote:OPERATION BLUE-J.....

The construction of the Thule Air Base.

Because of the harsh artic environment in which it was built, consideration into both the material used to build the airbase and the preparation of the earth upon which it was built had to be given. Various contractors had to witness the manufacturer of material used in the airbase construction. While at Thule the amount of earth preparation, the work site required before construction could begin.

In addition there was the massive logistical operation needed for Blue Jay.

Operation Blue Jay goes back to 1949 when communist aggression was in full flight in Indo-China and against United Nations forces in Korea and President Harry S. Truman declared a national emergency. In Washington a secret meeting was held in the office of the Chief of Engineers. Present at this meeting were:

Lieutenant General Lewis A. Pick, then major general, Chief of Engineers;

Brigadier General Noland, Deputy Chief of Engineers

Peter Kuwin builder of airfields, and large dams.

S.J. Groves one of the builders of the New Jersey and Pennsylvania Turnpike, and

Joe Green construction expert.

The job was to be approximately 900 miles north of the Artic Circle far beyond any shipping lane. The job was to build a great airbase for America's long range bombers high on the northwest coast of Greenland at the tiny settlement called Thule, and built with the permission of the Danish Government. The base would push America's defence line 2,000 miles to the north. Blue Jays strategic location was ideal, but its construction in only four short months seemed impossible.

The impossible was just a challenge to American resourcefulness. Industry and the Armed Forces joined hands to put across Blue Jay on time. Industry developed new designs that would stand-up to the severe strains of the artic winter.

Clements panels used for refrigerator walls were adapted to buildings and hanger. More than 300-thousand were used at Blue Jay. Over 11-million board feet of lumber would be needed for housing and storage. Steel for hanger trusses to stand a hurricane blast of the artic winter was fabricated. And steel for the water distillation and giant fuel tanks each 200 tons were needed. Lacking port facilities at Thule eight old LST unloading docks were improvised.

Their superstructures were chopped off at deck level to provide a smooth unobstructed dock surface now called "dumb barges" they would be towed to Thule and anchored as permanent piers. Throughout the spring of 1951 a tidal wave of equipment rolled into the Army base at Norfolk, Virginia, the prime staging area for Blue Jay. A 6-million tons of cargo moved to Norfolk. At the same time at Rosemont, Minnesota, another procurement program was underway for men.

Here in the upper Midwest was to be found a pool of workers experienced in cold weather construction. These men are being tested and given work trials. And they are also getting survival training. An advance party of these men were sent to Thule to prepare the worksite for the main body due to arrive by ship in June. Sites for hangers, barracks, roads, and quarries were staked out by-the Deputy District Engineer for the Northwest District.

Temporary shelters were put up. The Atwell Hut for example is shipped as a compete building in a single package. Soil samples are being taken and the beach being cleared. Back at Norfolk supply yards were jammed by early. Shovels, bulldozers, asphalt plants, graders, and rock crushers were all loaded onto ships.

Rolling stock is being loaded and trucks are being sea proofed for the voyage. DUKW' scrolled onboard by the score loaded with fuel and other vital cargo so they could dash ashore as soon as the ships reached their destination. Embarking also were 3,000 men of the engineers, signal and transportation corps plus other military specialists plus the bulk of the civilian workmen. On June 6, 1951 this armada steamed out of Norfolk and headed north. 82 ships carried a cargo valued at $125-million.

The ships are churning their way through ice with icebergs and pack ice. The convoy halted and held fast in an ice pack. And a Coast Guard icebreaker is breaking a path through the ice for the ships.

Finally on July 9 the fleet steamed into North Star Bay at Thule. Their two-week voyage took twice that long and which meant that two weeks were lost. This time had to be made up some how. Ships had hardly anchored when the control headquarters' ship Monrovia raced into high gear to get the convoy unloaded. Cargo was loaded into landing craft manned by 1,000 seamen.

Eventually 153-thousand long tons of cargo were unloaded onto the beach. Work crews 4,000 strong were ferried to shore from their quarters on five personnel carriers. They operated in two shifts, 60% on first or day shift and 40% on the second shift. As soon as earth-moving equipment disembarked from LST's they went to work around the clock in good as well as bad weather seven days a week.

The first objective was the giant airstrip with its runway, which is being prepared. The newly completed airstrip received two key visitors on August 8, when Lieutenant General Hoyt Vandenberg, Air Force Chief of Staff and General Pick arrived to check on construction progress at Thule. At this time there was only 2 months left to work.

The fuel tanks are being constructed and the welders are working night and day on them. Also under construction is the pipeline as it was being rigged and would run out over a mile from the fuel tanks to the tankers. There are also preparations of the land, needed to support this construction.

On August 30, Secretary of the Air Force, made an inspection visit and with less than two months left, found the work is ahead of schedule. Barracks were under construction, and as soon as they were completed the workmen moved ashore and ships departed for home.

On October 1, Lieutenant General Curtis LeMay, Chief of the Strategic Air Command, visited Thule, and was briefed by Colonel Clarence Renshaw, Northeast District Engineer. A snow and sleet storm is lashing the worksite. At the first break in the weather the work crews checked out for a flight home. In only 104 days Blue Jay was operational. A year later the new base had the benefit of another work season.

The military value of Greenland was not generally recognized until World War II, when weather stations and airfields were constructed at various places in Greenland by agencies of the United States. In August 1943 the Army Air Forces established a weather station at Thule to be operated by Danish personnel. This was accomplished on a verbal contract, which was confirmed in October 1945. (The Allies and the Nazis had a weather-station building race in Greenland; Denmark was occupied by the Nazis. The US occupied a strategically-important kryolite mine, used in aluminium manufacture, in SW Greenland early in the war.-Helen)

In 1946 the United States and Denmark agreed to expand the work of the station at Thule, and personnel of the U.S. Weather Bureau joined the Danes in operating the weather station. New buildings, a radio station, and a gravel airstrip were constructed in 1946 by the Army Air Forces, operating as a part of a joint military task force. The airstrip was prepared between July and September 1946, and the first Air Transport Command aircraft landed on 9 September. Thule became a resupply point for other arctic weather stations, and the airstrip was also utilized for polar reconnaissance flights.

U.S. - Danish memorandums of 1947 and 1949 continued former agreements, and in 1949 both nations were linked in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A new bilateral agreement for the defense of Greenland was signed in April 1951, and soon thereafter the construction of Thule Air Base began. It was initially designed as a forward base for staging bombers and tankers of the Strategic Air Command, and this mission accounted for the urgency associated with construction efforts.

In December 1950 the Department of Defense directed the Army Corps of Engineers to construct Thule Air Base as soon as diplomatic arrangements were confirmed. The Army engaged a commercial firm, the North Atlantic Constructors, for this task. Hiring was accomplished in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Norfolk, Virginia, was designated the port for shipment of material in surface vessels, and Westover Air Force Base, Massachusetts, was used as a marshalling point for airborne shipments of freight and passengers.

A reconnaissance party arrived at Thule in the middle of February 1951, landing on the gravel strip constructed in 1946. A United States Air Force (USAF) detachment reached Thule on 10 March 1951, and a naval task force arrived with equipment, personnel, and supplies on 9 July. More than 4,400 passengers were airlifted to Thule during 1951, and more than 1,000 passengers and about 300,000 tons of cargo arrived on surface vessels. Until adequate barracks were available, the bulk of the construction force was housed aboard ships furnished by the Military Air Transport Service (MATS). During the winter of 1951-52 the construction force was reduced to the minimum number of men required to perform inside work and maintain the construction camp, but the workmen returned in the spring of 1952, and again in the spring of 1953, to finish the initial effort.

By October 1953 the vast construction program was substantially completed, and most of the buildings on the base had been accepted by the base commander. The runway, 10,000 feet long and 200 feet wide, was capable of supporting heavy aircraft, and the field was equipped with navigational aids. There were seven large hangars plus several smaller ones for fighter aircraft on alert. Near the center of the base there were 125 barracks, 6 mess halls, a gymnasium, service club, hobby shop, library, base exchange, post office, theater, chapel, and hospital. There were also 63 warehouses, a laundry, a bakery, and plants for generating heat and power.

Water was obtained from an adjacent lake, and an auxiliary supply, used principally by the base laundry, was obtained by distilling sea water. There was a 1,000 foot dock, constructed from barges which had been towed from the Gulf of Mexico, placed on caissons, and stabilized alongside a rock-filled causeway. Eighty-nine miles of road interlaced the base and ran to off-base installations. Hosted tank trucks supplied water and removed wastes until 1960, when heated and insulated pipe lines, built above the ground, were completed.

The base was and is a forward staging area for striking USSR/Russia. The 1962 telephone directory lists a Kennedy and a Fred Lee, but no Hoppers. RCA corp also had a support staff there.

[Image: jayne.jpg]
Jayne Mansfield at the Thule Air Base for the 1961 USO Christmas show with Bob Hope, Connie Stevens, Jerry Colona and others
Reply


Messages In This Thread
Strange Timing & Motive In Polanski Arrest - by Myra Bronstein - 28-09-2009, 10:23 PM
Strange Timing & Motive In Polanski Arrest - by Myra Bronstein - 09-10-2009, 02:43 AM
Strange Timing & Motive In Polanski Arrest - by Myra Bronstein - 12-10-2009, 03:49 AM
Strange Timing & Motive In Polanski Arrest - by Helen Reyes - 27-10-2009, 11:44 AM

Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  On Assange's Arrest - First they came for the....... Peter Lemkin 10 12,887 01-05-2019, 06:19 PM
Last Post: James Lateer
  Spanish court issues arrest warrants for Netanyahu and other officials Magda Hassan 2 7,069 16-11-2015, 05:22 PM
Last Post: Lauren Johnson
  Saudi prince avoids felony sex assault charges after arrest at Los Angeles mansion Drew Phipps 1 6,010 21-10-2015, 07:24 AM
Last Post: Peter Lemkin
  Cops arrest public defender for defending her client... David Guyatt 2 5,594 05-02-2015, 05:28 PM
Last Post: Albert Doyle
  India Re-Issues Arrest Warrent On Bhopal Exec.! Peter Lemkin 6 13,579 18-04-2013, 06:33 AM
Last Post: Magda Hassan
  Italian Police Arrest 16 Judges, Sieze $1.3 Billion in Mafia Bust Magda Hassan 0 3,213 20-03-2012, 09:55 PM
Last Post: Magda Hassan
  Amnesty International Calls for Bush's Arrest On His Current Trip In Aftica! Peter Lemkin 0 3,308 02-12-2011, 10:21 PM
Last Post: Peter Lemkin
  Amnesty: Canada ‘required’ to arrest George W. Bush Magda Hassan 0 4,026 13-10-2011, 11:03 AM
Last Post: Magda Hassan
  Mordechai Vanunu Israeli Whistleblower Under House Arrest Keith Millea 1 4,134 10-08-2010, 08:56 PM
Last Post: Carsten Wiethoff
  UK court rejects Palestinian call to arrest Barak Peter Presland 12 10,775 04-03-2010, 09:31 AM
Last Post: David Guyatt

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)