I took the above picture May 19 2002 (armed Forces Day!) as well as the others, below. Because it was a Sunday I was unable to arrange a tour but will in the future. Note the transmitter building and tower are probably not original; no doubt the county could not pass this up as a transmitter site, regardless of historical accuracy. The caretaker has a home inside the enclosure though I chose not to photograph it (not interesting). There are several water monitoring wells (red) constructed in 1999 as well as the original well buildings.

View from the southeast corner of the roof. Lots of old tires from before Pete's arrival, perhaps to keep the roof from rattling in the wind (Pete doesn't know, and he is not inclined to remove them).

Inside the missile bay, looking up at the substantial roof that would slide to the right. Somebody make a flat cutout of an Atlas and mounted it to the erector arm to show visitors how big it was (the nose-clamp ring was removed and is sitting against a wall).

Looking down into the flame pit.

Looking up at part of the erector arm at the base end of the missile.

View from the driveway. Pete only partly opened the Big Door (he says 65 tons, I've seen other references as being 40 tons).

One of the antennae.

The top of the pop-up antenna silo. This also has a nitrogen fill port.