News

Design revealed for memorial to 14 who died in Cold War mission

  • Rendering by George Tate, Courtesy Of Silent Heroes Of The Cold War National Memorial Committee

By Keith Rogers
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: Oct. 24, 2011 | 5:44 p.m.
Updated: Oct. 25, 2011 | 8:31 a.m.

After more than a decade of planning and fundraising, Steve Ririe's dream to build a national memorial on Mount Charleston dedicated to the silent heroes of the Cold War is on the cusp of becoming a reality.

Ririe, chairman of a local nonprofit fundraising group, Silent Heroes of the Cold War Corp., released the architect's design Monday for a memorial that will break ground next summer and will be part of a visitors center project at the base of Kyle Canyon.

The memorial, to be erected by the U.S. Forest Service at an estimated cost of $90,000, will feature a black granite slab, symbolic of government "black projects," with 14 stars, one for each man who died in 1955 when a transport plane crashed on the mountain while taking them to Area 51 to test the U-2 spy plane.

In front of the slab will be a crypt where items and debris from the crash site will be sealed, allowing visitors to make a connection to pieces of the C-54 transport plane from an observation area in view of the mountaintop where four crew members and 10 passengers, including a team of engineers and support staff, perished Nov. 17, 1955.

"After over a decade of working on this and having gotten to know the families, it's personal," Ririe said Monday.

"One of the things I learned is that this is not an isolated incident. There are a lot of other Americans who died, and there are a lot of survivors who don't have closure," he said.

"We have to recognize that four decades have passed, and there is still lots of pain and lots of unburied feelings."

Local architect George Tate volunteered his services to design the memorial while Ririe and the nonprofit organization launched a fundraising effort in 1998.

Ten years later, legislation by U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., and a companion bill in the House by Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., paved the way for the Interior Department to establish an advisory committee to oversee an inventory of Cold War sites in the nation, including one for the Silent Heroes of the Cold War National Memorial on Mount Charleston.

Ririe said a groundbreaking will be held in the summer of 2012 to mark the start of the Forest Service's effort to groom a footprint for the memorial on land it manages in lower Kyle Canyon.

So far, advocates of the memorial led by Ririe have secured about $45,000 in donations.

"We have raised the majority of our target, but we are still shy by $44,500," he said.

Ririe said the memorial will honor all Cold War heroes who worked in secret, "many of whom paid the ultimate sacrifice."

"Silent Heroes of the Cold War Memorial will be a place where we can take our children and tell them the stories of the heroes who worked in secret here in Southern Nevada to see us safely through."

His announcement came on the eve of tonight's airing of a segment of the Travel Channel's "Mysteries of the Museum" that will feature the Cold War heroes whose plane crashed when they were being shuttled on a secret mission to test the high-flying U-2 spy plane at Area 51, known then as "Watertown," along the dry Groom Lake bed 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas.

Investigators later determined the pilot, 1st Lt. George M. Pappas, had become disoriented under the conditions and got caught up in snow flurries and a powerful crosswind that pushed the plane into a canyon heading toward Charleston Peak.

Realizing too late that the plane was on a collision course with the mountain, Pappas in the last seconds tried to position the plane to clear the peak. Instead, the aircraft clipped the ridge 50 feet below the crest.

In 1998, Ririe sat by remnants of the transport plane's wreckage near the top of Mount Charleston, and wondered how the plane crashed and how family members of the 14 who died in it have endured.

It puzzled him so much that he obtained declassified documents from the government and set out to memorialize the "silent heroes," as he called them, with a monument for visitors to observe the site.

In 2001, with many of the heroes' family members on hand, Ririe and a team of monument backers hiked to the wreckage site and recovered a damaged propeller, which became the centerpiece of the memorial's fundraising effort.

The propeller will be displayed at the Forest Service's visitors center after it is built.

Contact reporter Keith Rogers at krogers@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0308.

Comments

Registration Notice: The Review-Journal has implemented a new registration procedure that requires all existing and new accounts to validate and login using Facebook. Visit the Registration FAQ for more information.
Terms & Conditions

The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The Review-Journal does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please use the Report Abuse button.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.

Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

  1. Douglas.Cook Oct. 25, 2011 | 1:52 p.m. Report Abuse

    mrs ed wrote on October 25, 2011 11:34 AM: "The Soviet Union, .....lost 20 million people compared to Britian that only lost 135,000."

    Get your facts straight. And no we don't need to "honor" the Soviet Union although as a liberal Democrat it is the perfect model you wish to impose on the US and Obama is well on his way.

    UNITED KINGDOM
    (ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, WALES, AND NORTHERN IRELAND)
    MILITARY CIVILIAN TOTAL
    326,000 62,000 388,000

  2. Frank.Pelteson Oct. 25, 2011 | 12:44 p.m. Report Abuse

    Now that we are gradually merging with the Soviet Union, as revealed by the late Ford Foundation President Rowan Gaither to the Reece Committe, these “Cold War heroes” are no longer important. For proof, please play http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HU392-qi_PE titled "The hidden history for World Government" Also, please visit http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2005-02/13/content_416321.htm showing Kissinger shaking hands with Putin.

  3. mrs ed Oct. 25, 2011 | 11:34 a.m. Report Abuse

    This is a good memorial, they should have one for the civilian airliner that crashed south of town.

    The Soviet Union, our main ally in WWII killed 4 out of 5 Germans. They liberated many concentration camps. They lost 20 million people compared to Britian that only lost 135,000. Maybe we should have a memorial to the Soviet Union, many more Americans would have died during WWII without them.

  4. Gary.Affleck Oct. 25, 2011 | 10:15 a.m. Report Abuse

    I was a naval aviator in the early 60's on Midway Island where we flew 15 hour flights every other day looking for Rusian bombers. On Jan,22, 1961 one of our EC121K radar planes crashed on Midway and 6 people were killed. Just another example of the unsung heroes keeping the Rusians at bay during that time period.

  5. Great Carnak Oct. 25, 2011 | 10:05 a.m. Report Abuse

    Having seen photos of the original crash in 1955, and visited the actual site last month, it is absolutely amazing how much of the original wreckage has apparently been looted by souvenir hunters. Sad...

  6. Jerry S..Dickinson Oct. 24, 2011 | 9:42 p.m. Report Abuse

    CynicalObserver.....you better go hide now. Didn't they tell you that was a secret?

  7. CynicalObserver Oct. 24, 2011 | 7:02 p.m. Report Abuse

    There was a CIA plane crash, on the land north of Cactus Avenue behind Tire Works, where far more CIA employees died. How about a memorial for them. The CIA was formed to fight the Cold War against the USSR, and now fights the new cold wars against Russia, China and a host of others.

Friday, May 25, 2012
Overcast Overcast, 78° Weather Forecast