ARNOLD AIR FORCE BASE, Tenn. – It was 70 years ago this month that President Harry S. Truman signed legislation that paved the way for the... Laws allowing establishment of AEDC turn 70

ARNOLD AIR FORCE BASE, Tenn. – It was 70 years ago this month that President Harry S. Truman signed legislation that paved the way for the establishment of Arnold Engineering Development Complex (AEDC).

During a June 25, 1951, ceremony at Arnold Air Force Base, President Harry Truman draws aside the curtain to reveal a dedicatory plaque mounted to a granite rock. The ceremony was held to dedicate the Air Engineering Development Center as the Arnold Engineering Development Center in honor of Gen. Henry H. “Hap” Arnold, who had passed away before the ceremony and whose vision was instrumental in bringing the center to fruition. Pictured with Truman is Arnold’s widow, Bee. It was 70 years ago this month that Truman signed into law the bills that allowed for the establishment of AEDC. (U.S. Air Force photo)

On Oct. 27 and 28, 1949, Truman signed the Unitary Wind Tunnel Plan Act and the Air Engineering Development Center Act of 1949. The first bill authorized a unitary plan for the construction of transonic and supersonic wind tunnel facilities in an effort to bolster national defense. The second bill, signed the following day, authorized the $100 million appropriated by Congress for the construction of the Air Engineering Development Center, the site that would soon become known as the Arnold Engineering Development Center and eventually the Arnold Engineering Development Complex.

Work to bring AEDC to fruition began years before the passage of these laws. This work was precipitated by the foresight of eventual General of the Air Force Henry “Hap” Arnold.

President Harry Truman, center, arrives at Arnold Air Force Base on June 25, 1951, to dedicate the Air Engineering Development Center located at the base as the Arnold Engineering Development Center in honor of the late Gen. Henry H. “Hap” Arnold. It was 70 years ago this month that Truman signed into law the bills that allowed for the establishment of AEDC. (U.S. Air Force photo)

It was during a visit to England in the spring of 1941 that Arnold, who was commanding general of the Army Air Forces during World War II, observed a British plane flying without a propeller. He wanted to bring this type of capability to the U.S. military.

Realizing that developing new equipment would require the establishment of research and development organizations and better testing facilities, Arnold met with renowned mathematician, engineer and physicist Dr. Theodore von Kármán in New York in 1944 to discuss the future defense needs of the nation.

Arnold asked von Kármán to form an advisory group tasked with providing recommendations on the direction of future aviation research. At Arnold’s request, members of this group visited Germany in May 1945 to view test and research facilities captured during the Second World War. They found facilities, aircraft, engines and rockets more advanced than the Allied nations had imagined.

Among those who made the trip to Germany was American scientist Dr. Frank Wattendorf. After the survey of the superior German ground testing facilities had been completed, Wattendorf penned a report known as the Trans-Atlantic Memo. This June 1945 report would become the baseline for establishing “a new Air Forces development center.”

This photo shows Arnold Air Force Base as it appeared during its construction in the 1950s. During the month of October, 70 years ago, President Harry Truman signed into law the bills that allowed for the establishment of what would become Arnold Engineering Development Center, now Arnold Engineering Development Complex. (U.S. Air Force photo)

The Trans-Atlantic Memo was provided to Brig. Gen. Franklin O. Carroll, who was then commander of the engineering division at Wright Field, which was later combined with the nearby Patterson Field to form Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio. Using information from the report, Carroll delivered a presentation to Arnold’s Air Staff. Carroll discussed the advancements the Germans had made in ground testing while noting the deficiencies in American wind tunnels.

Carroll, who would later go on to become the first AEDC commander, requested the Air Technical Service Command conduct a preliminary study “for the establishment of a new Army Air Force’s Applied Research and Development Center for Fluid Dynamics.”

A committee was formed to complete this study. The group’s report was released on Dec. 18, 1945, less than a week before Toward New Horizons was published. The latter was a report from von Kármán’s group that visited Germany in which they proposed a facility for the study and development of jet propulsion, supersonic aircraft and ballistic missiles. The envisioned facility was brought to life with the eventual construction of the Air Engineering Development Center.

Both reports recommended the use of captured German test facilities in a new installation in order to save time of facility design and construction. It was also recommended that the installation be located near large sources of water and electric power.

After a report titled “Proposed Air Engineering Development Center” was presented to the Air Staff in January 1946, a $1.5 million Army Air Forces contract was awarded to Sverdrup & Parcel Inc., an engineering firm based out of St. Louis, Missouri, to conduct further planning for the proposed center.

Sverdrup & Parcel Inc. recommended several possible sites for the new center, including Moses Lake in Washington, Grand Wash Cliffs in Arizona and the Tennessee Valley area.

The Moses Lake site was considered too vulnerable to attack, and a water dispute between Arizona and California essentially disqualified the Grand Wash Cliffs site from consideration.

Huntsville, Alabama became the preferred site. The Army was preparing to deactivate the Redstone Arsenal, and the use of this site could save time in the construction of housing and offices for the Air Engineering Development Center. However, the Army changed course on the Redstone closure after the Air Force began to take interest in it.

U.S. Sen. Kenneth McKellar of Tennessee stepped in with an offer. He said the state could donate Camp Forrest to the Air Force for the center.

Traffic enters and leaves from the gate at Camp Forrest, which was located in southern middle Tennessee. On April 28, 1948, Camp Forrest was named as the site for the new Air Engineering Development Center, which eventually became Arnold Engineering Development Complex. It was 70 years ago this month that President Harry Truman signed into law the bills that allowed for the establishment of AEDC. (U.S. Air Force photo)

Camp Forrest was an active Army post located in southern middle Tennessee. The camp was active between 1941 and 1946 and was initially used as a training center for infantry, artillery, engineering and signal units. Camp Forrest became a Prisoner of War camp in May 1942. After the end of World War II, the camp was closed. It was declared surplus in 1946 and dismantled.

Along with the Camp Forrest site, McKellar offered to help push necessary legislation through Congress.

The Air Force accepted.

On April 28, 1948, the year after the Air Force officially separated from the Army to become its own branch of the military, Camp Forrest was named as the site for the new Air Force Engineering Development Center.

 A model of the Martin-Bell Dyna-Soar is prepared for testing in a hypersonic wind tunnel at then-Arnold Engineering Development Center in the late 1950s.  It was 70 years ago this month that President Harry Truman signed into law the bills that allowed for the establishment of what would later become known as Arnold Engineering Development Complex. (U.S. Air Force photo)

In early March 1950, the year after Congress authorized $100 million for the construction of the Air Engineering Development Center and less than 5 months after the signing of Unitary Wind Tunnel Plan Act and Air Engineering Development Center Act of 1949, the Secretary of the Defense approved the construction of the center. That June, the Army Corps of Engineers began construction on a perimeter fence and access road. Later that month, work began on a dam on the Elk River to create what would become known as Woods Reservoir to provide cooling water for testing facilities.

It was directed that the new center would be operated by a corporation under contract to the Air Force. On June 29, 1950, the Arnold Research Organization, or ARO, the corporation established to manage and operate the center, was awarded a contract from the Air Force to cover the first 15 months of operation.

Gen. Arnold died in January 1950. On June 25 of the following year, Truman visited the center in Tennessee that Arnold helped bring to life and dedicated the site in Arnold’s honor, naming it the Arnold Engineering Development Center.

On Oct. 21, 1952, supersonic airflow was first achieved at AEDC in the one-foot transonic wind tunnel known as “PeeWee.” The following year, construction on the Engine Test Facility was completed, and a supersonic test of the Air Force Falcon air-to-air missile was performed in what would come to be known as the von Kármán Gas Dynamics Facility.

: Arnold Air Force Base is shown in this photo from the 1990s. It was 70 years ago this month that President Harry Truman signed into law the bills that allowed for the establishment of what would become Arnold Engineering Development Center. (U.S. Air Force photo)
 A model of the Boeing Dyna-Soar is tested in a transonic wind tunnel at then-Arnold Engineering Development Center in 1959. It was 70 years ago this month that President Harry Truman signed into law the bills that allowed for the establishment of what would become Arnold Engineering Development Complex. (U.S. Air Force photo)

 

The Arnold Engineering Development Center was re-designated as Arnold Engineering Development Complex in July 2012.