John W.
Yelp
The Ronald Reagan Minuteman Missile State Historic Site is just a few miles North and West of Cooperstown, North Dakota, along one side of a big wheat field. On the outside it's a nondescript, uninviting flat roofed structure of 1960's industrial architecture, all surrounded by a tall cyclone fence. From the road the place looks like some old time, forgettable office with a fence around it.
In fact, the place looks so uninteresting that you'll be tempted to just drive on by. Don't. This place is worth your time.
Several of these missile sites were decommissioned in the 1980s. Our government put the sites on the market and sold them to the public. The State of North Dakota recognized the Cold War significance of these installations. It acquired the Reagan Minuteman site for preservation and interpretation.
In the ground level building you'll see a 20 minute video detailing the story of the missile silos. You can find the same video - "America's Ace in the Hole" - on YouTube. The building provided barracks, offices, dining hall and recreational area for the Air Force crews assigned to duty at the facility. You get to see every part of the above ground station.
The visit really takes a turn for the bizarre when you step into an enormous freight elevator and slowly descend 50 feet into the underground launch facility. You'll feel the temperature drop as the elevator creeps downward. Down below you'll tour a cold, impersonal living space that once served as war room and living quarters for the Air Force crews.
It's CREEPY down there! It's FASCINATING down there, too!
Most chilling are the actual missile launch panels, complete with all the switches, buttons, dials, telephones and radios and so forth. The launch crews were strapped and buckled into their seats, just like on an airplane!
The whole place looks a scene from the movie "Dr. Strangelove." DON'T MISS IT!