Wendover Field, Utah (2024)

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When Col. Paul Tibbets flew over Wendover Field in September 1944 in search of a remote, secure place where he could train the B-29 crews he handpicked to drop the atomic bomb, he looked down from 30,000 feet and declared it “perfect.” Sixty-four years later, the desert—and Wendover—is as stark as ever. Several bizarrely glitzy high-rise casinos have arisen on the Nevada side of town in the last couple of decades, but the sense of isolation and remoteness still dominates. That isolation has a silver lining: today Wendover Field is the best-preserved bomber training base from World War II.

by Stephen Budiansky

When Col. Paul Tibbets flew over Wendover Field in September 1944 in search of a remote, secure place where he could train the B-29 crews he handpicked to drop the atomic bomb, he looked down from 30,000 feet and declared it “perfect.”

Others didn’t quite share his enthusiasm. The comedian Bob Hope came through on a USO tour and wisecrackingly dubbed the army air base “Leftover Field.” Hugging the edge of the Bonneville Salt Flats 125 miles west of Salt Lake City, Wendover was as bleak and barren as a bleak and barren desert could be. A few stark brown hills offered the only relief from the mirage-laden salt plains that stretched out as far as the eye could see.

The town itself, boasting a population of 100 before the air force arrived in 1940, owed its existence to a small water tower that refilled steam locomotives of the Western Pacific Railroad, a few arsenic mines, and the State Line Hotel. The hotel spanned the Utah/Nevada border, luring travelers on two-lane U.S. Route 40 with a lone light atop a tall pole, a gas station, and the promise of hamburgers in the café on the Utah side of the building and gambling and liquor on the Nevada side.

Sixty-four years later, the desert—and Wendover—is as stark as ever. Several bizarrely glitzy high-rise casinos have arisen on the Nevada side of town in the last couple of decades, but the sense of isolation and remoteness still dominates. That isolation has a silver lining: today Wendover Field is the best-preserved bomber training base from World War II. Some 100 of its 668 original buildings are still standing. Many remnants of the ultrasecret mission for which Tibbets’s men trained are still here to be seen, touched, and experienced.

Interstate 80, with a 75 mph speed limit, has replaced old U.S. 40 and cut the drive from Salt Lake City in half from the three hours it took during World War II. But the bleak desert scenery is virtually unchanged from what it was then, or for that matter from what it was a century and a half ago, when a single emigrant wagon train decided to try this route to California, an act of folly never repeated.

They don’t call them salt flats for nothing. An information sheet I picked up at the West Wendover Welcome Center in Nevada informed me that they are so flat you can actually see the curvature of the earth if you stand at the right spot. Back in the ’80s, a slightly eccentric Iranian-born Swedish artist decided the drive was so boring that, to relieve the monotony, he erected at his own expense—reputed to be $1 million—a crazy sculpture in the empty stretch about 30 miles east of Wendover; the “Tree of Utah” looks like a Christmas tree made of steel I-beams and huge fuzzy baseballs. It somehow seems to fit.

From the Wendover strip, the short road to the airfield (on the much poorer Utah side, where many of the casino workers live) goes past a dreary row of shanties, a sign for “Painless Pete’s” dentist office, and the old airfield chapel, now converted into an apartment building.

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Wendover Field, Utah (2024)

FAQs

What was the range of the Wendover test? ›

The total site ranged from 18 to 36 miles wide and 86 miles long and was soon hailed as the largest bombing and gunnery range in the world.

What movies were filmed at Wendover Air Force Base? ›

A local group, Historic Wendover Airfield, is attempting to preserve the former base. Numerous films, television shows and documentaries have been filmed using Wendover Field, including The Philadelphia Experiment (1984), Con Air (1997), Mulholland Falls (1996), Independence Day (1996), Hulk (2003) and The Core (2003).

Who did the United States military train at Wendover Utah? ›

Twenty-one heavy bomb groups trained in Wendover including the 306th BG (first to daylight bomb Nazi Germany), the famed 100th BG (known as the bloody 100th due to aircraft losses) and the Flying Tigers 308th Bomb Group which served in China, Burma and India.

What is Wendover famous for? ›

Wendover City is famous for the nearby Bonneville Salt Flats, the 26,000 acres of salt flats where would land speed records have been made; it is also where the crew of the Enola Gay trained before dropping the atom bomb on Japan in 1945.

Did they test nukes in Utah? ›

After four years of heavy nuclear testing in the U.S.–controlled Marshall Islands, President Truman would relocate the bulk of the nation's nuclear testing to a more accessible location, approximately 144 miles west of St. George, Utah — the Nevada Test Site.

What is the Utah test and training range used for? ›

Utah Test and Training Range (UTTR) is a remote military reservation operated by Hill Air Force Base as a practice bombing and gunnery range for military aircraft, propagation testing, rocket motor test firing, missile storage, and small arms and machine-gun firing ranges.

Is there a Air Force Base in Wendover Nevada? ›

Historic Wendover Airfield is the most original remaining and authentically preserved WWII Army Air Force base in the United States. The importance of this site to our national history is not surpassed by any other airfield in the country.

Is George AFB still active? ›

George Air Force Base was officially decommissioned in December 1992. Today, several of the old base buildings are still used by the Army and Marine Corps for urban warfare training. The airfield is now a part of the Southern California Logistics Airport (SCLA) which is operated by the city of Victorville.

What is the name of the Army base in Utah? ›

U.S. Army Dugway Proving Ground (DPG) is located approximately 90 miles southwest of Salt Lake City, Utah. Dugway Proving Ground is situated in Tooele County, located in Utah's historical west desert region.

What famous people live in Wendover? ›

Notable people
  • Thomas Barlow (1845–1945), physician.
  • Edmund Burke (1729–1797), member of parliament.
  • Gordon Onslow Ford (1912–2003), artist.
  • David Jason (born 1940), actor.
  • John Junkin (1930–2006), actor and scriptwriter.
  • Geoffrey Palmer (1927–2020), actor.
  • Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin (1900–1979), astronomer and astrophysicist.

What does the word Wendover mean? ›

English: habitational name from Wendover in Buckinghamshire. The placename is from a lost river name of ancient British origin meaning 'bright waters'.

What are some interesting facts about Wendover Utah? ›

The town has had a Royal charter to hold a weekly market since 1464, which is held on Thursdays, and there is a Farmers' Market held on the third Saturday of each month. Wendover is situated at the terminus of the Wendover Arm of the Grand Union Canal.

What is the size of the Nevada test site? ›

The Nevada Test Site occupies about 1,375 square miles in southeastern Nye County, Nevada. Aerial view of Frenchman Lake shows the remains of structures that were subjected to a series of atmospheric tests from January 1951 through July 1962.

What military group controlled and managed the Wendover airport? ›

In the late 90's the base ownership was transferred from Wendover, Utah to Tooele County. Control of the range was assumed by Air Force Systems Command (AFSC) on 1 January 1979. It was renamed the Utah Test and Training Range (UTTR) with management by the 6545th Test Group at Hill AFB.

What important event happened on July 16, 1945? ›

The world's first nuclear explosion occurred on July 16, 1945, when a plutonium implosion device was tested at a site located 210 miles south of Los Alamos, New Mexico, on the plains of the Alamogordo Bombing Range, known as the Jornada del Muerto. The code name for the test was "Trinity."

What is the history of Wendover, Utah? ›

History. The town was established in 1908 as a station stop on the Western Pacific Railroad, then under construction. The transcontinental telephone line was completed as workers raised the final pole at Wendover, Utah on June 27, 1914, after construction of 3,400 miles (5,500 km) of telephone line.

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