Gopher Ordnance Works
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Gopher Ordnance Works was located off County Road 46 near Coates and Rosemount, Minnesota. It was first opened in 1943 as a smokeless powder production plant. The plant was closed soon after the end of World War II. There are some remains still at the original site which is visible from U.S. Route 52 and County Road 46.
A location is chosen
After the government decided it needed a place to open up another gunpowder factory, they chose Dakota County in East Central Minnesota as their prime spot to put up such a factory, specifically, the city of Rosemount. They soon evicted farmers on 11,000 acres (45 km2) of farmland so that they could build Gopher Ordnance Works, which consisted of 858 buildings.
General Plant Information
Gopher Ordnance could hold approximately 3,000 employees, however, most of the employees were not hired off site and had already worked in the defense industry. The plant was operated by DuPont. The production lines at Gopher were completed in 1943 and idled until 1944 when the government requested the plant begin production and create three additional production lines. The plant began production in January of 1945, and was closed in October of the same year. The gunpowder being produced at the plant was being used for navy artillery shells. The smokestacks were for boiling water that was used to manufacture the gunpowder. The large T-Walls were part of solvent recovery houses. The process involved lots of volatile material.
Environmental Impact
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agenchy inspected the property in 1981 concluding that based on the limited investigation there was no contamination of concern. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began inspections in 1985. In 1999 the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers concluled that the properthy was eligible for restoration funds. In 2005 the Corps revisedits positioen and statedn that only the land transfered to the state in 1947 was eligible, and a detailed investigation was completed in March 2009.
In 2010, the University of Minnesota lanuched a Remedial Investigation to collect information on the environmental condition of the property.
Advertising
The plant was unable to get employees easily, so it ran ads in local newspapers. One such ad pictured a female saying, "If you can run a vacuum cleaner, you can do my war job at Gopher".
External links
- A Flickr photoset of the GOW ruins, taken in 2006
- Minnesota History Quarterly article on the Gopher Ordinance Works
- Local News Station KARE11 article on the ruins
- An Urban Explorer's journal on their visit to the Gopher Ordnance site
- History
- Timeline
- Gopher Ordinance Works
These last 2 links no longer work. I believe the U of Minnesota still has this information, but has relocated them at another location. Someone please update.
References
- "Stadium Deal May Need Cleanup". Retrieved 2008-05-25.