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From war machine to fields of green…A Munitions Factory
on the Ohio River, on this Moment of Indiana History.
Even before the U.S. officially entered the second world war, Congress
authorized increased spending for the manufacture of arms for sale to
the allied forces. The passage of the first national defense appropriations
act in June 1940 quickly resulted in the construction of the world's largest
smokeless powder plant near Charlestown, Indiana. Large tracts of inexpensive,
undeveloped land with a readily available water supply made it an ideal
site for the location of the Indiana Army Ammunition Plant, or INAAP.
The government owned facility--run by the independent contractor DuPont--consisted
of Indiana Ordnance Works, known as “the powder plant,” the
Hoosier Ordnance Plant, a packaging unit, and a never-completed third
section.
The location of the plant in Charlestown was a salve to economic hardships
brought on by the Great Depression and the Ohio River Flood of 1937. Workers
flocked from three states to relocate in Charlestown. What had previously
been a bedroom community for Louisville swelled in population from 900
to 13, 400 over the second half of 1940. The town’s physical and
governmental infrastructure was completely unprepared for the boom, resulting
in traffic congestion, housing shortages, crime, disease, and educational
setbacks. In time, the city’s sewer system was completed, public
health measures were implemented and Highway 62 constructed to handle
the influx of commuters. Adequate schools were established only after
many of the school-age children had left the area.
At its peak, the INAAP employed 27, 520 people, including greater-than-average
numbers of women and blacks. After the war, the facility served as a storage
depot, resuming production during the conflicts in Korea and Vietnam.
After DuPont, contractors operating the plant included Good Year, Olin
Mathieson and ICI. Charlestown’s prosperity followed the cycle of
the INAAP’s activity, which dwindled to a workforce of 380 in 1992.
The government closed the plant in 1998, designating 6,000 of the 10,000-acre
property for economic redevelopment. Sections of the site are undergoing
environmental remediation. A transfer of remaining land doubled the size
of Charlestown State Park in 2004. The park on the banks of the Ohio is
Indiana’s third largest, offering opportunities for boating and
fishing, along with three scenic overlooks and a half-mile boardwalk.
This Moment of Indiana History is a production of the Indiana Public
Broadcasting Stations in association with the Indiana Historical Society.
More information is available on-line at “moment of Indiana history.org.”
Writer: Yaël Ksander
Special thanks to WFIU’s Joe Bourne, who first told me about the
munitions plant in Charlestown, his hometown. Joe’s father was employed
at the INAAP as a chemical engineer, and the family lived in company housing.
Joe remembers never having seen the river as a child, the view being taken
up by the hulking plant. Joe worked in the INAAP’s Can Renovation
section when the plant was being run by Olin-Mathieson during the Viet
Nam war. Joe later discovered that during the same period, the jazz singer
Helen Humes worked in the INAAP bag plant, whose workforce was two-thirds
female. -- yk
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