Friday, April 5, 2013

Dissertation Complete and Defended

Hard to believe I created this blog four years ago to highlight a bit of my research.  Now, my doctoral dissertation is complete and I have successfully defended it.  Hopefully in the coming year or two it will be published for the masses to enjoy and/or criticize.

While I will not post the dissertation outright, here is the abstract of the manuscript, titled "Economics of Emergencies: North Carolina, Civil Defense, and the Cold War, 1940 - 1963." As a disclaimer, this information is under federal copyright, so enjoy but please, do not filch without proper acknowledgement.


Civil defense in the early Cold War years resulted from a perceived security threat to the American homeland. But whereas Americans remained skeptical of the ability to defend against nuclear attack, the assignment of disaster relief responsibility to civil defense provided a new avenue along which federal “defense” funds would flow. North Carolina’s civil defense history broadly mirrors the changes and evolution in the federal program but differs noticeably in how civil defense was implemented in communities more concerned with natural disasters than nuclear attack. State civil defense efforts served not just as a tool to secure federal money for infrastructure improvement, but also as a way to make North Carolina a safer place for business investment. By orienting the state’s civil defense program and policies toward planning for and responding to natural disasters, state leaders sought to minimize the damage such disasters could have on efforts to promote economic development. Federal civil defense funds essentially helped North Carolina develop an emergency management and response apparatus that reassured businessmen wanting to invest in new ventures that the state could effectively protect such investments.

Under the administration of Governor Luther H. Hodges, North Carolina embarked on a program of disaster relief which in time placed the state at the forefront of emergency preparedness. From 1953 and 1955, two severe droughts and four successive hurricanes imperiled the state’s agricultural, textile, and coastal tourism industries, inflicting well over $300 million in total damages. These disasters instigated a noticeable shift toward the use of civil defense resources to alleviate the effects of natural disasters in the state and mitigate economic losses for current and future industry. Hodges employed civil defense resources to guide the rebuilding and future economic development of the state’s coastal areas and mitigate against future hurricane hazards. This state effort secured millions in federal disaster relief and civil defense funds to protect both economic development and coastal tourism in the eastern counties.

North Carolina’s civil defense legacy from the Cold War is best described as a catalyst. Civil defense almost never served as the outright reagent for economic or policy development in the state. Rather, civil defense resources permitted Hodges and succeeding governors to secure the funding or political support necessary to protect existing and promote future economic development in the state. The refutation of nuclear civil defense did not coincide with a rejection of emergency preparedness. Work in response to natural disasters put federal investment in equipment and training for nuclear war into peacetime use and provided federal officials with a means to promote the necessity of civil defense. With natural disaster response as a responsibility of the state civil defense agency, government at all levels mined the modern security state for federal largesse to fund the creation of a capable emergency response apparatus exemplified in today’s professional emergency management agencies.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

North Carolina's Fallout Shelter Radio Stations

NPR just the other day featured an article on a radio station in Charlotte with a fallout shelter built beneath it. This is but one of ten of these hardened radio stations, announced in June 1962 (before the Cuban Missile Crisis, contrary to the article).  Below is the actual North Carolina Civil Defense Agency (NCCD) press release on the story, and the followup information from the 1963 - 1965 NCCD Progress Report.

For clarification, "SBW - PIO" stands for Sarah Boyd Weaver, Public Information Officer.



Steuart L. Pittman Passes

Another researcher and myself were talking about contacting Pittman to ask him some questions only weeks back.  Godspeed, Sir.

Washington Post Obituary

New York Times Obituary

Sunday, January 27, 2013

North Carolina Civil Defense Agency Organizational Chart, circa 1964

The extreme delay in any new posting coincides with my finishing up the basic writing of the dissertation. Things have been hectic and busy since July when all my writing began.  The upshot is that I hope to defend before April, after which the dissertation will then be re-edited into a book manuscript.  Using my scribd account, I intend to post numerous publications from the NCCD online for those few civil defense researchers out there.

Below is the organizational chart for the NCCD.  This is only slightly different from a chart listed in the North Carolina Operational Survival Plan published in May 1958. The shift involves moving the Welfare and Manpower subcategories from the operating staff encompassing "Religious Affairs, Warden" and moving them to the far left operating staff subcategory.


Sunday, November 25, 2012

New Article in North Carolina Historical Review about North Carolina and the CAP

At long last my journal article about the North Carolina Wing of the Civil Air Patrol and its coastal patrol operations in World War II is available in the October 2012 issue of the North Carolina Historical Review.  The Editor-in-Chief and Editor have given me permission to share the article as a PDF.  If you would like to read the article, you can read it here.  Enjoy!




Wednesday, November 7, 2012

A Governor Sees the Soviet...and Meets the Premier - July 1959

From 24 June to 17 July 1959, Governor Luther H. Hodges toured the Soviet Union with a contingent of eight other governors from across the United States from the National Governors’ Conference.  During the three weeks, Hodges visited five republics, met with countless officials, including First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Nikita S. Khrushchev, and thousands of the Soviet citizens.  Hodges wrote a series of letters for the Greensboro Daily News that were later privately published as A Governor Sees the Soviet: Letters from Governor Luther H. Hodges of North Carolina in September 1959. 

Here is the photo from when Hodges met Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev on 7 July 1959. The NCCD would hear a bit about his visit later...