West Virginia Ordnance Works (WVOW) was a United States Army ammunition manufacturing facility constructed and operated during World War II. It was located north of Point Pleasant, West Virginia in Mason County encompassing 8,323 acres (33.68Â km2). The $45 million plant employed 3500 at its peak and operated from 1942 to 1945.[1] The site was disposed of following the war and land was utilized by creating a landfill, the McClintic Wildlife Management Area, the Mason County Airport and an industrial park among others.
It was also around here that the first known sighting of the cryptid dubbed "Mothman" occurred in November, 1966.
Superfund
Around 1979, fishermen in the Wildlife Management Area reported red water seepage at the site and beginning in 1981, TNT, DNT and other residual contaminants from World War II operations were discovered. On September 8, 1983 the site was listed on the National Priorities List (NPL) making it eligible for cleanup as part of the Superfund program. The site was West Virginia's "top priority" cleanup site and was among the national top ten most polluted sites. Portions of the site have been cleaned up or determined uncontaminated and were later removed from the list, but cleanup has not been completed as of 2007.
According to the FY2006 Defense Environmental Restoration Program Annual Report To Congress, 2,704 acres (10.94Â km2) remained on the NPL and $71.4 million in cleanup funding had been appropriated. Estimated completion was FY2020 for an additional $27.9 million.
See also
- Mothman (alleged sightings in the vicinity known as the "TNT area")
- McClintic Wildlife Management Area received around 2,788 acres (11.28Â km2), the industrial portion of the site
- Mason County Airport (FAA location identifier: 3I2)
- Mason County Fairgrounds
References
External links
- USACE - West Virginia Ordnance Works (WVOW) remediation
- EPA - West Virginia Ordnance (US Army) Superfund page
- Point Pleasant Depot
- McClintic Wildlife Management Area