Roosevelt Roads Naval Station

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Coordinates: 18°14′17″N, 65°37′40″W

Roosevelt Roads Naval Station is an inoperative, former United States military air base in the town of Ceiba, Puerto Rico.

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Future U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, then Assistant Secretary of the Navy, toured Puerto Rico in 1919, visiting Ceiba. When he returned to Washington, D.C., he expressed a liking for the terrain where the base now is. This was during the World War I era, and the United States could benefit from an air field in Ceiba. While Puerto Rico is a commonwealth, its territorial rights belong to the United States, which made it perfectly feasible, and ideal, for the American government to build an airplane base in Ceiba.

It took many years, however, for the United States Government to become convinced of the need for an air base to be constructed in Ceiba. It was not until Adolf Hitler and Nazi-led Germany began to invade other European countries, that the United States Government, led by then President Roosevelt, entertained the idea of a Naval air station in Ceiba. With warfare going on in the European and Pacific theatres, they saw an airbase in the Caribbean area as an unnecessary commodity, if at least only for the period being.

The base had been inaugurated, but scaled down to a maintenance status with a public works office in 1944; from that moment on and until 1957, the base went through many shifts, being opened seven times and closed eight times. Meanwhile, it continued on being a source of work for the citizens of Ceiba as well as for American military pilots and soldiers, because Ceiba's citizens gained jobs around town doing different things, such as working for the Puerto Rican Electric company's Ceiba branch, as a consequence of the airbase's operations, when it was operating.

In 1957, it was upgraded to Naval Station status. Fort Bundy was set there, but it crossed over to parts of Vieques, a fact which would later become important in the history of the base. An American military mission, the M3, was also set there. It was part of the "Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station, Puerto Rico Base Communication Department". "M3" had a fleet center, a technical control facility and a Tactical support communications department, among other things. The "M3" was designated to help Puerto Rico, the United States and other Caribbean and Latin American countries that were members of NATO to deal with drug trafficking, illegal immigration and other, much more complex subjects such as enemy airplanes during war, terrorism, etc.

For the next 47 years, the base would be utilized by military airplanes for landings and take-offs, as well as for other missions and control of the area's air-space. In 2001, a Hercules C-130 airplane carrying seven Puerto Rican National Guard soldiers, including a Mexican-American woman, crashed in the town of Caguas, while en route from Roosevelt Roads to Rafael Hernandez Airport in Aguadilla. All seven soldiers perished, in the largest air tragedy ever to happen in Caguas. Shortly after the base was closed in 2004, a 71-year-old pilot decided to take a personal flight in a single-occupant, general aviation airplane from Fajardo Airport in nearby Fajardo, to Roosevelt Roads Naval Station. Before landing, however, his airplane stalled and crashed in a baseball field nearby. The man was able to escape without injury.

Over the years Roosevelt Roads Naval Station, or Roosey as it was frequently called, was home to hundreds of military families. Initially most of the teachers at the schools came from the United States as DOD contract teachers. As time went on, more and more teachers were hired from the local community. In the mid-70's there was no cable TV on base. Families could tune into AFRTS family-oriented shows or rig up an antenna and hopefully get reception from St. Thomas. At the El Coqui Theater, in the Bundy area of the base, movie goers watched films as bats flitted across the screen.

The base equestrian stables was located across from the golf course. Most of the 'horses' were technically ponies because of their size although a number of thoroughbreds, who washed out at the race track, found a home on base from time to time.

Main article: Navy-Vieques protests

In 1999, David Sanes died as consequence of a bomb that landed near him. It was apparently thrown from an American military airplane. As a consequence of this and other, cancer-related issues (such as Milivi Adams' cancer and the high incidence of that disease in Vieques), many Vieques citizens (such as Ismael Guadalupe), and Puerto Rican activists from other towns (Ruben Berrios, Tito Kayak, etc.) began activism against the military presence in Vieques. This included illegally entering military bases. Other important activists included Jesse Jackson, Robert Kennedy Jr., Rigoberta Menchú and Edward James Olmos (the latter was jailed in Puerto Rico for illegally trespassing an American owned area).

Ft. Bundy was affected by the protests, because part of it was in Vieques. After Sanes' death, there was a deep struggle between the autonomous Government of Puerto Rico and the American Government. This was over after President George W. Bush decided to grant Puerto Rico the rights to operate the former military possessions in Vieques, including Ft. Bundy, which crossed over to the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station. As a consequence of President Bush's decision, the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station became NAPR (naval activity Puerto Rico) on which DOD Police keeps the base safe, but still is considered a military installation and is part of DOD military bases. On March 31, 2004, the station became inoperative once again.

After the military left the station, Puerto Rican Governor Sila Maria Calderon announced that her party, the PPD, had plans to turn the base into an international airport. This was backed in 2005 by the then-new Governor, Anibal Acevedo Vila, who established that the area would be converted into an airport so that new airlines could fly to Puerto Rico. He also established that Ceiba as a town would serve as an economical and touristic center for eastern Puerto Rico, and that converting the former military air base into a civil airport would be part of a strategy aimed at opening about seven or eight large airports in Puerto Rico.

Currently, approximately 2,900 acres (12 km²) of the former Naval Station Roosevelt Roads is being marketed to the public by the Los Angeles group of Colliers International on behalf of the Department of the Navy's Base Realignment and Closure Program Management Office as a planned public auction set to commence in early 2008. The remaining portions will be conveyed to the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and other Federal agencies in various stages. Please visit the Official Roosevelt Roads Websiteor CREF for more information on the public sale.

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