Tuesday, February 20, 2018

The Neighborhood That Wasn't There

In the early days of World War II, real fear existed that the Japanese would bomb the West Coast. Several war industries were located there, and they needed to be hidden. Enter Hollywood.
Canvases were stretched over the rooftops of aircraft factories and painted with streets and lawns. Movie set designers created fake houses out of canvas and plywood. Trees were made of wire with glued-on chicken feathers painted in shades of green and brown. Air ducts were disguised as fire hydrants. Steep, sloped roofs became hills.

During World War II the Army Corps of Engineers needed to hide the Lockheed Burbank Aircraft Plant to protect it from a possible Japanese air attack.
  
The goal was to look like a peaceful suburb from the air. Employees took scheduled walks in the fake town, hanging out laundry and moving rubber cars.
 
Employees stroll through a fake neighborhood.


Long runways beside the aircraft plants would seem to be a giveaway, but when a visiting general was flown over a disguised factory, he couldn’t find it. Japanese aircrews surely wouldn’t.
Dummy runways were created by burning grass to look like tarmac. Far from the real planes and hangars covered to look like farmland, dummy aircraft of wood and metal dotted the bogus fields.
 
Underneath the camouflage, business as usual.


Thirty-four airfields and factories were hidden. Enemy submarines would have been a likelier threat than airplanes. Ships were sunk within sight of West Coast ports. A Japanese submarine shelled an oil field near Santa Barbara in February of 1942, doing little damage.
In June of 1942, the US Navy sank four enemy aircraft carriers in the Battle of Midway. The chance of Japan bombing the West Coast greatly diminished. The Hollywood-designed sets never had a chance to prove their worth.
The factories remained under cover for the rest of the war.

Wouldn’t you have loved to explore the make-believe neighborhoods?

7 comments:

  1. What a fun post! I had forgotten about these fake neighborhoods. I think there is an abandoned one in California somewhere (maybe more).

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  2. Whoa! This is new historical inforamtion. Thank you for sharing, Terri.

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  3. I.have.never.heard.this.before! Thanks for a fascinating post.

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  4. Crazy! I had never heard this before. What neat info.

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  5. I learned about the fake neighborhoods while researching my book Wheresoever They May Be. And yes, I couldn't resist putting in a comment about what was up on the rooftop!

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  6. Wow...I haven't heard about it...
    Thank you for sharing!

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  7. That is so interesting! I didn't know about that.

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