PEPCON Explosion: 20 Years Gone

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"We've had an explosion and everything's on fire" Company Comptroller Roy Westerfield  told a dispatcher.  A few seconds later he said "Get 'em all out of here". 

These were quite possibly his last words.

 

On May 4th, 1988, a loud explosion rocked the entire Southern Nevada Valley.  The ground rumbled, windows shook and, in many places, shattered completely.  Residents at first thought it was an earthquake.  Others who saw a mushroom cloud rising over Henderson thought a nuclear nightmare might be unfolding in the industrial city.

In reality, it was an industrial disaster that occurred  at the Pacific Engineering Production Company of Nevada which was commonly referred to as PEPCON.  The plant, located in Henderson, was one of two American producers of ammonium perchlorate which is an oxidizer in solid rocket fuel boosters for the Space Shuttle and the military's Titan Missile program.

The other American manufacturer, Kerr-McGee, was located less than five miles away from the PEPCON plant and well with-in the area that suffered blast damage.

A little background information:  After the Challenger Space Shuttle disaster in January, 1986, the United States government continued their contract with PEPCON for ammonium perchlorate.  Despite the freeze on the Space Program, the company continued to manufacture the product at the same rate as before the Shuttle disaster.  Since there was no delivery of the product going on due to the freeze and no guidance from the government as to where to ship it to, the company stored the compound on site in plastic drums. These drums were housed on the parking lots around the plant.  The Las Vegas Review Journal reported in the aftermath that "nearly 9 million (yeah, you read that right) pounds of the chemical was consumed by the flames or explosions."

According to Wikipedia, a fire started by "a cigarette that had been discarded into a barrel of scrap ammonium perchlorate."  Nearby, workers were repairing a steel frame with fiberglass walls that had suffered damage in a recent windstorm.  They were using a welding torch.  The fire spread quickly once it reached the fiberglass material.  This led, according to the Las Vegas Mercury account by Gregory Crosby, to the first small explosion:

This small explosion raised the alarm "that enabled most workers to escape before a second larger explosion occurred on the heels of the first." 

Company comptroller Roy Westerfield "was on the phone reporting the emergency, explaining the urgency of the situation, "We've had an explosion and everything's on fire" he told a dispatcher.  (Las Vegas Review Journal)

The Henderson Fire Department responded to the fire.  When the Fire Chief arrived he saw a massive white and orange fireball and dozens of people running across the desert towards him.  The second explosion happened at 11:54 and the shock wave shattered the windows in the Chief's car.  A heavily damaged vehicle approached and its driver advised the chief that the danger was growing.  The Chief turned around and headed towards safety.

Inside the plant, Roy Westerfield was still trying to herd people to safety.  He was talking by phone to a dispatcher when  few seconds later he said "Get 'em all out of here".  These were quite possibly his last words. 

It was the third massive explosion that sent Henderson and Las Vegas residents running for their windows, radios and television news.   Local Channel 3 anchor Gwen Castaldi went on the air and began letting Valley residents know what was happening.  "It was a real moment of urgency and tragedy in the community." (Personal interview with Castaldi, 2005).

It was the third blast, according to Gregory Crosby, "that sealed the plant's fate when that 9 million pounds of chemical literally went up in smoke."  

The blast was so forceful that it knocked an arriving fire engine over two lanes.  Another arriving fire truck had its windows shattered.  Cars were overturned.  The explosion created a visible shock wave.  This explosion almost destroyed the Fire Chief's car but he was able to drive to a nearby hospital to seek treatment for his passenger and himself.

Inside the plant, Roy Westerfield and Bruce Halker, two employees who were shepherding people out of danger were killed.   More than 300 people were injured.

The marshmallow factory next door, Kidd and Co., suffered the brunt of the explosion.  Due to faulty equipment there were fewer employees working that day.  Those employees who were there evacuated at the first sign of trouble.  The marshmallow factory was destroyed. 

"The final explosion went off and PEPCON basically disappeared.  Boulder Highway looked like a war zone.  There was glass everywhere.." Eyewitness  and PEPCON employee Joe Hedrick.

The last explosion registered 3.5 on the Richter scale by the National Earthquake Information Center 600 miles away in Colorado.  A crater estimated at 15 feet deep and 200 feet wide was left in the storage area. 

A 747 on approach to McCarran Airport was reportedly buffeted by the shock wave.  The Airport, 11 miles away from the blast, suffered cracked windows.  An analysis later estimated the blast damage the equivalent of 250 tons of TNT. 

Nearby Basic High School suffered serious damage and damage was reported at McDoniel Elementary, Burkholder Middle School and Southern Nevada Vocational-Technical Center.  The last blast blew out the windows at Basic High School.

"We thought someone was out there with a shotgun" remembered teacher Michael Neighbors, "Like fools, we went right for the windows.  We literally pushed the kids out of the building.  It was like an air pocket.  The back of my hair parted." (Las Vegas Review Journal). 

The large plume of smoke could be seen around the valley and residents throughout the valley worried about chemical fall-out.   Luckily, the wind that day was only 20 to 25 mph and kept much of the chemical from settling in the valley.  Local health officials predicted that lives were saved because of the winds.

Damage was estimated at $74 million dollars.  The nearby Fire Station was heavily damaged and there was structural damage to a nearby warehouse.

PEPCON, renamed Western Electrochemical Company, relocated to Iron County, Utah.  Now some 14 miles northwest of St. George, they began the relocation a mere three months after the devastating explosion at the Henderson plant.  Kerr-McGee moved their plant 17 miles northeast of Las Vegas to Apex.   For awhile Kerr-McGee continued to manufacture the more stable liquid form of the chemical on site.  But in 1998, ten years after the disaster, the parent company of PEPCON/Western Electrochemical Company bought out the remaining ammonium perchlorate contracts and moved all production to Utah.

Senior Company official, Fred Gibson, Jr tried to shift blame from PEPCON to Southwest Gas by saying that a ruptured gas line caused the fire.  However, this conflicted with eyewitness testimony by employees.  PEPCON attorney told the Las Vegas Review Journal, three days after the disaster, "Nothing ignites ammonium perchlorate.  It does not burn.  It is not flammable."  Chemists from around the world immediately disputed the attorney and called the product "unstable and highly flammable." 

After the explosion it came out that the facility had been cited numerous times since 1974 for safety violations.  There had been a small explosion in 1980 that had injured a worker. 

More than 50 law firms represented dozens of insurance companies and corporations in lawsuits.  The case ran up tens of millions of dollars in attorneys fees and produced 1 million pages of depositions.

The case wound its way through the judicial system from 1989 to 1992 when a $171 million settlement was reached before going to a jury trial.  Insurance companies that had reimbursed some 17,000 claimants received almost 100 cents on the dollar.

Clark County agreed to pay $3.8 million to insurance companies as a result of shoddy inspections that had taken place at the plant over the years. 

Southwest Gas also agreed to settle because according to their attorney "it was a practical decision made because of the uncertainty of what a jury might do at trial." (Las Vegas Review Journal).

Southwest Gas later found out what a jury would do.  In a trial that lasted a little over a month, PEPCON's insurance company argued that gas, which is lighter than air, had leaked from a pipe then moved horizontally underground toward the plant 670 feet away.  The gas was then to make a 90-degree turn upward and ignited with an unknown source. (Emphasis added)

Following final arguments, the attorneys hadn't even gotten back to their offices before the call came from the court house that a jury had reached a verdict.  It took less than a half hour for the jury to laugh that idea out of court.

The disaster was a turning point for the development of Henderson.  The city began to shift from being the "City of Industry" (its slogan) to a bedroom community of Las Vegas.  A few years after the disaster, Green Valley subdivision, a master planned community, took off with home buyers and changed the dynamics of Henderson forever.

Though many industries remain in Henderson, the city is now a growing hub of suburban dwellers looking to escape Las Vegas.

 

Video of the explosion can be seen here:  http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/pepcon/pepcon1.mov 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NMofeKl4hpY

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NMofeKl4hpY 

 

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The Pepcon Site with the Kidd Marshmallow Factory on the right

(Courtesy of the Las Vegas Review Journal)

 

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Map of Pepcon location

 

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The explosion as seen from Lake Mead Blvd.

(courtesy of the Las Vegas Review Journal) 

 

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The Aftermath

(courtesy of RoadsidePictures

 

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The Aftermath

(courtesy of RoadsidePictures

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Morelli House

 

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The wonderful Morelli House was open this morning courtesy of the Junior League and the Preservation Association of Clark County.

According to docent Donna Andress, the Morelli House is a classic example of Las Vegas mid-century residential architecture.

Our pal, Alan Hess, says "In Las Vegas the past is often overlooked, forgotten or demolished in the rush to the future.  The historic Antonio and Helen Morelli house, preserved by the Junior League, however is a vibrant reminder fo the newness, optimism and style in Las Vegas in the mid-20th century."

The house was built in 1959 at 52 Country Club Drive in the prestigious Desert Inn Country Club Estates.  The house had a wonderful view of the world-class Desert Inn Golf Course.  Sands Hotel Orchestra Leader Antonio Morelli chose the mid-century modern design for the house.  Working with the hotel's carpenter forman, Richard Small, the two men over the course of two years designed and built the house.  Hugh E. Taylor, a local architect, drew up the plans.

"The house's bold horizontal lines", according to Hess, "glass walls, open plan and natural materials embody the fundamental tents of Modern architecture and Modern living in that period." 

Morelli and his wife, like so many newcomers back then (and today) came to take advantage of the possibilities of a new life in Las Vegas.  The Sands Hotel, perhaps more than any other hotel of its day, resides in our collective memory of Classic Las Vegas as the epitome of class and style.

The Morellis had arrived at the right time.  From New York, the classically trained musicial traveled the country as a pianist with various vaudeville acts and theater productions.  He had married Helen Collins in 1935.  They arrived in Las Vegas at the right moment.  The theater circuit that had sustained Morelli for many years was coming to an end.  Television was the new interest and variety shows brought entertainers into people's homes for free.  Las Vegas brought those entertainers to the showrooms of the Strip where for $15 dollars you could have dinner, two drinks, dessert and see Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Judy Garland and the other stars of Classic Las Vegas.

The Morelli house was 2800 square feet with plenty of room for entertaining.  The main room with its copper hooded fireplace and the formal dining area had a spacious view of the Golf Course courtesy of the tall ceilings and sliding glass doors that opened onto the patio.  The kitchen offered a more initimate less formal area filled with the top of the line appliances of the day and leather banquettes.  A television cabinet kept them up on all the latest news.

On the other side of the living room, a hallway leads to the master bedroom and a guest suite.

When it was located on the Country Club, the house had an outdoor pool in the front yard.  A walled yard offered some privacy for the swimming pool.  Screens of ornamental block added more privacy and texture.

Morelli later added a studio on the other side of the kitchen but, due to structural limitations, that structure could not be moved.

After Morelli passed away, his wife Helen decided to move back to New York to be closer to her family.  Mr. Kay G. Glenn who was Howard Hughes press secretary from 1951 until the millionaire's death in 1976 bought the house.  He only made two small changes to the house in the 22 years he owned it.  He changed the paint color in two places.  He took exceptional care of the house and respected the original concept that Morelli had envisioned.  Because of this, the house was in its near original condition and represented a "perfect historically unaltered example of mid-century residential architecture."

In 2000, Steve Wynn purchased the Desert Inn Hotel and the homes on the Golf Course.  He had plans for a new resort that did not include the Golf Course or the homes.  At that time, the Junior League had attempted to save the Whitehead house, the childhood home of neon designer, Betty Willis.  They had moved the endangered house to a vacant lot donated by Jackie Gaughan.  Unfortunately, the Whitehead house fell victim to a fire of suspicious nature and was lost.

Developer Irwin Molasky contacted the Junior League and offered them the Morelli House.  The University of Las Vegas School of Architecture had identified the house as the house "most worthy of saving due to its classic mid-century design, superior workmanship and materials and its historical provenance."

The house was moved to the corner of 9th and Bridger diagonally across the street from the old Las Vegas High School.

The Junior League has taken great care of the house and teamed with furniture maker Valdimir Kagan.  Mr. Kagan toured the house and became so enthralled with the possibilities that he designed and donated the furniture in living room.  The burgundy serpentine sofas were donated by American Leather Company adn the cocktail tables and barrel chairs were donated by Weiman Preview Furniture Company.

The Morelli House is available for tours and is available for rent for special events by contacting the Junior League of Las Vegas at 702-822-6536. 

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The entry way

 

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The Kitchen Floor
 
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The guest bathroom
 
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 Light fixtures on the back patio

 

Special thanks to RoadsidePictures for letting us use these images 

 

Beth Bergh Tile Work Saved

Our pal Dennis McBride, the Curator of History at the Nevada State Museum in Lorenzi Park, has agreed to be a guest blogger for us.

 

Here is his first article for us on how he saved the Beth Bergh Tile Work for the State Museum:

 

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The Nevada State Museum-Las Vegas recently was able to salvage an important piece of mid-century Las Vegas artwork from the Campos Building on the corner of Bonanza Road and Second Street shortly before the structure was demolished.

The Campos Building was the first state office building built in southern Nevada. Like a lot of such projects, the Campos Building didn’t come to life easily. Las Vegas businessman Harrison Stocks offered the state a plot of land for a southern Nevada state office building at Fremont and Twenty-First Streets around 1951. With that promise in hand, the legislature approved the bond-funded project and then-governor Charles Russell signed the bill. But when it was time to begin construction in 1953, Stocks withdrew his land offer. Editorials in the Review-Journal made much out the state having a building with nowhere to put it, and urged Las Vegans to scour the city for a suitable piece of land.

The City of Las Vegas came up with an undeveloped plot of land on the southeast corner of Second and Bonanza, close to the downtown core. The bond issue for the building was $320,000, and the building, designed by architect Richard Stadelman, promised to be “a modern design … of Class A construction.” Construction began in early January 1954. The cornerstone was laid in a Masonic ceremony on May 8, and state offices had moved into the building by early fall 1954.

Set into the north wall of the state building, facing Bonanza Road, was a five-foot diameter unglazed terra cotta tile bas relief of the Great State of Nevada, designed by ceramicist Beth Bergh, who came to Las Vegas from Reno in 1951. Bergh opened B. B. Originals, a shop and studio at 1122 Bonneville Avenue in August 1954 where she taught classes and produced ceramics for sale. At that time two of her works decorated Las Vegas buildings: the Great Seal on the state building, and a glazed tile mural calledPeaceable Kingdom in the façade of the West Charleston Elementary School [today known as Wasden Elementary]. The last news we have of Bergh is from 1957 when she was preparing an exhibit in her shop.

By 2006 the state building housed the Nevada Department of Parole and Probation and had been named for A. A. “Bud” Campos, chief of the department in 1971-81. The building was targeted for demolition in 2006, and the Public Works Board wanted to be sure Bergh’s artwork was saved if something could be worked out with the Nevada State Museum. The deal was made, and a few days before demolition began, Public Works delivered the seal in a thousand-pound block of concrete cut from the wall.

Unfortunately, the block was delivered upside down, and when workmen tried shaving the concrete to a more manageable size, vibrations from the saw shook the tiles loose. What might have been a disaster, however, turned out to be good luck, since most of the tiles fell out of the wall intact, and those left were easily removed. The work then was to clean, repair, and store the individual tiles until the Nevada State Museum moves into its new building at the Las Vegas Springs Preserve and the bas-relief can be reconstituted and put on display. The job of cleaning and repairing fell to me as Curator of History for the Nevada State Museum-Las Vegas.

For several weeks I brushed and scraped the unglazed tile, chiseled grout and concrete away, scrubbed and repaired as far as possible. Cleaning the artwork revealed several old breaks that had been repaired sometime in the past, including what turned out to be a bullet hole from vandals. Once the seal had been cleaned, I wrapped each piece in acid-free tissue and boxed it in anticipation of the museum’s move next year.

Little more is known of Beth Bergh and her work. Her Peaceable Kingdom at Wasden Elementary School was destroyed sometime in the 1990s, so the Great Seal is the only piece of her local public work to survive.

 

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If you have any information on Beth Bergh please contact  Lynn@classiclasvegas.com

 

The History of Helldorado - This Friday

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We are thrilled to announce that we have an upcoming panel on the History of Helldorado.  If you are new to town and wonder why there is a Helldorado Celebration (which is coming on May 17th) or if you remember fondly sitting on the curb on Fremont Street watching those beautiful floats go by, come on around and here the stories of how and why Helldorado got started and what it was like. 

At one point in the 1950s, it rivaled the Rose Parade in terms of attendance and beautiful floats.

A great evening of history and fun that you won't want to miss!

 

The History of Helldorado

Friday, May 2nd (this month only Untold Stories is on a Friday)

Las Vegas Springs Preserve

7:00 pm

$12.00 admission

 

Panelists include:

Emmett Sullivan, the son of co-founder Mark Sullivan

Rhonda Cashman Evans, the granddaughter of co-founder, Big Jim Cashman

Don Payne, former Manager of the Las Vegas News Bureau

and Rex Bell, Jr.

 

We hope to see you there!

 

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 Going to the Hosgow

 

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Float going down Fremont Street  1950s

 

Special thanks to the Elks Lodge and the Las Vegas News Bureau for letting us use these images.