Pershing Project Manager's Office

The Pershing Project Manager's Office (PPMO) was the U.S. Army agency responsible for the systems management and engineering of the Pershing missile systems.

History

Pershing management was initially under the Army Ballistic Missile Agency (ABMA) at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama in 1958.[1] ABMA was initially a group under the Army Ordnance Missile Command (AOMC). On 11 December 1961, ABMA was abolished and the personnel and mission moved directly to AOMC. The United States Army Missile Command (MICOM) was activated at Redstone Arsenal on 23 May 1962; Pershing and other project offices were transferred. On 31 January 1977, MICOM was split into the United States Army Missile Materiel Readiness Command (MIRCOM) and the United States Army Missile Research and Development Command (MIRADCOM). On 1 July 1979, MIRCOM and MIRADCOM were disestablished and combined again into MICOM. On 1 May 1987, the Program Executive Office (PEO) for Fire Support was established at Redstone Arsenal and the PPMO was transferred. After the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) between the United States and the USSR became effective on 1 June 1988, the PPMO returned to MICOM in March 1989. Responsibility for Pershing project management was placed under the direction of the newly established MICOM Weapon Systems Management Directorate on 27 August 1989.

The PPMO operated the Pershing Modification and Repair Activity in Frankfurt, Germany, commonly known as the Mod Shop, which performed depot-level repairs and modified Pershing equipment as required.[2] The shop was run by a warrant officer assigned to the PPMO with several enlisted soldiers and over fifty civilians employed by Martin Marietta Aerospace.

Decorations

Project managers

Col. Samuel C. Skemp, Jr., Col. Larry H. Hunt, Col. Rutledge P. Hazzard, Col. Oliver M. Hirsch, Col. Edwin A. Rudd,Col. Edwin L. Donley
Col. Thomas M. Brown, Col. William J. Fiorentino, Col. Robert A. Brown

References

  1. "The Pershing Project Office". Redstone Arsenal Historical Information. United States Army.
  2. Hutton, Lucas (October 1979). "Pershing's Mod Shop". The Pershing Cable. 56th Field Artillery Brigade.
  3. Army Superior Unit Award (PDF). Department of the Army. 30 December 1992. p. 10. General Orders 34.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Hull, Larry (1973). Pershing: A Decade of Service (PDF). The Martin Company. OR 10.596B.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Leventhal, Herbert A. (1992). Project Management in the Army Material Command 1962-1987 (PDF). AMC Historical Office.
  6. Meacham, Andrew (5 November 2013). "Col. Sam Skemp Cultivated Nuclear Warheads and Roses". Tampa Bay Times.


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