The US Army upgraded Fort Hero, and renamed it Camp Hero in 1942. This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency website http://www.afhra.af.mil/. A year later AN/FPS-3 and AN/FPS-5 radars were operating. Other Sites > log in. The Navy also acquired land in the area, including Fort Pond Bay and Montauk Manor. Camp Hero was a U.S. Army installation established prior to WW2, and Montauk Air Force Station was established within its perimeter as the Army phased out of the location in the 1950s. In November 1957, the Army closed the Camp Hero portion of the military reservation as Soviet long-distance bombers could fly well above ground-based artillery. The AN/FPS-35 was so powerful that it disrupted local TV and radio broadcasts, and had to be shut down several times and re-calibrated. Stranger Things’ original title was Montauk… Around 1965 the site was removed from joint-use status. TT-3 was operated as an annex of the 773d AC&W Sq, with its offshore personnel assigned to a flight of the 773d, although the facility was logistically supported by the 4604th Support Squadron (Texas Towers) at Otis AFB. Montauk Project Time Travel Experiments The strange mysterious day . Montauk project was, apparently, a series of US government experiments at Camp Hero or Montauk Air Force Station in Montauk, Long Island, with the aim of developing exotic technologies such as time travel and teleportation. In December 1960 the large, high-power AN/FPS-35 radar became operational at Montauk. Camp Hero ist ein Radarstützpunkt der US Air Force an der Ostspitze von Long Island bei Montauk (New York). One of the 16-inch gun casemates at Camp Hero. In November 1957, the Army closed the military reservation on the Eastern side of Camp Hero. It was decommissioned in 1981 and is now owned by the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation as Camp Hero State Park. Minuteman/Peacekeeper