Hays Army Ammunition Plant Explained

Hays Army Ammunition Plant was an 7.9acres, 1,650-employee foundry established in 1942 in the Hays neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. At first it produced 16inches shells and 5inches breechblocks for the Navy. Though owned by the Army, the plant was operated by the Mesta Machine Company on behalf of the United States Navy during World War II. The plant was operated by the Mullins Manufacturing Company during the Korean War and by the Levinson Steel Company during the Vietnam War. For the Army it produced 105 mm shells, 250,000 of these per month throughout 1968. It was the only Army plant with cold extrusion capability. Manufacturing ceased in May 1970 and the plant was mothballed in June 1971. The 1982 value of the complex was $69 million.[1] The plant was placed on standby in 1991 and donated for redevelopment in 1993. It is now used as an industrial site.[2] [3]

Headstamp

The headstamp and manufacturer code for Hays Army Ammunition Plant is HYAAP.

External links

40.3917°N -79.9324°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Army Publishing Directorate.
  2. Web site: Galvtech (Hays Ammunition Plant). Western Pennsylvania Brownfields Center. Carnegie-Mellon University. 27 January 2014.
  3. Web site: Hays Army Ammunition Plant . Ferguson . Robert . MacDonald . Stuart E. . 1984 . Historic American Engineering Record . Library of Congress . Washington, D.C. . 27 January 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140203085850/http://lcweb2.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/pa/pa1700/pa1754/data/pa1754data.pdf . 3 February 2014 .