Yuma Proving Ground Explained

Yuma Proving Ground
Location:La Paz County and Yuma County, Arizona
Nearest Town:Yuma, Arizona
Partof: US Army Test and Evaluation Command
Type:Military proving ground
Built:1943
Used:1950 – present
Ownership: United States
Current Commander:COL John Nelson [1]
Occupants:
Website:https://www.yuma.army.mil

Yuma Proving Ground (YPG) is a United States Army series of environmentally specific test centers with its Yuma Test Center (YTC) being one of the largest military installations in the world. It is subordinate to the U.S. Army Test and Evaluation Command.

YPG's headquarters is located at its YTC in southwestern La Paz County and western Yuma County in southwest Arizona, United States, approximately 30miles north of the city of Yuma.[2]

Of the four extreme natural environments recognized as critical in the testing of military equipment, three fall under the management authority of YPG. Realistic natural environment testing ensures that American military equipment performs as advertised, wherever deployed around the world. YPG manages military equipment and munitions testing at three locations: The Cold Regions Test Center at Fort Greely, Alaska;[3] the Tropic Regions Test Center operating in Panama, Honduras, Suriname, and Hawaii;[4] and at YTC.[1] The common link between these test centers is "environmental testing," which makes the proving ground the Army's environmental test expert.

History

The presence of the U.S. Army in Yuma goes back to 1850, when Fort Yuma was constructed on a hill overlooking the important Yuma crossing of the Colorado River. Soldiers at Fort Yuma maintained peace and protected the important Yuma crossing, which was used by thousands of travelers each year.[5]

The Army constructed a second facility in 1865, the Yuma Quartermaster Depot, to act as a supply base for Army posts throughout Arizona and parts of New Mexico. Supplies were delivered by riverboats and transported from the depot to military outposts by wagon. After Fort Yuma and the Yuma Quartermaster Depot closed in the 1880s, the Army did not return to Yuma on a permanent basis until World War II.[5]

Yuma Proving Ground traces its history to Camp Laguna and the Army Corps of Engineers Yuma Test Branch, both activated in 1943. Located on the Colorado River, the Yuma Test Branch conducted testing on combat bridges, amphibious vehicles, and boats. Tens of thousands of mechanized and infantry soldiers were trained at Camp Laguna for duty at combat fronts throughout the world, from North Africa to the South Pacific. Abandoned campsites and tank trails can still be found on the proving ground.[5]

Camp Laguna lasted only until the end of World War II. The Yuma Test Branch was closed in 1949 and reactivated two years later as the Yuma Test Station, under the operational control of the Sixth U.S. Army. In 1962, the station was named Yuma Proving Ground and reassigned to the U. S. Army Materiel Command as an important component of the Test and Evaluation Command. On 26 July 1973, it officially received its full name – U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground. The following year it was designated as a Department of Defense Major Range and Test Facility Base.[5]

Since its early days, Yuma Proving Ground has been a desert environmental test center for all types of military equipment and materiel. However, developmental and a variety of other types of testing of artillery systems and ammunition, aircraft armament and targeting systems, mobility equipment, and air delivery systems, not necessarily desert environmental-related, now comprise the bulk of the workload. A heavy investment in technology and a highly skilled soldier-civilian workforce makes the proving ground a significant social and economic component of the local community.[5]

Yuma Test Center

YTC encompasses 1,307.8 square miles (3,387.2 km²) of the northwestern Sonoran Desert[2] and conducts tests on nearly every weapon in the ground combat arsenal. Nearly all the long-range artillery testing for U.S. ground forces takes place at the YTC in an area almost completely removed from urban encroachment and noise concerns. Restricted airspace controlled by the test center amounts to over 2000sqmi. YTC has the longest overland artillery range (40miles) in the nation, the most highly instrumented helicopter armament test range in the Department of Defense, over 200miles of improved road courses for testing tracked and wheeled military vehicles, over 600miles of fiber-optic cable linking test locations, and the most modern mine and demolitions test facility in the western hemisphere. Realistic villages and road networks representing urban areas in Southwest Asia have been constructed and are used for testing counter-measures to the threat of roadside bombs. It is estimated that the track can be used to test about 80 percent of the Army's wheeled vehicle fleet.

More than 3,000 people, mostly civilians, work at YTC, which is the largest employer in Yuma County.

In a typical year, over 500,000 artillery, mortar and missile rounds are fired, 36,000 parachute drops take place, 200000miles are driven on military vehicles, and over 4,000 air sorties are flown from YTC's Laguna Army Airfield.

About 10 percent of the YTC's workload is training. In a typical year, dozens of units come to the facility for realistic desert training, especially before deploying overseas.

YTC's clean air, low humidity, skimpy rainfall – only about 3inches per year – and annual average of 350 sunny days, add up to almost perfect testing and training conditions. Urban encroachment and noise concerns are nonexistent problems, unlike at many other military installations.

YTC tests improvised explosive devices, commonly known as IEDs, the number-one killer of American service men and women in Iraq and Afghanistan. Hundreds of unmanned aerial vehicles fly at the proving ground each year from the six airfields located at YTC, as do helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft conducting personnel and cargo parachute drops.

Many friendly foreign nations also visit YTC to conduct test programs.[6]

The General Motors Desert Proving Ground – Yuma opened at YTC in late July 2009. General Motors built the facility at a cost of more than $100 million after closing its desert automotive test facility in Mesa, Arizona, that had been in operation since 1953. The new facility allows General Motors and Army automotive testers to test their wheeled vehicles all year-round.

YTC offers the following for testing, evaluation, and training purposes:

Demographics

Yuma Proving Ground
Settlement Type:Census-designated place
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Arizona
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Yuma
Unit Pref:Imperial
Population As Of:2020
Population Total:313
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Density Sq Mi:auto
Timezone:MST (no DST)
Utc Offset:-7
Coordinates:32.8653°N -114.4369°W
Postal Code Type:ZIP Code
Blank Name:FIPS code
Blank1 Name:GNIS feature ID

Yuma Proving Ground is a census-designated place (CDP) covering the residential population of the Yuma Proving Ground in Yuma County, Arizona.

It first appeared as a CDP in the 2020 Census with a population of 313.[7]

2020 census

Yuma Proving Ground CDP, Arizona – Racial and Ethnic Composition
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
!Race / Ethnicity!Pop 2020[8] !% 2020
White alone (NH)17154.63%
Black or African American alone (NH)206.39%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH)61.92%
Asian alone (NH)227.03%
Pacific Islander alone (NH)00.00%
Some Other Race alone (NH)00.00%
Mixed Race/Multi-Racial (NH)3410.86%
Hispanic or Latino (any race)6017.17%
Total313100.00%

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.yuma.army.mil/ YPG, U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground (official homepage)
  2. https://www.census.gov|b=50|l=en|t=4001|zf=0.0|ms=sel_00dec|dw=0.007998535667255037|dh=0.0050551613624548325|dt=gov.census.aff.domain.map.EnglishMapExtent|if=gif|cx=-113.68404498617427|cy=32.93911668941063|zl=1|pz=1|bo=318:317:316:314:313:319|bl=393:358:357:356:355:354|ft=338:335:332:331|fl=372:204:369:368|g=100$10000US040120206009000&-show_geoid=Y Yuma Proving Ground census blocks, Census Tract 206, La Paz County and Census Tract 105, Yuma County, Arizona
  3. https://www.atec.army.mil/crtc/ CRTC U.S. Army Cold Regions Test Center
  4. https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a514049.pdf Tropic Regions Test Center
  5. https://www.yuma.army.mil/history.html Yuma Proving Ground Continues Area's Army History
  6. https://www.army.mil/article/193343/piranhas_swim_at_us_army_yuma_proving_ground Piranhas swim at U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground
  7. Web site: Yuma Proving Ground CDP, Arizona. United States Census Bureau. March 13, 2022.
  8. Web site: P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO, AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE – 2020: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171) – Yuma Proving Ground CDP, Arizona. United States Census Bureau.