Stuff You Should Know - Short Stuff: Greenbrier Bunker
Episode Date: March 30, 2022The Greenbrier Bunker was a secret nuclear hideout for Congress, until it wasn't. Once it was exposed as a thing, it ceased to be a thing. Listen in to a fascinating short stuff today!See omnystudio.c...om/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject, something completely unbelievable
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Hey and welcome to the short stuff. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and again this is short stuff.
And this one is pretty cool because it's about a secret bunker hidden at a resort hotel. Not
something you come upon every day. No, this is... I never even heard of this until the other day
actually and I'm not even sure how I heard about it now that I think about it. But it seemed like
the perfect short stuff because what we're talking about is during the Cold War, the United States
government saying, you know what, if the bomb happens, we need our government to function.
And in order for our government to function, we need the people of Congress to be safe and not
fried from radiation. And the only way to do that is to build a massive underground bunker for
everyone to go and live. And that's just what they did. Yeah, but they didn't put it on a military
base. They didn't put it like underneath the Capitol building. They went to a resort in West
Virginia called the Greenbrier that had been around for a very long time already. It's a very
well known resort. It's still around today. It's beautiful. And in fact, Dorothy Draper, probably
the greatest interior designer of all time, macked out the Greenbrier I think in the 30s or 40s
and brought it back to life. It's an amazing place. But they chose the Greenbrier in part because
no one would ever suspect that they built the bunker to house Congress during a nuclear attack
four hours away from Washington, D.C. in West Virginia beneath a resort that everybody loved.
Right. No one would think that would happen except for the people that built it.
Because when the construction crews showed up and they were like, all right, we're going to need
three foot concrete walls here in these huge areas. We're going to need about 1,100 bunk beds.
They went, okay, what's going on here? And they said, don't worry about it. Just build what we tell
you to build and stay quiet because obviously something like this had to be secret. And it
was secret for many decades until, I don't know, was it a reporter or just a writer that basically
wrote an article about it? Reporter, a guy named Ted Gupp, who sounds like the kind of person who
just out something for fun. It sounds like someone who now they would use the word like he gupped
that thing up. Right. Which means that he wasted billions of taxpayer dollars with one single
article. Because it was then useless. And everyone said, well, thanks, Gupp. Now we don't have our
super secret bunker anymore. It's very much bombable. Because this thing, although it's built to withstand
to be a few hours from Washington, DC, where the big bomb lands, it can't withstand a direct hit.
And no one would have bombed White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia had it not been for you.
Thanks, Gupp. Yeah, within three years of Ted Gupp's article, The Ultimate Congressional Hideaway,
the Greenbrier Resort was giving tours of it because it'd been decommissioned that quickly.
And again, this thing was in ready operation at a moment's notice for 30 years. Over the course
of those 30 years, the 1,100 bunk beds were assigned to a person. And these were, it wasn't like
they assigned it once. As new Congress people came in, they got assigned bunk beds. Like if
something happened, this place was ready to go at a moment's notice to accept all of Congress.
And I say we take a break and then we'll come back and talk about some of the details behind
this ingenious plan. Let's do it. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Hard podcast,
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Atikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born,
it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going
to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell
me to stop running and pay attention because maybe there is magic in the stars, if you're willing
to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast.
Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought
I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down.
Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology,
it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.
So Chuck, if you went to the Greenbriar between I guess 1962 and 1992,
you might encounter somebody wearing a foresight associates uniform. And if you ask them what
foresight associates did, you'd say, oh, well, we actually take care of all the TV sets here at
the Greenbriar. And then the next thing you know, you would wake up in a crypt in Mexico
wearing someone else's clothes. And that'll be that. Yeah. And the last thought that you had in
your head was, man, there's a lot of people taking care of these TV sets here. Right. Because it
turns out that the foresight associate TV technicians were actually the government employees
who are secretly tasked with keeping the Greenbriar bunker at a state of operational
readiness at all times. Yes. It was called when they built it. I saw 57 and 58. So somewhere in
there, it was called Project Greek Island. And again, the location was determined because it's
close enough to DC to where it's not super far if you had to get there in a hurry. But it's safe
enough to be there. I think they could withstand radiation for how many days could they survive
on just the air in there? Three. But then the filtration system was so amazing that it could
actually filter out radiation. So they were okay. That's right. It cost about 14 million bucks.
This was completed in 62 right before the Cuban Missile Crisis. 720 feet underground,
two levels, 112,000 in changed square feet. So roughly the size of a couple of football
fields stacked on one another. Yeah. Think about it. 720 feet underground. That is a
skyscraper down. And what's nuts to me is it still couldn't withstand a direct hit from a
nuclear bomb. That's scary. That really says a lot right there. So when you went to this place
under a nuclear attack, if you were a member of Congress, you would be hustled off to the
Greenbrier. The first thing that would happen once you entered the secure sealed off area
is that you would be decontaminated. You'd be given new clothes. Your other clothes would be
incinerated. And you would find very quickly that entire swaths of the Greenbrier had also been
ingeniously included in this. Even though it was open to the public, they were used as
meeting rooms and stuff during normal times. In the case of a nuclear emergency, when Congress
took over the bunker, they got sealed off with the rest of this bunker too. Yeah. So like there
were literal, I mean, like companies would have a, not a retreat, but I guess a retreat there.
And you know, they would go and listen to people lecture about their industry.
And not, you know, unknowingly the whole time they're sitting on top of this underground
bunker. It's like, it was pretty ingenious to not have it at a military base and to sort of
hide it in plain sight in some ways. There's, if you're wondering like, well, how did you access
it from the Greenbrier? It would of course be behind the door that says, danger, high voltage,
keep out. Yeah. Danger, danger, high voltage. I love that. It's like out of an Austin Powers
movie or something. It's like, I just put high voltage and no one will open that door. Yeah,
I think it works. I mean, you're kind of a chump if you go through that door anyway, you know?
Yeah, you'd be a real gup. Nice callback, dude. That was great. So Wells is in there. You got your
decontamination room. You got your dormitories, which are 18 rooms with 60 beds in each. You
got to have a cafeteria and a kitchen. Sure. They even had like media rooms set up with fake views of
like the Capitol in the background and stuff like that. So they had like a production facility,
essentially, because they had to be able to broadcast out in case anything went wrong.
Yeah, and they had three meeting rooms, one that could house the Senate,
one that could house the House of Representatives, and one that could house joint congressional
meetings where everybody was involved. They also had a pharmacy with tons of antidepressants,
apparently. Yeah, they had a good stuff. They had a little jail, and then this to me was pretty
revealing. I think either NPR or the Atomic Heritage Foundation pointed out that they had,
in this little jail area, they had weapons, but that the weapons amounted to like a couple of
rifles, some pistols, like some batons and like helmets, like stuff you would have for riot gear.
And I realized like that wasn't meant to be used on, you know, Soviet forces trying to gain
entry. That's to be used in the case of like some sort of crazy mutiny, like below ground by
Congress people who are losing their marbles. Yeah, or just old grudges, like they're finally
going to take Pelosi down once and for all, put her in a straight jacket, because there were
straight jackets. Yeah. There were two boxes of straight jackets with this jail in case something
happened like that. Yeah, so the whole thing was completed, I think you said in time for the Cuban
Missile Crisis, right? Yeah. That's really good timing. And again, when they did this, they did
it under the auspices that the Greenbrier was building a new wing, and indeed the Greenbrier
did build a new wing, but there were some really weird parts of it. So it did raise some questions,
but apparently the locals kept it to themselves because it does not seem to have been one of those,
you know, open secrets. Like it seems to have been like a real secret secret, which is, you know,
hats off to everybody who managed to keep that a secret all those years. Well, yeah, because like
we said, the construction crews were immediately suspicious, but a lot of people worked on that
thing and clearly knew what was going on. And I guess it was just a different time where people
cared about their country such that they knew it was important to keep it a secret for national
security reasons. Yeah, hats off government on keeping some secrets. How fast would this be
tweeted out today? There was a drywall person working on an underground bunker. Check it out.
Supposedly the Supreme Court was destined for the Grove Park Inn in the case of a nuclear
emergency that would find culprits at the Greenbrier. Yeah. Where's that? Asheville. Okay.
Really? Yeah, I'm pretty sure. Yeah, it's in Asheville. So that's where they would go and
bunker down to? Yeah. Wow. Pretty amazing stuff, Chuck. I wonder if this, I mean, if there were
1,100 beds, this seems to indicate that they would have their families there, right? I guess, but
I guess, yeah, it must be. And I think there's a train route from DC to the Greenbrier. So
there would probably be time to be like, meet me at the Amtrak station. We got to go
to your family. Interesting. That's the only explanation I can find. Although staff maybe,
I could see Congress people choosing their staff over their family in a nuclear disaster.
That's 1,100 bunks though. That's plenty of room for staff and families and maybe even an enemy or
two. Sure. Again, though, thanks to the Atomic Heritage Foundation, great article on this,
as well as NPR, who we always love. Yes, and great thanks to you too, Chuck. And you, sir. Thank you.
Well, we thank each other, everybody. That means short stuff is out.
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