Close Menu
Survival Prepper StoresSurvival Prepper Stores
  • Home
  • News
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Firearms
  • Videos
What's Hot

How an EMP Attack Could Cripple Your Daily Life and How To Stop It

October 25, 2025

Recovery, resilience and returning from war in Ukraine

October 25, 2025

The .280 Remington Should Have Been a Success. Here’s Why It Wasn’t

October 25, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Survival Prepper StoresSurvival Prepper Stores
  • Home
  • News
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Firearms
  • Videos
Survival Prepper StoresSurvival Prepper Stores
Join Us
Home » The most dangerous gravesite in the US resides in Arlington Cemetery
News

The most dangerous gravesite in the US resides in Arlington Cemetery

Vern EvansBy Vern EvansOctober 24, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
The most dangerous gravesite in the US resides in Arlington Cemetery

It had been nearly five years since Winston Churchill had declared that “an iron curtain has descended across the continent,” and plunged the West in a Cold War and a hot race for armament with the East.

Yet worlds away from Washington and Moscow, in a remote outpost 40 miles west of Idaho Falls, Idaho, a town would soon become home to America’s first nuclear accident.

On Jan. 3, 1961, operators from the U.S. Army’s Stationary Lower Power Reactor One, or SL-1, were returning from a 10-day holiday break.

Among them was Army Spc. John Arthur Byrnes, Navy Seabee Richard Carlton Legg and SP4 Richard McKinley.

SL-1 was designed to provide heat and electricity for remote Defense Early Warning system radar sites, established to provide early warning of attack by Soviet aircraft or ICBMs, supplementing conventional plants requiring costly and hazardous diesel deliveries.

Richard McKinley (FindaGrave)

However, poor oversight, lack of rigorous training and detailed procedures and inadequately tested technology spelled disaster for SL-1 and its operators that night when, shortly after 9 p.m., a steam explosion blasted through the plant.

According to Argon Electronics, which provides nuclear and other hazardous material training simulators, the blast had enough force to lift the whole 26,000-pound apparatus over 9 feet into the air and create 500 pounds per square inch of pressure “which forced the plugs at the top of the reactor open and fire the control rods like missiles into the ceiling.”

“The entire reactor room was instantly filled with burning steam contaminated water and fragments of the radioactive cores,” Argon said.

It would take over an hour and a half for responders to arrive at the reactor, and when they did, they found dangerous levels of radiation.

Byrnes and Carlton were killed almost instantly in the blast. McKinley was still breathing, but the 27-year-old succumbed to his injuries shortly after being transported into an ambulance.

An Atomic Energy Commission investigation found the explosion had been caused by an operator pulling the reactor’s central rod too far out of its housing and, according to NASA, “This withdrawal caused the reactor to go ‘supercritical’ in just 4 milliseconds as the core power level surged to 20,000 megawatts or over 6,000 times the rated power output.”

It was speculated that the rod had become stuck, resulting in an operative accidentally pulling it too hard to free it. Others say it was the simply the result of human error.

McKinley was interred at Arlington National Cemetery on Jan. 25, 1961. He was buried in a lead casket. (FindaGrave)

Brynes and Legg were buried in their hometowns but McKinley, a Korean War veteran, was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery at the behest of his wife.

Twenty-two days after the explosion, McKinley’s family gathered in Arlington, Virginia, to watch the veteran’s eight-minute funeral — from 20 feet away.

Laid to rest in a double lead-lined casket, McKinley was lowered into a 10-foot-grave encased in concrete and surrounded by a metal vault. For good measure an additional foot of concrete was poured in atop his casket.

McKinley’s gravesite remains the only radioactive burial plot in Arlington National cemetery, and while it is safe to visit, his cemetery file warns, “Victim of nuclear accident. Body is contaminated with long-life radioactive isotopes. Under no circumstance will the body be removed from this location without prior approval of the AEC [Atomic Energy Commission] in consultation with this headquarters.”

Claire Barrett is the Strategic Operations Editor for Sightline Media and a World War II researcher with an unparalleled affinity for Sir Winston Churchill and Michigan football.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Recovery, resilience and returning from war in Ukraine

Trump’s bill would remove certain gun taxes; Democrats vow opposition

Michigan police identify gunman in CrossPointe Church shooting incident

Dem says GOP is only pro-life so kids can grow up and ‘get shot in school’

Elon Musk indicates his new party will be pro-Second Amendment and pro-bitcoin

Federal appeals court rules California ammunition background checks unconstitutional

Don't Miss

Recovery, resilience and returning from war in Ukraine

News October 25, 2025

LVIV, Ukraine — “I’m not disabled, I’m upgraded.” These were words I remember vividly from…

The .280 Remington Should Have Been a Success. Here’s Why It Wasn’t

October 25, 2025

Quick Wilderness Hack: How to Make Bush Caffeine

October 25, 2025

Shawn Ryan Opens Up About Getting Hazed -“I Got Knocked Out and Drowned in a Croc‑Infested River”

October 25, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Copyright © 2025 Survival Prepper Stores. All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.