Camp Atterbury

Camp Atterbury, located in south-central Indiana, about 4 miles (6.4 km) west of Edinburgh, Indiana, serves as a military and civilian training base under the auspices of the Indiana National Guard. The camp is named in memory of William Wallace Atterbury, a New Albany, Indiana, native who received a Distinguished Service Medal for his contributions during World War I. Initially established in 1941 on 40,351.5348 acres (163.296868 km2) of land, Camp Atterbury opened in 1942 and continues to embody its motto, Preparamus (We Are Ready), as a site for preparing American military personnel and civilians for service.

Camp Atterbury
Bartholomew, Brown, Johnson Counties,
near Edinburgh, Indiana
Mass-enlistment ceremony of WACs on 10 August 1943, at Camp Atterbury, Indiana
TypeMilitary and civilian training base
Site information
Controlled byUnited States
Site history
Built1941–42
In use1942–46, 1950–54, 1969–present[1]

During its peak years during World War II, Camp Atterbury's primary mission was to provide combat training for the U.S. Army. Numerous auxiliary and service units, as well as four U.S. Army divisions, trained at the camp between 1942 and 1944. Wakeman Hospital Center, the camp's 6,000-bed hospital and convalescent center, became the largest in the Fifth Service Command. It trained medical personnel and treated an estimated 85,000 patients during the war. Between 1943 and 1946, a portion of the camp was used an internment compound for an estimated 15,000 soldiers, most of them Italian and German prisoners of war. A small chapel that the Italian prisoners built in 1943 is the camp's only remaining POW-related structure. Camp Atterbury also served as a military reception and separation center during the war. Its separation center, one of eighteen such facilities in the United States, discharged a total of 537,344 enlisted men and 39,495 officers from military service. Camp Atterbury and Wakeman Hospital were deactivated in December 1946.

After World War II, Camp Atterbury remained on stand-by status until 1950, when it was reactivated as a military training center during the Korean War. After the U.S. Army discontinued its use as a military installation in December 1968, the Indiana National Guard assumed responsibility for oversight of the camp. Since 1969 the camp had continued to serve as a military and civilian training facility. It supports the Indiana National Guard and its missions, the Camp Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center (CAJMTC), and the Muscatatuck Urban Training Center (MUTC). In addition, portions of the camp have been leased to other groups, including the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, the Atterbury Job Corps, and the Johnson County, Indiana, parks department, among others.

Site selection and early construction

In January 1941 the U.S. War Department issued orders to consider potential sites for a new U.S. Army training center in Indiana. After the Hurd Engineering Company surveyed an estimated 50,000 acres (200 km2), an area was selected for the camp in south-central Indiana, approximately 30 miles (48 km) south of Indianapolis, 12 miles (19 km) north of Columbus, and 4 miles (6.4 km) west of Edinburgh. The site, which includes portions of Johnson, Bartholomew, and Brown Counties, was selected because of its terrain (some of it is level; other parts are hilly), its location near larger urban areas (such as Indianapolis, the state capital, and Columbus, the Bartholomew County seat of government), and its proximity to transportation (adjacent to a Pennsylvania Railroad line and U.S. Highway 31).[2] On 28 April 1941, the U.S. War Department announced its intention to establish a military training camp that would be capable of housing 30,000 men.[3]

On 14 January 1942, about a month after the attack on Pearl Harbor and the United States entry into World War II, the U.S. War Department announced its decision to proceed with its plan to build the military training center in southern Indiana.[4] Initial land acquisition for the camp encompassed 40,351.5348 acres (163.296868 km2) in 643 tracts. The land acquisition cost an estimated $3.8 million ($55,127,088 in 2015 chained dollars). In addition to the land, the site encompassed numerous farmsteads, the town of Kansas (population thirteen), fifteen cemeteries, and five schools. Four of the area's fifteen cemeteries remained intact; the gravesites in the other cemeteries were exhumed and relocated.[5]

Initial work at the site began in February 1942.[6] The U.S. Army contracted John Richard Walsh, a civilian, as a real estate project manager to oversee the initial development at the camp that would accommodate and train a full-sized, triangular division of 40,000 men.[7][8] Various civilian contractors built the camp over a period of six months from February to August 1942. At the peak of construction in June 1942, there were 14,491 workers on the payroll. An estimated 700 vehicles and daily bus service provided transportation from nearby towns and an on-site concession tent served meals to 600 workers at a time.[9]

On 6 February 1942,[10] the War Department announced that the camp would be named in memory of William Wallace Atterbury, a New Albany, Indiana, native who received a Distinguished Service Medal for his contributions during World War I.[11][12] Other names that had been considered were Camp Johnson (for Johnson County, Indiana), Camp Bartholomew (for Bartholomew County, Indiana), and Camp MacArthur (for General Douglas MacArthur), among others. In addition, Camp Atterbury was nicknamed Mudbury during its construction because of its muddy grounds, the result of heavy spring rains during 1942.[13]

World War II-era facilities

The military training camp initially included more than 1,700 buildings and other structures to house and support approximately 44,159 enlisted men and officers (more than one U.S. Army infantry division).[4] Costs for initial construction were approximately $35 million ($507,749,491 in 2015 chained dollars). Buildings included soldiers' barracks, officers' quarters, mess halls, warehouses, post exchanges (PXs), chapels, theaters, and indoor and outdoor recreational facilities, as well as administrative and other support buildings, such as a library and post office. Facilities to provide water, sewer, and electricity were also installed in addition to construction of a spur of the Pennsylvania Railroad adjacent to the camp.[14] The camp's training facilities also included twenty-one firing ranges and about thirty buildings arranged as a small town, nicknamed Tojoburg, to provide soldiers with field practice in a village setting.[15]

Hospital and convalescent center

Camp Atterbury also included a large, 1,700-bed hospital on approximately 75 acres (0.30 km2) of land. Initial construction included forty-three, two-story buildings for patient wards, treatment facilities, mess halls, a post exchange, an auditorium, and a recreation center, as well as housing for medical officers, enlisted men, and nursing staff. Thirty-one of these concrete-block buildings had interconnecting corridors. With later expansion and remodeling, the facility evolved into a 6,000-bed hospital and convalescent center. In July 1942 a medical training school was established at Camp Atterbury and as demand for its services increased, the hospital was further expanded and remodeled. In August 1942 additional buildings were erected to provide space to train field hospital units.[16]

In April 1944, when the post hospital was designated as a specialized general hospital for treatment of soldiers wounded in combat, it was under the command of Colonel Haskett L. Conner. The facility included 2,000 beds for hospital patients and a separate rehabilitation center for 3,000 convalescing soldiers.[16] On 8 May 1944, the hospital was renamed Wakeman General Hospital, in honor of Colonel Frank B. Wakeman, a New York native.[17]

In July 1944 the Women's Army Corps Medical Department Enlisted Technicians' School was relocated to Camp Atterbury from Hot Springs, Arkansas. In a little more than a year, an estimated 3,800 WACs received their medical technology training at Wakeman Hospital. Some of them remained at Camp Atterbury after their training, while others continued their service at other U.S. Army hospitals.[18]

In late 1944 and early 1945, the hospital and convalescent center's facilities were further expanded and remodeled in anticipation of an increase in demand for its services. Effective 5 April 1944, the 3547th Service Unit replaced the WAC and medical section of the 1560th Service Unit, and on 18 August, the hospital received its first casualties from England and France. The wounded arrived by airplane from Atterbury Army Air Field, about twelve miles away, and by train.[19]

Wakeman General, the largest hospital in the Fifth Service Command, was "one of the best equipped among the forty-three specialized general hospitals in the United States" in the 1940s.[20] It specialized in plastic, neuro-, and orthopedic surgery and reconstructive treatment, and was especially known for its plastic eye replacements.[21] By January 1945 Wakeman had a medical detachment of 1,600 personnel and about 700 civilians serving 6,000 patients. In addition to its staff, the hospital had the American Red Cross and a group of local women, known as the Gray Ladies, as volunteers to assist its patients. The Red Cross and United Service Organizations also provided entertainment in the form of recreational activities, shows, and special events.[22]

On 20 April 1945, the Wakeman General and Convalescent Hospital, whose total capacity eventually reached 10,000 patients, was designated as the Wakeman Hospital Center. Soldiers who remained at Camp Atterbury for an extended period of recovery were housed in barracks within the camp about two miles from the hospital. Wakeman Hospital remained under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Ray M. Conner, followed by Colonel Frank L. Cole in May 1945 and Colonel Paul W. Crawford in January 1946. The convalescent center was under the command of Colonel Harry F. Becker.[23]

Wakemen treated an estimated 85,000 patients during the war. It closed at the end of 1946 after its remaining patients were transferred to other hospitals. The WAC Medical Department Enlisted Technicians' School was relocated to San Antonio, Texas.[4][24]

Military camp

From 1942 to 1944 Camp Atterbury's the primary mission was to provide combat training for the U.S. Army, while Wakeman General Hospital and its convalescent center trained medical personnel and treated wounded combat soldiers. Between 1943 and 1946 a portion of Camp Atterbury housed an internment camp, primarily for Italian and German prisoners of war. The camp also supported various U.S. Army service units and served as a military reception and separation center. Camp Atterbury and Wakeman Hospital were deactivated in December 1946.

During World War II, Camp Atterbury was under the command of a succession of military officers from its establishment in 1942 to its closure in 1946. Colonel Welton M. Modisett, who served as its first post commander, arrived in May 1942. He continued to serve in that capacity during the camp's use as a military training center and prisoner internment camp.[25][26] Brigadier General Ernest A. Bixby succeeded Colonel Modisett as post commander in June 1945, when the camp was active as reception and separation center. Colonel Herbert H. Glidden succeeded General Bixby in June 1946, followed in August by Colonel John L. Gammett, who had been the commander in charge of the internment camp, and Colonel Carter A. McLennon, who arrived in September. Colonel McLennon was Camp Atterbury's commander when it closed in December 1946.[27]

During its use as a military training facility between 1942 and 1944, four U.S. Army infantry divisions trained at the camp before they were deployed overseas: the 30th, 83rd, 92nd, and 106th infantry divisions. Camp Atterbury also trained numerous service support units.[28][29]

In 1942 the U.S. Army's 83rd Division, under the command of Major General John C. Milliken, was the first infantry division to arrive for training at Camp Atterbury.[30] Reactivated on 15 August 1942, the division and its auxiliary units later grew to include about 25,000 service personnel. In March 1943 the 83rd established a U.S. Army Ranger training school at the camp. The division left Camp Atterbury in June 1943 for further training in Tennessee and Kentucky before shipping out to England and the European Theater of Operations in April 1944.[31][32]

The 365th Infantry Regiment and the 597th Field Artillery Battery, two units of the 92nd Division, under the command of Colonel Walter A. Elliott, were reactivated at Camp Atterbury on 15 October 1942. Composed of African American servicemen, the two units remained at the camp until 26 April 1943, when they joined the remaining 92nd Division forces at Fort Huachuca, Arizona. The 92nd sailed for North Africa in June 1944, and served in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations.[32][33]

The 30th "Old Hickory" Division, under the command of Major General Leland S. Hobbs, arrived on 13 November 1943, for a ten-week stay at the camp. The division left on 30 January 1944, for Massachusetts, and sailed to England in February 1945.[34]

The 106th "Golden Lion" Division, under the command of Major General Alan W. Jones, arrived at Camp Atterbury in March 1944 and left on 9 October 1944. The 106th Division, the largest to train at Camp Atterbury, was sent to the Ardennes, where it fought in Battle of the Bulge in December 1944.[35]

Numerous auxiliary and service units also trained at Camp Atterbury, including some of the units from the Eighth Detachment, Special Troops, Second Army, which was under the command of Colonel Richard C. Stickney. Medical units also trained at Wakeman Hospital and practiced in the field.[29][36] Another unit, the U.S. 39th Evacuation Hospital, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Allen N. Bracher, was activated on 30 August 1942, and departed from Camp Atterbury on 7 June 1943, for Tennessee. It was sent overseas in March 1944.[37] The 101st Infantry Battalion (Separate) under the command of Colonel Vincent Conrad, arrived at the camp in December 1942. It was given the nickname of the Austrian battalion because some of its members were political refugees from Austria, including three archdukes (Felix, Carl Ludwig, and Rudolf), who were the sons of Charles I of Austria and the brothers of Otto von Habsburg. A few months later, when the battalion was disbanded in 1943, its members were reassigned.[38]

The 1584th Special Training Unit (renamed the 1560th SCU Special Training Unit in February 1944) provided academic training for military personnel at the camp beginning in November 1943. The 1562nd operated a school to train bakers and cooks for military service.[39]

In 1942 Indiana officials reported that the camp would receive Women's Army Auxiliary Corps personnel to serve in various capacities at the camp. (The WAACs became known as the Women's Army Corps, or WACs, on 15 May 1942.) Facilities were erected for their use in a separate block of buildings, away from the other service personnel. Similar in construction to others at the camp, the women's buildings included barracks, mess halls, an administrative building, and recreational facilities. The first contingent of 130 women arrived at Camp Atterbury on 6 March 1943, from a training center at Daytona Beach, Florida. This all-white group served as the 44th Headquarters Company, under the command of Second Officer Helen C. Grote, who had trained at Fort Des Moines Provisional Army Officer Training School in Des Moines, Iowa.[40][41] (The 44th Post Headquarters Company was renamed the Headquarters Section of the 3561st Service Unit on 21 June 1943.) Another contingent of 141 women arrived at the camp on 22 May 1943, under the command of Second Officer Sarah E. Murphy. This all-black group of WACs performed duties at Wakeman Hospital as part of the 3561st Service Unit and cared for wounded soldiers returning from combat.[42]

Camp newspapers and radio stations

Camp Atterbury established its own newspaper during the war. The first issue of The Atterbury Crier was published on 25 September 1942. The name of the free publication was subsequently changed to The Camp Crier, with its first issue published on 5 March 1943. Wakeman General's publication, The Probe, was combined with the camp's general newspaper in January 1946. The last issue of The Camp Crier was published on 14 June 1946.[43] In addition to the camp newspaper, some of the individual units published their own mimeographed newsletters under names such as The Jerk, The Buzz Saw, The Fighter, The Wardier, and a Wakeman Hospital newsletter called The Splint and Litter, among others.[44]

Wakeman Hospital also had its own radio station, WAKE.[45] Camp Atterbury's first wartime, all-soldiers radio show, called "It's Time For Taps," aired from Indianapolis on Thursday, 8 October 1942, at 1310 AM kHz.[46]

Internment camp

From 30 April 1943, to 26 June 1946, a portion of Camp Atterbury was enclosed with a double barbed-wire fence and surrounded by guard towers for use as a prisoner-of-war camp. Administered under the terms of the Geneva Convention of 1929, the internment camp was one of 700 established in the United States. Over the three years and two months of its operation, the internment camp received an estimated 15,000 soldiers, most of them Italian and German.[47][48] During its operation there were seventeen prisoners deaths, but no escapes.[49] The internment camp was closed in June 1946 and dismantled. In 1970 the remains of the prisoners who died at Camp Atterbury were exhumed from the POW cemetery at the camp and moved to Camp Butler National Cemetery, near Springfield, Illinois.[50]

Located on 45 acres (0.18 km2) on the western edge of Camp Atterbury, about 1 mile (1.6 km) from the camp's regular troops, the internment camp included separate compounds for the prisoners within a stockade. Its facilities were intended to house and feed up to 3,000 the prisoners at a time. Seriously injured prisoners were treated at Wakeman Hospital.[51] On 15 December 1942, the U.S. Army activated the 1537th Service Unit to perform duty at the prison camp. After receiving specialized training, the service unit arrived in February 1943 to prepare for the arrival of the prisoners of war. For the duration of its use, the internment camp was under the command of Lieutenant Colonel John L. Gammell. Father Maurice F. Imhoff, a Roman Catholic priest, was assigned as the camp's chaplain.[48][51]

The prison compound was equipped similarly to Camp Atterbury's other facilities; however, the U.S. Army service unit was housed outside the perimeter of the internment camp. Prisoners were organized into three battalions and the camp was divided into three sections.[52] They worked as general camp laborers and at offsite locations, usually as agricultural laborers in groups of ten or more, accompanied by a military guard. Prisoners were paid eighty cents per day for their labor, in addition to a ten-cent per diem from the U.S. government. They were also allowed leisure time at the camp.[53]

The first group of 767 prisoners, most of them Italians, arrived on 30 April 1943, and another group of 400 arrived the following day. By September there were nearly 3,000 prisoners at the camp.[48][51] All the Italian prisoners had been removed from Camp Atterbury by 4 May 1944.[54]

In 1943 Lieutenant Colonel John Gammel gave the Italian prisoners permission to erect a small chapel about 1 mile (1.6 km) from the internment compound. Dedicated to the Blessed Mother, it was named "The Chapel in the Meadow." The three-sided structure, which measured 11 feet (3.4 m) by 16 feet (4.9 m), was built of brick and stucco from scrap materials found at the camp. The exterior had bright blue stucco walls and plain white columns. A cross surmounted the south end of its gable roof. The east and west sidewalls each had an opening in the shape of a cross. Its interior was decorated with a faux-painted marble altar installed at the back. Another altar was built for outdoor use. Religious paintings decorated the interior walls and ceiling.[55]

The "Chapel in the Meadow" was not demolished when the internment was dismantled, but it fell into disrepair and was vandalized after the war. The chapel was restored and dedicated in 1989.[55][56] It is the only extant structure from the prisoner-of-war compound. Camp Atterbury's former prisoners and their descendants have returned to the site for annual reunions. In 2017 the Indiana Historical Society re-created a replica of the chapel for its exhibit, "You Are There 1943: Italian POWs at Atterbury," which runs from 4 April 2017, through 11 August 2018, at the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana History Center in downtown Indianapolis.[57][48]

In addition to the chapel, the Italian prisoners left behind two stone-carved memorials that are still at the camp. A large stone that rests inside the camp's east entrance carries the inscription: "Camp Atterbury–1942".[58] The Italians also carved a commemorative stone with the inscription: "Atterbury Internment Camp, 1537th S. U., 12-15-42," in reference to the U.S. unit in charge of the prison compound. This stone lies within the perimeter of the former internment camp.[59]

After the departure of the last Italian prisoners on 4 May, another group of prisoners of war, most of them German, began arriving on 8 May 1944. About 5,700 were housed at the camp by September.[60] When the internment camp exceeded its capacity, some of the German prisoners were relocated. By October the number of German prisoners had reached 8,898. An estimated 3,700 of them were housed in satellite camps in other areas of Indiana, where they were closer to the communities who needed them for labor. German prisoners primarily worked as agricultural laborers, as the Italian prisoners had done, but they were especially needed for work at area canning factories. The last German prisoners of war to leave Wakeman Hospital departed on 28 June 1946, for New Jersey.[49][61]

Reception and separation centers

In August 1944 the reception (induction) center at Fort Benjamin Harrison, northeast of Indianapolis, was moved to Camp Atterbury, where it was organized as a separate unit in October 1944. U.S. Army inductees stayed in camp about a week before their transfer to a training center. About 9,000 inductees per month passed through Camp Atterbury's reception center before its operations were moved to Fort Knox at the end of 1946. In addition to the inductees, about 3,000 military personnel who were awaiting reassignment passed through Camp Atterbury's reception station, organized as a separate unit in November 1944. Military personnel arriving at the reception station usually stayed twelve to twenty-four hours before they were sent home or reassigned to other duties after a brief furlough. By September 1945 the reception station was processing about 60,000 returning soldiers per month. It closed on 31 July 1946.[62]

Camp Atterbury's separation center, organized as a separate unit at the camp in October 1944, was one of eighteen facilities in the United States that was responsible for handling U.S. Army discharges.[63] Shortly after Victory over Japan Day in August 1945, Brigadier General Ernest Aaron Bixby, the camp's commanding officer, announced that its huge receiving and separation centers (the U.S. Army's second-largest separation center during World War II) were discharging a daily average of 1,000 U.S. Army troops with sufficient points (85 points or more) or qualifying dependency.[64]

On 12 December 1945, Camp Atterbury discharged 2,971 soldiers, its highest number on a single day up to that date.[65] On 2 August 1946, the last U.S. Army soldier to be processed and discharged at Camp Atterbury was Technical Sergeant Joseph J. "Joe" Stuphar of Poland, Ohio.[66] The induction and separation center officially closed on 2 August 1946; however, about 10,000 military and civilian personnel remained at Camp Atterbury to keep the reception center, military police activities, and Wakeman General Hospital in operation.[66] A total of 537,344 enlisted men and 39,495 officers were discharged from military service at Camp Atterbury's separation center during the war.[63]

Deactivation and closure

The U.S. Army suspended operations at Camp Atterbury at the end of 1946 and the War Department proceeded with plans were to transfer Wakeman's remaining patients to other hospitals.[67] The first public announcement that the induction and separation center at the camp would close was made on 10 May 1946.[68] On 18 September 1946, after the U.S. War Department announced that Wakeman Hospital would be declared surplus by 31 December, Indiana governor Ralph F. Gates reported from his office in Indianapolis that the hospital might be used after the first of the year as a temporary state mental hospital until the construction of the new northern Indiana mental hospital was completed.[69] However, after Camp Atterbury and Wakeman Hospital were deactivated in December 1946, the Indiana National Guard established its headquarters at the site. Camp Atterbury remained on stand-by status until 1950, when it was reactivated as a military training center.[4][70]

Korean War training camp

At the onset of the Korean War, Camp Atterbury was reactivated with the arrival of the 28th Infantry Division on 14 September 1950, in a 450-vehicle convoy. The 28th Division left the camp in November 1951.[71] The 31st Infantry Division also trained at Camp Atterbury.[72][73] When it departed for Camp Carson, Colorado, in 1954, operations were suspended at Camp Atterbury and it was once again deactivated.

Indiana National Guard installation

Camp Atterbury remained dormant until the 1960s. On 31 December 1968, the U.S. Army discontinued its use as a military installation. The Indiana National Guard assumed oversight of the camp in January 1969. From the 1970s through the 1990s, the camp supported the Indiana National Guard and its missions during the Vietnam War, Operation Desert Shield, and the Gulf War's Operation Desert Storm.[4]

Originally encompassing about 40,352 acres (163.30 km2)[74] the military training site has been reduced to approximately 30,000 acres (120 km2). During the 1960s the Indiana Department of Natural Resources leased more than 6,000 acres (24 km2) of land within Camp Atterbury to establish the Atterbury State Fish and Wildlife Area.[75] Other acreage has been leased to the Atterbury Job Corps, the U.S. Department of Labor, the Johnson County, Indiana, Parks Department, and Hoosier Park.

The former military installation also gained importance following the September 11, 2001 attacks, when it served as a National Guard training facility. The Camp Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center (CAJMTC) was activated in February 2003.[76] Since 2003 thousands of regular and reserve forces have trained at the camp prior to their deployment to Afghanistan and Iraq. Camp Atterbury is one of two National Guard bases with this mission; Camp Shelby in Mississippi is the other. Since 2009 Camp Atterbury has also trained thousands of civilians from the Inter-Agency and U.S. Department of Defense in the "DoD Civilian Expeditionary Workforce" program as they prepare to mobilize in support of stability operations in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Kuwait. Naval Air Systems Command sent Dr. Stephen Berrey, its first Acquisition Program Manager-Logistics (APML) civilian employee, to attend the DoD Civilian Expeditionary Workforce training program at Camp Atterbury. Dr. Berrey (Class of 10-08) graduated from the program on 26 August 2010, and immediately deployed to Iraq during Operation Iraqi Freedom.

In July 2005, Camp Atterbury's size was increased an estimated 1,000 acres (4.0 km2) after it obtained the Muscatatuck State Development Center, a former state mental facility. The site includes sixty-eight buildings, an 180-acre (0.73 km2) reservoir, and an "extensive" tunnel system, along with other features. Renamed Muscatatuck Urban Training Center (MUTC), its grounds are used as an urban training facility.[77] Troops and civilian emergency management organizations are conveyed from the Camp Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center to the MUTC via air or ground transportation for training in urban warfare and other operations.[78]

On 3 June 2008, a tornado hit Camp Atterbury, damaging an estimated forty buildings. Two injuries were reported. Despite the estimated multimillion-dollar damage to the camp, training continued for more than 2,000 troops, including a U.S. Marine unit that was at the site during the tornado outbreak.[79] Four days later, the National Guard and U.S. Marines at Camp Atterbury were utilized in response to the June 2008 Midwest floods.

In April 2010 plans were announced to reclaim an estimated 1,200 acres (4.9 km2) of land for construction of Indiana National Guard offices, barracks, and other facilities.[80]

The Civil Air Patrol's National Emergency Services Academy (NESA) is held at Camp Atterbury each summer, as well as the Indiana Wing Encampment, which is held at the Mitch Daniel's Barracks just South of the main base. [81] In addition, Camp Atterbury was chosen as the site for an unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV)-focused National Air and Space Administration Centennial Challenge. Its goal was to develop some key technologies to integrate UAVs into the National Airspace System. The competition was held at the camp on 10–17 September 2014.[82]

Since its initial opening in 1942, Camp Atterbury has continued to embody its motto, Preparamus (We Are Ready), as a site for preparing American troops and civilians for service.[83]

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See also

Bakalar Air Force Base (initially known as Atterbury Army Air Base)

Notes

  1. "About Us: Camp Atterbury History". campatterbury.in.ng.mil. Archived from the original on 8 February 2013. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  2. Dorothy Riker, ed. (1952). The Hoosier Training Ground: A History of Army and Navy Training Centers, Forts, Depots, and Other Military Installations Within the State Boundaries During World War II. Indiana in World War II. III. Bloomington: Indiana War History Commission. p. 7. See also Larry Taulman; Don G. Wertz, eds. (1983). The Atterbury File. Franklin, Indiana: Custer Baker Middle School. p. 59. OCLC 9760205.
  3. Riker, p. 8.
  4. "Atterbury-Muscatatuck" (PDF). Atterbury-Muscatatuck and the Indiana National Guard. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 January 2017. Retrieved 7 March 2017.
  5. The acquired land included about 25,908 acres (104.85 km2) in Bartholomew County, 10,398 acres (42.08 km2) in Johnson County, and 4,045 acres (16.37 km2) in Brown County. The deadline for the last of the area's inhabitants to vacate the land was 1 July 1942. See Riker, pp. 9, 11–13, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 2–3.
  6. Riker, p. 9.
  7. A triangular division is formed around three infantry regiments. See Riker, p. 21.
  8. "Indiana Army Camp Size Again Reduced". Kokomo Tribune: 17, column 3. 12 March 1942.
  9. Wages for construction workers were set at $1.30 per hour. See Riker, pp. 16–18, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 99–101.
  10. Riker, p. 20.
  11. On 5 October 1917, after the United States entered World War I, Atterbury, at that time a Pennsylvania Railroad vice-president, was commissioned as a brigadier general in the U.S. Army. Between August 1917 and May 1919, he supervised the construction of harbor facilities and a portion of the French railways that were assigned to the U.S. Army for maintenance and operation. Atterbury returned to civilian life after the war and served as president of the Pennsylvania Railroad from 1925 to shortly before his death in 1935. See Riker, pp. 20–21, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 92.
  12. "Camp Atterbury: General William Wallace Atterbury". IndianaMilitary.org. Retrieved 28 February 2017. See also: "William Wallace Atterbury" (PDF). Atterbury-Muscatatuck and the Indiana National Guard. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 January 2017. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  13. Riker, pp. 20–21, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 92.
  14. Riker, pp. 14–15, 53–55, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 96.
  15. Riker, pp. 23–24.
  16. Riker, pp. 42–43.
  17. Colonel Wakeman attended Valparaiso University as an undergraduate student prior to his service in the Medical Corp during World War I, and received a medical degree from Indiana University in 1926 before returning to active duty in the U.S. Army Medical Corps. Colonel Wakeman served as Chief of the Training Division, Office of the Surgeon General of the U.S. Army, prior to his death in March 1944. See Riker, pp. 43–44.
  18. Riker, pp. 31–32, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 231–32.
  19. Riker, pp. 42–45.
  20. Riker, p. 45.
  21. Wakeman was one of twelve hospitals in the United States handling these specialized eye cases, and the only one the Fifth Service Command to do so. See Riker, pp. 43, 45.
  22. Riker, pp. 46–47.
  23. Riker, pp. 42, 45–48.
  24. Riker, p. 49.
  25. Riker, p. 33.
  26. Lieutenant Colonel Henry Edward Tisdale was named Camp Atterbury's first executive officer; however, he became the commanding officer at Fort Benjamin Harrison on 1 October 1943, and remained there until 24 September 1945. See "Tisdale Transferred". Kokomo Tribune: 13, column 3. 8 June 1942.
  27. Riker, p. 36, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 116.
  28. Riker, pp. 21, 25.
  29. For a list of military units that arrived and departed from Camp Atterbury from August 1942 to December 1946, see Riker, pp. 68–79.
  30. "Infantry At Atterbury". Kokomo Tribune: 2, columns 5 and 7. 21 July 1942.
  31. The 83rd was among the U.S. troops that landed at Omaha Beach during the invasion of Normandy on 18 June 1944. In addition to France, the division served in Luxembourg and crossed into Germany on 30 March 1945. Deactivated at the end of the war, it was reactivated as a reserve force in 1946. See Riker, pp. 21–25, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 119–20.
  32. "Welcome To Camp Atterbury's Joint Maneuver Training Center" (PDF). Atterbury Attitude. 1. 20 July 2014. Retrieved 7 March 2017.
  33. Riker, pp. 25–26, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 121.
  34. The 30th Division joined other Allied forces at Normandy on 15 June 1944. In addition to France, it served in Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany. See Riker, pp. 26–27, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 122–23.
  35. The 106th Division was on the front lines, crossing into Belgium on 10 December 1944. Spread over a 28-mile (45 km) front, it bore the brunt of the fighting at the Battle of the Bulge, suffering 8,663 casualties (7,001 missing, 416 killed, and 1,246 wounded in action.) The 106th remained in Europe after Germany's surrender to guard German prisoners of war. See Riker, p. 27, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 123–25.
  36. Riker, pp. 28–29.
  37. Riker, p. 69.
  38. Riker, p, 65, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 130–31.
  39. Riker, pp. 29–30.
  40. Riker, pp. 30–31.
  41. "Atterbury To Get WAAC's". Kokomo Tribune: 13, column 3. 8 June 1942.
  42. Riker, p. 31, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 232.
  43. Riker, pp. 49–50.
  44. Riker, p. 52.
  45. Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 159.
  46. The show aired over radio station WISH Indianapolis at 9:15 p.m. Central War Time (C.W.T.). See "Soldiers To Offer Radio Play Thursday". Kokomo Tribune: 10, column 6. 7 October 1942.
  47. Camp Atterbury's internment camp received several inspections and visits from dignitaries during the war, including representatives from neutral countries, the International Red Cross, the Young Men's Christian Association, the U.S. State Department, the U.S. House military affairs committee, and the U.S. president. See Riker, pp. 40–41, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 207. See also: "Camp Atterbury Prisoner of War Compound". Retrieved 22 March 2017.
  48. Dawn Mitchell (1 March 2017). "Experience Life as an Italian POW". Indianapolis Star: 3A.
  49. On 28 February 1944, Francisco Tota became the only Italian prisoner to die at the camp. On 23 June 1946, Paul Witt became the last prisoner to die at Camp Atterbury. For a complete list of prisoners who died at Camp Atterbury, see Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 209.
  50. Riker, pp. 40–41, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 209.
  51. Riker, pp. 36–39, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 193–96, 200.
  52. Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 198.
  53. Prisoners were limited to working a maximum of ten hours per day, including the time it took for round-trip transportation from the camp, and could only be used when no other civilian labor was available. In addition, the prisoners were prohibited from assignments that involved dangerous work. Initially limited to work within a 25-mile (40 km) radius of the camp, the distance restriction was later removed to allow them to work in Decatur County, Indiana, which was farther away from the camp. A prisoner's maximum monthly compensation of $13 was paid in coupons redeemable at the camp canteen. Any earnings exceeding the maximum were held in trust for the prisoner until his release and repatriation. See Riker, pp. 37–39, and Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 200–02.
  54. Riker, p. 39.
  55. The chapel's interior paintings on the back wall, above the raised altar, were a crucifix flanked by cherubs. The interior of the two sidewalls include paintings of the Dove of Peace, the Madonna, and Saint Anthony. An Eye of God was painted on the ceiling. The interior floor was painted red. See: Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 205–06, 226–28, and Ryan Trares (16 February 2017). "Chapel in the Meadow: Learn about Italian POWs at Camp Atterbury". Daily Journal. Retrieved 21 March 2017. See also: Sargent First Class Jeff Lowry (6 March 2017). "Historical Society Brings POW Chapel to Life at Atterbury". Indiana National Guard. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  56. Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 205–06, 226–28. See also: "The Prisoner of War Chapel" (PDF). Indiana National Guard. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 January 2017. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
  57. Trares, "Chapel in the Meadow."
  58. The carving also includes a design of a sword or dagger inserted between the numerals nine and the four in the year 1942. See Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 204.
  59. Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 204.
  60. Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 207.
  61. Riker, pp. 40–41.
  62. Riker, pp. 56–59.
  63. Riker, p. 57.
  64. By 14 October 1945, a record discharge day of 2,574 soldiers, a total of 147,017 officers and enlisted men had been released up to that date. Brigadier General Bixby, who assumed command of Camp Atterbury on 13 June 1945, later reported that the following week the camp's centers were processing up to 2,000 soldiers per day. See "Editors Given 'Discharges' At Atterbury". Kokomo Tribune: 2, column 4. 15 September 1945.
  65. Riker, p. 59.
  66. U.S. Army Technical Sergeant Stuphar received his honorable discharge certificate (military discharge) and Colonel Herbert H. Glidden, the U.S. Army's post commander, shook his hand. Technical Sergeant Stuphar was born on 6 July 1918, in Youngstown, Ohio, and died on 17 May 1980, in Mahoning, Ohio. See "Separation Center Of Atterbury Closed". Kokomo Tribune: 3, column 4. 5 August 1946.
  67. Riker, pp. 49, 68–69.
  68. The expected closing date was 31 July 1946. This was also the first announcement that the two centers (induction and separation) were named as just one center. See "Atterbury Units To Close". Kokomo Tribune: 3, column 3. 10 May 1946.
  69. "State May Acquire Wakeman Hospital". Kokomo Tribune: 22, column 6. 19 September 1946.
  70. Riker, pp. 68–69.
  71. Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 127–28.
  72. Taulman and Wertz, eds., p. 239.
  73. For a list of units that trained, were activated, or were released at Camp Atterbury between 1950 and 1953, see Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 236–40.
  74. Riker, pp. 9, 11–12.
  75. Taulman and Wertz, eds., pp. 255–59.
  76. "Atterbury Muscatatuck". Indiana National Guard.
  77. "Muscatatuck Urban Training Center (MUTC)". VirtualGlobetrotting. 26 February 2007. Retrieved 28 February 2017. See also: "MUTC Overview". Atterbury-Muscatatuck Range. Archived from the original on 4 April 2017. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  78. "What is MUTC". Archived from the original on 22 July 2011.
  79. "Camp Atterbury Heavily Damaged By Tornado". TheINDYchannel/Scripps TV Station Group. 4 June 2008. Archived from the original on 1 April 2017. Retrieved 28 February 2017. See also: "Press Release". Indiana National Guard. Retrieved 7 September 2008.
  80. Phil Bloom (15 April 2010). "Land Exchange Proposal a Benefit to Atterbury Expansion, Sportsmen". Indiana Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved 3 August 2010.
  81. "National Emergency Services Academy". NESA. Civil Air Patrol. See also: 2017 Policies and Procedures Guide (PDF). Edinburgh, Indiana: National Emergency Services Academy. 2016.
  82. In 2015 NASA cancelled the Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Airspace Operations Challenge because of "technical and operational issues" in addition to its high costs. See "Unmanned Aircraft Systems Airspace Operations Challenge (UAS AOC)". National Air and Space Administration. 23 April 2015. Retrieved 28 February 2017. See also: "NASA to Explore UAS Airspace Operations Through a New Robotic Challenge". Defense Update. 20 December 2013. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  83. "Atterbury History". Atterbury-Muscatatuck and the Indiana National Guard. Retrieved 7 March 2016.

References

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