Chapter VIII - WWII
FORT DIX DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR
In the 1930s, the United States
recovered slowly from its major crisis, the Great Depression. The minds of the
nation’s people were preoccupied with earning basic necessities of food,
clothing, shelter. There was no time for more than mild interest in the power
struggles of Europe and Asia.
United States direct involvement in
a second global conflict was far from the thoughts of this vast majority of
American people, even though objectives of Japan’s ruling clique, Germany’s
“Fuehrer” Adolph Hitler and Italy’s “Duce” Benito Mussolini were clearly
evident. Generally in the late ‘30s, the US public was paying little heed to
the world’s systematic dissection by the Axis powers – Japan, Germany and Italy.
Japan’s armies had overrun Manchuria
(1931) and were storming China. Germany had reoccupied the World War I
demilitarized zone of the Rhineland (1936) and annexed Austria and the
Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia (1938). Italy had invaded and annexed the independent
nation of Ethiopia (1935-36).
Two days after Germany invaded
Poland (1 September 1939), France and England declared war on Hitler’s “Third
Reich,” and the Second World War began. In the same month, Russian forces
struck into Poland to insure a share of that country. A year later, with the
war proceeding badly for the Allies, President Roosevelt proclaimed a limited
national emergency -- this country’s first real step in preparing for active
participation in the world struggle. Immediately after the 8 September
proclamation, an effort was made to expand the nation’s military forces. The
Selective Service Act of 1940 was enacted to strengthen the Armed Forces, with
the largest percentage of men to be inducted into the Army.
Fort Dix felt the impact of the
buildup almost immediately. To meet requirements of building the largest Army
in the history of the United States, new military installations had to be
constructed and existing facilities expanded. By the end of 1940, Dix had
become one of the largest posts in the country with a population of 17,929.
The “Battle of Britain” raged in the
skies, and the British Commonwealth stood alone against Germany’s onslaught.
But Germany changed direction and pointed her efforts, along with several other
unlimited national emergency, and all-out efforts were made to build one of the
strongest Armed Forces in the world. Fort Dix came into its own as one of the
busiest Army training centers in the country.
In the next few years, the post
became a primary staging and training area for troops shipping to the war
fronts of North Africa and Europe. Army Air Corps units and men used the
installation as a stopover before proceeding overseas. In addition, the huge
military post was used as the air base in defense of Atlantic shipping and the
North American continent itself. Fort Dix bustled with military buildup
activity in preparation for the big push across North Africa, up the Italian
Boot, and the invasion of “Fortress Europe.”
The land and facilities at Dix,
however, were inadequate to handle the volume of men and materials necessary
for the post to accomplish maximum results desired by the Army. Already the
largest Army installation in the Northeast, more land had to be acquired and a
great number of buildings constructed. America’s effort in the crash program at
Fort Dix was completed just in time but not without a great deal of difficulty.
The acquisition of land was one of
the most difficult undertakings of the expansion program at Fort Dix. Beginning
in October 1940, the Post Judge Advocate’s Office held repeated conferences
with farmers and their representatives to negotiate amicable acquisition by
purchase, lease, or trespass rights of thousands of acres needed for airfields,
maneuvers, range work and training facilities.
Condemnation proceedings were
instituted, and approximately 16,000 acres acquired in November 1940. There
was, however, considerable dissention among the farm owners affected. This was
particularly true of occupants of the Pinewoods, an area to be used as an
artillery impact zone. The Pinewoods people had been firmly rooted to the area
for many years and required considerable persuasion before they would vacate
their land.
Meanwhile, expansion activity
brought Fort Dix into the limelight of national news. Because of this, the War
Department invited newsmen from the eastern United States to the post for
briefings and inspection of facilities and equipment. This was done to help
newsmen interpret the needs and actions of the Army at one of its most important
camps. To give them an idea of the size and importance of the camp, the newsmen
were permitted to tour the entire post, which at the time covered approximately
25,000 acres. During their stay they inspected the Garand semi-automatic rifle,
latest models of military vehicles, 155mm artillery pieces, antiaircraft
weapons, and a host of other up-to-date items of war equipment.
By March 1941 federal expansion of
Fort Dix resulted in an increase of nearly five million dollars in tax-exempt
real estate property. The more valuable properties were located mainly on
acquired land in New Hanover Township, site of many buildings. After repeated
conferences with these and other property owners, the government acquired
17,000 acres of local land needed for infantry maneuvers. Tresspass rights were
negotiated for an additional 70,000 acres. This tract encompasses the
reservation extending south to the Lakehurst Road between Pemberton and Browns
Mills and north to New Egypt, Jacobstown, Georgetown and Jobstown.
In addition, 2,500 acres bordering
the water pipeline from Fort Dix to New Lisbon were condemned. Including in
this acreage was the Clifford Borden farm on the Wrightstown-Jobstown Road and
129 properties in Pemberton and New Hanover townships. The Borden Farm was
selected to be the site of a million-dollar hospital, later known as Tilton
General Hospital. Approximately $200,000 was allotted to the War Department to
purchase the properties, which included 71 houses.
The condemned property boundary
extended from the Burlington County Farms eastward along the Browns
Mills-Pemberton Road to Browns Mills. Included was everything north of the road
except for one Lyman’s Hornor’s house. A large number of bungalows in Sherwood
Forest also were included. The boundary cut cross country from Anderson’s
gravel pit on the outskirts of Browns Mills to the Deborah Sanitorium woods. It
continued along the Trenton Road and included Billingham’s garage and the Lake
Tresing Housing development.
From the outskirts of Pointville,
the line followed an irregular course to Lemmontown, continued westward to a
farm occupied by a Mr. Baker, then southward to the Burlington County
Institution Farm at New Lisbon.
On 14 August 1941, the United States
Government formally took possession of 285 acres of land, which was part of the
Burlington County Institution Farm. The land was sold by the Burlington County
Board of Freeholders to the federal government for Fort Dix expansion at the
offered price of $5,700. Most of the land constituted low woodland not used by
the county farm system.
One of the seemingly impossible
tasks in connection with the acquisition of land was determining individual
owners of respective tracts. There were few maps or surveys to use as a guide.
In order to obtain some idea of where the boundary might be, aerial photography
was necessary.
The photographs this provided title examiners with a practical means of checking description of the land as written in public records against lanes, paths, water courses and other physical boundaries. Many titles to the land were based on possession by members of a family for generations -- a possession often originated without deed but in the form of squatters rights. In order to trace the authenticity of titles to these properties, family histories also were also examined, for many titles had to be traced back to original proprietary grants.
The photographs this provided title examiners with a practical means of checking description of the land as written in public records against lanes, paths, water courses and other physical boundaries. Many titles to the land were based on possession by members of a family for generations -- a possession often originated without deed but in the form of squatters rights. In order to trace the authenticity of titles to these properties, family histories also were also examined, for many titles had to be traced back to original proprietary grants.
In one of these searches, an
interesting fact was uncovered. Near the boundary of the Fort Dix reservation
(now the Fort Dix-McGuire Air Force Base military complex) ran the
Quintipartite Line, which formed the division between East Jersey and West
Jersey. Under the deed, the eastern half of the New Jersey Colony was conveyed
to Sir George Carteret and the western half to William Penn, Gamen Lawrie, Nicholas
Lucas and Edward Byllinge. Some of the sheepskin deeds, which proved transfers
from these original owners, were still in existence and examined by title
searchers early in 1941.
The record of titles to the land now
comprising Fort Dix and McGuire Air Force Base as itself a history of the law
and legend of New Jersey. Titles to more than 1,000 separate land ownerships
were painstakingly examined. Each was an interesting story of the changing
times and progressive development of the state. All of this research had to be
accomplished within a year, the time set by the government for completion of
the title searching. Size of the project to analyze and abstract title
documents for this vast area of 25 square miles can be better understood by
considering that almost 4,000 recorded documents existed in a single
development. Each was examined.
Fort Dix expansion faced other
problems. For instance, extension of the reservation included the site of the
famous Hanover Bog Ore Iron Furnace that had manufactured cannon balls during
colonial days. Burlington County Historical Society induced Army officials to
set aside, as a marked enclosure, the small area that still retained visible
reminders of an almost forgotten spot.
While land acquisition took place,
the 44th Division, made up of New Jersey national guardsmen, was inducted
into federal service on 16 September 1940 by executive order of President
Roosevelt. Immediately, organizations and individuals of this unit began to
move to Fort Dix. At first only small detachments arrived, while company
commanders, first sergeants, supply sergeants and men of all grades labored
vigorously at their home stations to make the transition from state to federal
service and to prepare for the move to the post.
As each unit completed preparations,
it was released by its federal instructor. Orders were received, and the units
were sent by truck and train to their new home, Fort Dix. First to arrive were
the 104th Engineers, the 119th Quartermaster Regiment and batteries
of the 157th Field Artillery. These units were in camps by 18 September,
two days after being activated.
During the next few days other units
of the division, and some from out of the state to be attached to the division,
rolled in, from as near as Mount Holly and others as far as Niagara Falls. By
25 September, all were here – 11,000 strong. Construction of buildings in the
area to be occupied by the 44th Division began about 1 September, but the
troops were assembled at Dix before the barracks and other facilities were
completed. A tent city was erected to serve as living quarters.
Meanwhile, new volunteers began
arriving daily. Men were enlisted for one year’s service with the division
under a War Department ruling that permitted the unit to sign men on. The
division’s recruitment station was set up at the Wrightstown entrance to the
post. As new men came, they were temporarily housed in a special segregated
area for the customary two weeks of quarantine. On 10 October, troops of the
division had their first pay day since induction.
Then came the draft, and on 29
November the first bewildered selectees arrived on post to become members of
the 44th Division, a unit already considering itself a veteran
organization. By 4 December, more than 1,400 selectees were received by the
unit. The men joined regiments and after two weeks of quarantine began 13 weeks
of basic training. By February 1941 the division had “adopted” 6, 115
selectees, or 36 percent of its total strength. The men were drawn from New
York, New Jersey and Delaware.
At its peak the division totaled 754
officers, seven warrant officers and 17,762 enlisted men. This figure was
gradually whittled away by discharges, but the division was able to maintain an
overall strength of about 16,500. When it was transferred from the post in
December 1941, its strength was more than 16,000.
Considerable food and supplies were
needed by the men at Fort Dix. In early 1941 it was estimated that 60 tons of
food were required to feed the men on post each day. It was also reported that
13,000 pairs of footgear were issued to arriving soldiers each month. In a
month’s time, 12,000 replacements of other garments were made to equip the
modern soldier. Gasoline consumption was another item that ran into
astronomical figures. In April 1941, 44th Division trucks consumed 160,000
gallons of gasoline, and this figure was expected to double considering more
than 5,000 vehicles were to be added later in the year.
On 20 April 1941, the division’s
training was interrupted when one of the worst fires to hit the area broke out,
destroying hundreds of acres of woodland and parts of several towns and
villages. In an area between Lakewood and Medford, the blaze came perilously
close to the sprawling Army post. Some 10,000 men of the division teams up with
civilian fire fighters and national guardsmen to battle the inferno, which
lasted several days.
Army trucks carried food to weary
fire fighters, and temporary kitchens were set up to supply coffee and
sandwiches. The infantrymen worked in shifts and were “on call” constantly,
while alternate shifts remained at their barracks ready to be transported
anywhere needed. After days of fire fighting, the flames were checked, and the
reservation untouched.
The job of physically preparing the
post was ably performed by Major David R. Wolverton, post quartermaster. It was
completed with speed and efficiency, and in a relatively short time, the fort
was ready for the men inducted into service and assigned for training. Six
million dollars were appropriated for the development of the post in 1940.
With the construction contract
awarded to the George A. Fuller Company, approximately 850 buildings were
erected in the area to accommodate troops of the 44th Division.
Other items included in the contract
were construction of two theaters, miscellaneous signal barracks, roads,
drains, waterlines and electrical distribution system. Additional funds were
appropriated for building a new station hospital. The hospital contract was
awarded to LaFountain, Christenson and Arace of Hackensack, New Jersey.
Improvements costing more than a
million dollars were made to the water and sewerage facilities. The daily
capacity of the water plant was increased from 2,000,000 to 4,000,000 gallons.
These improvements consisted of enlarging the filtration plant, constructing an
additional water tower, installing additional pumps at the New Lisbon station
and doubling the size of the sewerage plant.
The gigantic task of land
acquisition was perhaps equaled by the extensive construction projects on the
post since the beginning of 1940. A recapitulation of buildings erected in the
short period of two years presents and astounding picture. In all, more than
1,600 buildings were completed in this time. Included were 531 barracks, 173
day rooms, 178 dining halls, 172 buildings for company administration and
storage, 35 recreation buildings, 41 administration buildings, 13 chapels, 14
infirmaries, 23 hospital barracks, 18 hospital quarters, 26 motor repair shops,
28 warehouses, 10 fire stations, 12 gasoline stations, six theaters and two
morgues. The Fort Dix Station Hospital also was built in 1940 and consisted of
a 1,000-bed cantonment-type structure of 80 buildings.
Within a year, another medical
facility, Tilton General Hospital, was built on Florida Avenue. The completion
of this hospital in July 1941 was the prototype of the Army’s World War II
hospital building program throughout the country. Tilton construction was
rushed by three shifts working day and night throughout the unusually server
winter of 1940-41. The original construction schedule of 60 days could not be
met because of heavy snowfalls and severe storms. Except for grading and
surfacing, construction was completed in 87 days.
The original plan called for 79
buildings, including wards, mess buildings, warehouses and quarters. Nine
additional buildings were added later that year. Finally, because of the
ever-increasing war load, many more structures were needed, and by 1944, the
main hospital comprised 178 buildings.
Tilton General Hospital, named in
honor of James Tilton, surgeon general of the US Army from 1813 to 1815, was
built to care for individuals in the II Army Corps Area requiring definite
treatment or prolonged hospitalization. This was done on the basis of bed
allotments to some 14 separate camps, posts and stations, including the New
York Port of Embarkation. The first year’s peak load was attained on 29
December 1941 when 559 patients were being treated.
The organization of Tilton General
Hospital began when orders were published assigning Colonel S. Jay Turnbill to
duty at Fort Dix in January 1941. However, it was not until March that Colonel
Turnbill was ordered to take command of the unfinished hospital. A few days
later, other officers reported for duty, and on 25 March 1941, the first
contingent of 75 enlisted medical specialists arrived from the Army Medical
Center, Washington D.C. The enlisted medical detachment for Tilton was
activated on 29 March and authorized a strength of 250.
Prior to 2 April 1941, Tilton
officers were quartered at the Fort Dix Station Hospital, pending completion of
the general hospital. During the next several months, additional officers and
nurses arrived, and sufficient personnel were available during the early years
of World War II to meet all problems as they developed. Medical Department
officers were originally assigned to Tilton by the Surgeon General’s Office,
but Second Service Command headquarters took over personnel assignments in
mid-1942.
Officers were selected on the basis
of professional qualifications, and each specialized position for the original
staff was properly filled. During 1941, no significant losses of the hospital’s
Medical Corps officer personnel occurred, primarily because the staff increased
during the period to bring it to an authorized strength of 75.
The first nurses assigned to Tilton
arrived in the spring of 1941 from Pine Camp (Now Camp Drum), New York. They
supervised setting up wards and equipment in anticipation of the arrival of
patients. The first civilians were authorized and assigned as early as March
1941 - - prior to arrival of the enlisted cadre. The civilians included
professional as well as non-professional workers, who occupied clerical,
administrative, fiscal and unskilled labor positions. The peak number of
civilians at the hospital before the 1944 consolidation of Tilton and the Fort
Dix Station Hospital was 323. After consolidation, the number increased rapidly
to an August 1945 peak of 1,030.
During 1942 and 1943, it
periodically became necessary to obtain replacements for transferred Medical
Corps officer personnel. During these years, many Fort Dix doctors were sent to
overseas assignments. Personnel assignments were made from Second Service
Command Headquarters, and replacements for Medical Corps officers loses were
adequate. At that time, the turnover was not excessive, and specialized
assignments were well covered. However, in 1944 and 1945, personnel loses
caused by overseas commitments and separations increased appreciably, resulting
in the inability to meet replacement needs. These difficulties were felt,
especially in the highly specialized fields.
The first overseas casualties,
survivors of the Philippine Defense Campaign, were admitted to Tilton in March
1942, chiefly because of the surgeon general’s policy of sending general
hospital cases to installations near their homes.
In late 1944, Tilton General
Hospital was assigned the services of between 225 and 300 German
prisoner-of-war workers. They were selected for hospital work on the basis of
previous civilian and military training, and to some extent, the POWs
compensated for existing personnel shortages. The scope of the activities in
which POWs took part were commensurate with their backgrounds and training.
While a number performed menial tasks at the hospital, others with specialized
skills and training were assigned to duties in the laboratory, x-ray room,
utilities section and orthopedic brace shop. A small number, who had medical
training, were assigned to two German POW wards, which served the sick and
wounded prisoners on post.
On 7 July 1944, Tilton absorbed the
Fort Dix Medical Station Hospital, which was then named Tilton Annex. This
resulted in the added responsibility of Tilton to function as a station
hospital. The combined facilities had a normal capacity of 3,000, with an
emergency expansion capability of 5,500.
At the height of activity during the
war, 195 of the hospital’s 215 acres were used for buildings and tents. Tilton
General Hospital was situated in the northwest quarter of the reservation, just
west of the old remount area, and Tilton Annex was just inside the main
entrance to Fort Dix from Wrightstown. This amalgamation of facilities came
none too soon, for in December 1944 with an end of hostilities in sight, it became
apparent that a large number of patients who then were hospitalized in the
European Theater of Operations would be transferred to Dix.
In fact, in early 1945 an emergency
expansion to 4,100 beds was authorized to accommodate the increasing number of
patients from overseas. Services were further expanded to receive and care for
patients air evacuated from the war zones of Europe and Africa. Another
contributing factor was the increased availability of shipping facilities from
overseas areas.
The expansion of facilities was
accomplished by converting all available buildings into wards. Converted
buildings included enlisted men’s barracks and such miscellaneous buildings as
clinics and dispensaries that could be readily converted to 50-bed wards. By
the middle of 1945, 4,448 beds were made available for patients.
At the Fort Dix Army Air Field,
later to become McGuire Air Force Base, workmen had been employed on a $300,000
project to apply concrete surface to the three long runways.
These were soon to be used by the 119th and 126th Observation Squadrons, National Guard units inducted into federal service in 1941.
These were soon to be used by the 119th and 126th Observation Squadrons, National Guard units inducted into federal service in 1941.
In addition to the expansion of
flight facilities, many other improvements were made and temporary buildings
constructed.
The field, under control of the Army
Ground Forces at the time, was turned over to the Army Air Corps in 1942. Under
jurisdiction of the 1st Air Force, the airfield was used in antisubmarine
patrol operations. It afforded protection against German U-boats, not only for
American ships and coastal points but for allied shipping as well.
Later in 1942 the Air Services
Command, located at the Middletown Air Depot in Pennsylvania, and the Atlantic
Overseas Air Services Command used the field. In 1944, the Fort Dix Army Air
Field was used by the Air Transport Command as the eastern terminal of the
Ferry Command. The airfield was one of the few that could base B-29s, the
Army’s heaviest bomber at the time.
Late in the war many such planes
left Fort Dix for service overseas. Toward the end of the war, casualties were
returned from Europe for hospitalization in this country by way of the Fort Dix
airfield. In 1945, control of the airfield was returned to Fort Dix until the
creation in 1947 of the third branch of service - - the United States Air
Force.
The effect of post expansion and
construction on neighboring townships in 1941 was reminiscent of World War I
days. Early announcement that more than 20,000 soldiers would be trained at
Fort Dix created a real estate boom in the surrounding towns of Pemberton,
Wrightstown, Browns Mills, New Egypt, Jobstown and Cookstown, where housing
shortages already existed. Rents jumped, sometimes as much as two-fold, and the
necessity for low-cost housing projects to satisfy the requirements of officers
and noncommissioned officers was immediately apparent.
Hanover Homes, located on the
Jobstown-Wrightstown Road, was a result of this need. The project was
constructed by the Federal Works Agency at a cost of 4350,000. It was named in
honor of the historic Hanover Bog Ore Iron Furnace. Dedication ceremonies were
held on 4 July 1941. It was one of 30 housing projects throughout the country
dedicated at the same time.
Fort Dix expansion affected the
neighboring communities in still another way. For many years, residents of
Burlington County enjoyed driving leisurely along the highways and secondary
roads in this part of New Jersey. However, Fort Dix had become heavily
populated and a virtual beehive of activity. Traffic on the highways leading to
the post doubled and tripled. Traffic accidents increased as a result.
Officials at Fort Dix were asked, along with state police and other enforcement
agencies, to concentrate their efforts and facilities to eliminate rural
highway slaughter. It was obvious that old roads had to be improved and new
roads constructed.
In April 1941, such a task was
begun, but conflicting applications to the Works Progress Administration (WPA)
for a project to provide 47 miles of new highways on access roads to Fort Dix
resulted in a delay. The reason given was that two conflicting project
proposals were sent to the Washington WPA office. The first project, seeking
release of funds to provide access roads to Fort Dix, estimated the cost of
repairing the 47 miles at $200,000. However, that figure was too low for the
long mileage of reconstruction needed. The type of paving to be laid would
raise the coast to $800,000. The second project was submitted with the $800,000
estimate. The delay, caused by that mixup, was straightened out in a short
time.
On 9 August 1941, the road project
began. Nine country roads were reconstructed to provide better access to the
Army post. Finally, the estimated cost of $800,000 was confirmed.
First of the nine-road-improvement
program was the Pemberton-Fort Dix Road. A short while later, construction
began on the military highway from Fountain Green at Fort Dix to Route 39 at
Mansfield Square, via Georgetown.
The expansion of Fort Dix in 1942
caused another dire need for access roads to handle increased traffic in the
immediate area of the installation. Existing roads were not adequate to handle
civilian traffic, much less heavy military vehicles and other war machines.
Cooperating with the Army in the war
program, State Highway Commissioner Spencer Miller, Jr., approved the alignment
of an access road to Fort Dix through Burlington Country in May 1942. The
concrete thoroughfare was 10 miles in length and left route 39 at Mansfield
Square, two miles south of the Bordentown to Georgetown Road intersection. It
followed the Mansfield-Georgetown Road to Georgetown at Hutchinson’s Corner.
From that point it was carried over a new right-of-way to a traffic circle on
the Pemberton-Wrightstown Road at Fountain Green, near the residence of the
fort’s commanding general.
During the week of 12 July 1942,
additional steps were taken to relieve traffic conditions in the Fort Dix area
when the New Jersey State Highway Department announced that a
three-and-a-half-mile section of dual highway between Mansfiled and Georgetown
would be built. The federal government was to pay for the work. Meanwhile,
following United States Public Roads Administration approval, Route 39 from
Bordentown to Mansfield Square was widened, and four and a half miles of road
from Georgetown to the Pemberton-Wrightstown Road, skirting Fort Dix, was
constructed.
As roads to Fort Dix were being
planned and constructed, the town of Pointville passed out of existence during
the week of 31 August 1942. The United States Army moved in to take over New
Hanover village, which for months had been surrounded by the constantly
expanding Fort Dix reservation.
Monday, 31 August, was the last day
for civilian business there. Efforts by the residents and by township officials
to change the Army’s intentions had proven fruitless the week before.
As Pointville was drafted for military
service, two old landmarks passed from the scene. One was the Pointville
Methodist Church, which had been built in 1848, and the other was old Tom
Harvey’s hotel.
A number of Army and Navy uniform
and equipment stores also closed their doors. However, they weren’t “old
timers,” having opened for business since Fort Dix expansion began in 1940. As
Fort Dix gained more land, Burlington County lost some settled areas, and the
townspeople had to find a different way of life.
The expansion of Fort Dix in the
early 1940s affected the area’s telephone services. The increased training
program resulted in heavier phone traffic through the Mount Holly office.
District Manager Paul A. Coffee and his business office staff moved out of the
Main Street building and into a larger facility in the Robert Peacock building
at 105 High Street. Coffee stated, “Since designation of Fort Dix as a major
Army training station, telephone traffic through the Mount Holly exchange has
grown steadily. Nearly 9,000 calls on the exchange are made each weekday,
compared with less than 5,800 a day in the first week of September 1940. About
2,000 calls a day are toll calls. More than 1,200 of the daily toll calls are
made from Fort Dix coin telephones.” 1 (Mount Holly Herald, vol. cxvi, no. 50
1941.1.)
Also, with the expansion of Fort Dix
in 1940, Burlington County officials prepared themselves for a crime wave. It
was no secret that law enforcement authorities expected a great increase of
crime from the Army post. Advocates of enlarging the Burlington County Prison
in Mount Holly, built in 1810, used this theory as one of their most forceful
arguments. Until the beginning of the war in December 1941, the crime wave had
not materialized, and, considering the area’s great influx of civilian and
military personnel, increased crime was nominal.
Until 29 January 1942, civilian
authorities had jurisdiction in criminal cases occurring within the boundaries
of Fort Dix. After that date all criminal acts on the installation were handled
by military or federal authorities. Burlington County authorities were no
longer asked to assume the responsibility. The most frequent complaint
regarding soldiers during those days was auto theft. Many persons, both
civilian and military, felt that such thefts were due mainly to the
carelessness of the car owners. In almost all cases, keys were left in
ignitions after vehicles were parked. The few soldiers who did steal cars were
punished, and the reputation of Fort Dix suffered little.
Meanwhile, the huge job of classifying
selectees was placed into the hands of the 1229th Service Command Unit, later
renamed the 1262nd Reception Center.
Each man entering the center was
given an intelligence test and interviewed by enlisted men specially trained
for the job. The marking of papers was completed by machine, a report was made
by the interviewer, and all results of the examination were fully cataloged.
The method employed at the post was used as a model for other reception centers
throughout the country.
The Reception Center itself was
divided into battalions and a number of companies. In addition to the problem
of adjusting the newly inducted men to the change from civilian routine, the
center had the tremendous job of satisfying appetites of men who were
accustomed to a variety of foods. To accommodate the inductees, there were 11
mess halls, three of which had a capacity of 1,000 men each. Often they fed
more than this capacity.
In 1941, it was not unusual for any
one of the mess halls to serve more than 100,000 meals per month. All of the
center’s cooking and baking was done by permanently assigned enlisted
personnel. The mess staff consisted of approximately 200 soldiers, including
officers, cooks, warehousemen and other permanent party enlisted men.
In addition to regular mess
facilities, the center also was responsible for feeding selectees who were
shipped from the Reception Center to training centers throughout the country.
Kitchen cars were attached to each train when the distance involved more than
24 hours of travel. Sometimes the cars would serve as many as 14 different
meals en route.
Good food is but one factor in
maintaining the health and morals of troops. Equally important is the
furnishing of entertainment and recreation, and these needs received
considerably more attention during World War II than during the days of World
War I. A unique branch to handle this function was created, and the Army’s
Special Services became most important in providing for the welfare and morale
of the troops.
The Special Services branch at Fort
Dix coordinated the functions of government agencies with those of the United
States Service Organization (USO), the Red Cross, and other welfare
organizations. Under Special Service’s supervision, project after project was
initiated and completed.
The list of visiting personalities
brought to Dix by Special Services and the cooperating agencies contains
outstanding people of the theatrical, musical and athletic world. Mischa Elman,
Yehudi Menuhin, Albert Spalding, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lhevinne, Leopold
Stokowski, Ossy Renardy,
Dorothy Kirsten and Nelson Eddy are but a few who gave
their time and talent to entertain troops of the post. To these are added
Robert Woods, Igor Gorin, Lucy Monroe, Lucille Manners, Conrad Thibault, and
Kay Kaiser and Vaughn Monroe with their orchestras. There were hundreds more.
In Mount Holly, plans for a
soldiers’ retreat, where men of the fort could gather for relaxation and
amusement, were discussed by ex-servicemen and clergymen in January 1941. Such
a place existed during World War I when a building on the southwest corner of
White and Washington Streets was made available as a local headquarters for
visiting soldiers. The VFW post headquarters on Main Street was selected for
this purpose and made available throughout World War II.
During the week of 22 August 1941,
construction of three community buildings in the Fort Dix vicinity was approved
by President Roosevelt as part of the Defense Public Works Program. The program
was to provide facilities or services necessary for the health, safety and
welfare of servicemen. The three buildings, costing the government $82,195
each, were operated by the USO.
By 1942, facilities on the post for
entertainment functions and activities were numerous and varied. Plans were
well under way to construct a large indoor Sports Arena. During the latter part
of January 1942 the mammoth building was completed at a cost of $86,000. On 7
March, the Sports Arena, located on the parade grounds, officially opened with
an exhibition tennis match featuring Helen Jacobs, former women’s singles
champion. The arena is 217 feet by 131 feet with a n 8,000-square-foot sports
floor - - large enough to accommodate three athletic games, such as basketball,
simultaneously. Regimental and battalion dances often were held within its
walls. Sergeant Joe Louis, world’s heavyweight boxing champion, used the arena
for exhibition and training in preparation for his fight with Abe Simon.
Other athletic facilities operated
by Special Services included a nine-hole golf course, seven tennis courts and
several softball and baseball fields, for which the necessary equipment was
supplied to commissioned and enlisted personnel alike. Organized unit
intramural sports of all kinds took place on Special Services facilities.
Softball and basketball were perhaps the most popular.
There was a swimming pool on post
for wives and children of the men stationed at Dix. In addition, complete
swimming facilities were made available at Soldier’s Island in nearby Browns
Mills and Hanover Lake in Fort Dix Park.
Four service clubs, four cafeterias
and four libraries also came under Special Services supervision. Two open air
theaters with unlimited seating were sites for entertainment during the summer
months. Special Services also operated a guesthouse for relatives of the
enlisted men. However, the facility, which charges 75 cents per person for
overnight accommodation, was later closed because of its location within
staging areas of task forces.
To accommodate the growing influx of
personnel, a gymnasium and an outdoor swimming pool were under construction in
June 1945. Both of these structures were built on Tilton Annex area. To aid the
off-duty leisure of post enlisted personnel further, a swimming pool located
just west of the Sports Arena was reopened. This pool was built in 1918, but
had fallen into disuse in the Twenties. At one time it had been used as a wash
well for tanks and other heavy vehicles.
Shortly after the infamous Japanese
bombing of Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, the 44thInfantry Division left the
post for extensive combat training. It remained in the country at various camps
for three more years before shipping overseas. In September 1944, the division
embarked for the European Theater of Operations.
Its first major assignment with the
Seventh US Army was to secure passes in the Vosges Mountains. After
accomplishing this and nullifying a German counteroffensive, the unit worked
with the French 2nd Armored Division and advanced through Alsace-Lorraine,
taking Laintrey, Avricourt and Sarrebourg. Elements of the division reached the
Rhine River at Strasbourg.
Halting a savage German panzer
attempt to retake Sarrebourg, the 2nd Battalion, 114thInfantry,
44th Division, was credited with saving the division from annihilation and
checking a possible major Seventh Army defeat. By December the division reached
the Maginot Line. In March 1943 the unit was relieved from its position. In the
succeeding months, the division rolled deep into Fortress Europe, capturing
Mannheim and slashing into Austrian Tyrol. VE-Day found the unit established at
Imst, Austria. On that day elements of the 44th made contact with the
Fifth US Army, which had fought north from Italy.
On 1 January 1942, the
34th “Red Bull” Division, activated National Guard unit made up of men
from Iowa, Minnesota and the Dakotas, had arrived at Fort Dix from Camp
Glaiborne, Louisiana. After completing staging procedures, the division
departed for overseas in three increments. These first troops from Fort Dix to
arrive in Europe since World War I went to northern Ireland in February 1942.
By then of May the entire division was in Ireland. The unit eventually entered
combat in north Africa late in 1942. From there it landed at Salerno and for
the next 500 days took part in the liberation of Italy. At the war’s end the
division was in north Italy. It returned to the United States on 3 November
1945 and was inactivated a week later.
A short time after the departure of
the 34th Division from Fort dix in early 1942, other units streamed
through the post in rapid succession. The 1st Armored Division, a Regular
Army unit nicknamed “Old Ironsides,” arrived from Fort Knox, Kentucky, on 10
April 1942 for traditional training.
Activated on 15 July 1940, the division
already had completed considerable training at Knox. In addition, the unit
participated with the Second US Army in maneuvers throughout Louisiana and the
Carolinas. Upon arrival at Dix, the division underwent additional training and
in May 1942 departed for Ireland. The division saw action in north Africa,
where it joined with the 34th Infantry Division and later the British
Eighth Army. After a short second stay in Ireland in 1943, the division went to
French Morocco where it reorganized before participating in the Italian
campaign. After the war, the unit traveled to Germany where it was assigned to
occupation duty. It remained there until April 1946 when it returned to Camp
Kilmer, New Jersey, for inactivation.
Shortly after departure of the
1st Armored Division and during the staging of the 8thComposite Air Force
at Fort Dix, the 2nd Armored Division rolled into the post. Activated on
15 July 1940, this Regular Army unit, nicknamed “Hell on Wheels,” received its
initial training at Fort Benning,
Georgia, and held maneuvers in Tennessee,
Louisiana and the Carolinas. In late 1941 the division participated in special
amphibious training off the east coast of the United States and then reported
to Camp Hood, Texas, for additional training. On 27 October 1942, the division’s
Combat Command “B” departed Fort Dix for North Africa. The command was later
joined by the remainder of the division in December. After taking part in the
assault of Casablanca and prior to the invasion of Sicily, the division
underwent intensive amphibious training in north Africa. Later, after activity
in Sicily, the unit shipped to England and prepared for the invasion of
Normandy. Fighting through Normandy, northern France, the Rhineland, Ardennes
and central Europe, it fulfilled a three-year-old pledge in July 1945 when it
became the first American division to enter Berlin. In early 1946, the division
returned to Camp Hood for retraining.
Also active in north African battles
was the 756th Tank Battalion, which had been assigned to Dix on 28 November
1942, processed overseas in February 1943, and joined the famed
3rd “Marine” Infantry Division during the African campaign. Later in
Germany, the battalion distinguished itself on two occasions while still a part
of the 3rd Infantry Division. In these actions, the tank units swept
through the Vosges Mountains in August 1944 and cleared the Colmar Pocket from
23 January to 18 February 1945.
Many miscellaneous groups passed
through Fort Dix in 1942. Among them were the 22nd Quartermaster Regiment,
551st Signal Air Warning Battalion, 382nd, 384th and
389th Quartermaster Battalions, 177th and 827th Engineer
Battalions, 397th and 398th Quartermaster Port Battalions,
90th Quartermaster Railhead Company and 187th Quartermaster Depot.
The Post Naturalization Office,
established in 1942 as an adjunct of the Post Judge Advocate’s Office, played
an important part during World War II. Approximately 5,000 recruits became
citizens in its first year of operation. During 1942 and 1943, an average of
400 persons per month were naturalized. Most of them were natives of European
countries who later fought with other American troops overseas and again
returned to the US.
The 4th Mechanized Division,
another regular Army unit, arrived at Fort Dix in April 1943. Activated on
1st June 1940, at Fort Benning, Georgia, the division moved to Dix. While
at the New Jersey post, the unit was redesignated the 4thInfantry Division. The
“Ivy” (IV) Division left Dix in September for amphibious training at Camp
Gordon Johnson, Florida. In December the unit moved to Fort Jackson, South
Carolina, and then was ordered to England for further amphibious training. This
intensive waterborne training proved invaluable, for on 6 June 1944, elements
of the division became the first allied units to hit the beaches at Normandy.
From there, the Ivymen fought through Normandy, northern France, Rhineland, the
Ardennes and central Europe. By war’s end, the division had suffered 21,550
casualties. Shortly after VE-Day, the 4th began returning to the US for
retraining. However, before the division could be redeployed to the Pacific,
VJ-Day was announced, and on 5 March 1946, the unit was inactivated at Camp
Butner, North Carolina.
In the spring of 1943, the
80th Division, an Organized Reserve unit made up of men from the Blue
Ridge states of Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Virginia, arrived at Fort Dix.
A serious transit strike in Philadelphia, which affected the military war
effort by hampering the transport of men and materials, occurred during the
stay of the 80th. With the authority of the President and orders from the War
Department, a regiment of the division was dispatched to that city to
participate in the handling of the strike-bound transportation.
Activated on 15 July 1942, the
division had trained at Camp Forest, Tennessee. Upon completion of its
organization and training, the 80th was shipped to Fort Dix where it
stayed until July 1943.
From there it was sent back to
Tennessee to participate in maneuvers and then to Camp Phillips, Kansas. After
participating in a number of maneuvers in California and Arizona, the Blue
Ridgers were sent to France where they entered combat on 8 August 1944. After
239 days of combat, fighting their way through northern France, Rhineland, the
Ardennes Forest and central Europe, the division returned to the United States.
On 5 January 1946, the Blue Ridge Division was inactivated at Camp Kilmer, New
Jersey.
Meanwhile, in September 1943, many
smaller specialized unites were staging in preparation for overseas shipment.
Among them were the 741st Tank Battalion, 245th Quartermaster Battalion,
44th and 106th Evacuation Hospitals, 818th Tank Destroyer
Battalion, 719th Military Police Battalion and 11th Combat Engineer
Battalion.
Soon after the departure of these
units in October, the 85th Infantry Division, another Organized Reserve
unit, arrived at Fort Dix for staging. During its stay at the post, several
smaller units also were staged, including the 2nd and 5th Ranger
Battalions, 211th Field Artillery Battalion and the 537th Antiaircraft
Artillery Battalion.
The 85th, nicknamed the “Custer
Division,” remained at Dix until December 1943, when it was sent to Hampton
Roads, Virginia for overseas shipment. The division had received its nickname
from activities in August 1917 at Camp Custer, Michigan. The unit adopted the
name of its post and at the same time honored the famous General George A.
Custer, who was killed during the great Sioux War.
Debarking overseas, the
85th Division went to north Africa for amphibious training and then to
Italy. Entering combat in March 1944, it fought in the Rome-Arno, northern
Apennines and Po Valley battles. In August 1945, the division returned to
Hampton Roads where it was inactivated.
Shortly after the departure of the
85th Division from Fort Dix, the 90th Infantry Division, an Organized
Reserve unit made up of men from Texas and Oklahoma, arrived at Dix. After its
activation on 25 March 1942, the men of the division, nicknamed “Tough
‘Ombres,” trained at Camp Barkley, Texas. Later they moved about the country
participating in various maneuvers. Exactly two years to the day after
activation, the division departed Dix for England where it underwent two months
of amphibious assault training. In June, elements of the division took part in
the landing at Normandy, and by the 10th of the month, the entire unit was
in combat. From Normandy, after 308 days of combat, the Tough ‘Ombres had
fought through northern France, the Ardennes, Rhineland and central Europe. On
16 December 1945, the division returned to the States and was inactivated at
Camp Shanks, New York, on the 27th of the month.
Other units arriving at Fort Dix in
early 1944 were the 628th and 807th Tank Destroyer Battalions,
15th General Hospital, 460th Anti-aircraft Artillery Battalion, 297th General
Hospital, Headquarters Special Troops of the XIII Corps, 179thEngineer
Battalion, 3468th Ordnance Company, 628th Engineer Company and
168thQuartermaster Trucking Company. These units stayed only long enough to
stage to the European Theater of Operations.
In July 1944, the 102nd “Ozark”
Infantry Division arrived at Dix from Camp Swift, Texas, where it had been
participating in maneuvers. Activated 15 September 1942 at Camp Maxey, Texas,
the 102nd had taken part in extensive training exercises in Louisiana. The
“Ozark” division, which originally included men from the Ozarks, remained at
Dix until a September 1944 shipment to the European Theater of Operations.
Arriving at Cherbourg, France on 23
September 1944, the 102nd again trained for combat, which began 26 October
in a northward drive to the Rhine area between Duisberg and Dusseldorf. In
March 1945, the division captured the Rhine objective after a six-month battle
that cost the Nazis 86 towns, a rocket factory, and numerous railroad and
communications centers. The 102nd continued its push until VE-Day, when
units were in position at Gotha. In late February 1946, the division returned
to the United States and was inactivated on 12 March at Camp Kilmer, New
Jersey.
At war’s end, it was estimated that
almost 430,000 prisoners of war were in the United States. The Germans numbered
370,000, Italians 55,000, Japanese 3,000, and the remainder were from other
Axis nations. It was further estimated that of the German POWs, 70,000 were
officers and noncoms who either elected not to work or were refused the
opportunity by US military authorities in the interest of military and national
security. However, the others were permitted to engage in work not related to
America’s war effort. Some 85,000 worked in agriculture, 55,000 in industry,
and the remainder at military posts or stations throughout the country.
Fort Dix was one of the major
holding areas for prisoners of war. On 5 January 1944, the post’s POW camp
opened, and soon the first POWs entered the compound. Although the prisoners
held at Dix during the war were mainly Germans, there were some Italians, and
surprisingly enough, a few Russians. The Russians were captured by American
forces on the western front of Europe. During the early part of the war, many
Russians had defected to the Axis powers and elected to fight for Germany.
Donning uniforms of the “Wehrmacht” and assigned to units in western Europe,
they had fought in France against the liberation armies of Americans, British,
French and Canadians. Upon capture, some of them were sent to prisoner-of-war
camps in the United States – 154 of them to Fort Dix.
The POW camp at the post was often
cited as a model camp. Officials of the International Red Cross and the State
Department verified this after making frequent inspections of the camp.
In the latter part of 1944, German
prisoners of war were allocated from the POW camp to various facilities on the
reservation. Almost all of the prisoners were employed in a pay status, serving
in the laundry, hospital, quartermaster supply, and camp maintenance. Tilton
General Hospital received 225 to 300 of these prisoners.
Prisoner duties at the hospital
varied from orderlies and administrative work to skilled medical functions.
Their presence at the hospital contributed, to some degree, to the efficient
operation of the facility, especially during a shortage of US Army medical
personnel. POW doctors, working with US Army Medical Corps officers, were used
to care for sick and injured prisoners. In addition to medical service provided
by the post’s Station Hospital, the prisoners enjoyed recreation facilities and
religious activities. The rations issued the prisoners were the same as those
given to the troops on the post. They also received a full issue of quartermaster
clothing.
With cessation of World War II
hostilities in Europe, plans were made to repatriate American-held prisoners of
war. All prisoners would be returned to their homeland.
In several issues of June and July
1945, the New York Times reported an astounding story. In late June 1945, after
learning they would be sent back to the motherland and fearing retribution as
traitors, the 154 Russian POWs at Dix rioted. In an attempt to force their way
out of the compound, they attacked camp security personnel with mess kit knives
and clubs made from chair legs. As they rushed their guards, the Russians were
fired at with carbines and submachine guns. In the ensuing struggle, one
prisoner was killed and several others wounded. One prisoner was injured while
trying to scale the wire enclosure surrounding the compound. After this attempt
for freedom was thwarted, three of the Russians committed suicide by hanging
themselves from the rafters of their buildings.
On 29 June 1945, the remaining 150
prisoners were taken to Camp Shank, New York, each escorted by a military
policeman, to board an Italian merchant marine vessel bound for Russia. The
heavy escort was provided to prevent escapes and to forestall further attempts
at suicide. Shortly after their 1:30 p.m. arrival at Camp Shanks and prior to
the 3:30 p.m. scheduled sailing of the vessel, the escort received President
Truman’s order to return the prisoners to Fort Dix. They were to be held at the
post’s POW camp until a State Department study could be made of the situation.
The men were returned to the Fort
Dix POW camp, still escorted man for man. Upon arrival at Dix, the POW camp was
stripped of all furniture and equipment. The only item left was a mattress on
which each Russian could sleep. It was then learned that apparently others had
previously planned to commit suicide when an additional 15 lengths of rope and
belts were found hanging from the rafters. The men were kept at Dix a while
longer and eventually shipped somewhere. Final outcome of the incident is vague;
government records still are classified.
In June 1946, the prisoner-of-war
camp at Dix began to phase out. All remaining prisoners were readied for
overseas shipment. In two and a half years, more than 15,000 POWs had been held
at the post, the highest number at any one time totaling 5,580. These included
prisoners at branch camps in Centerton, Bridgeton, Dias Creek and Glassboro,
all of whom worked in canneries and on farms.
During World War II the post
experienced a rapid growth of buildings, facilities and population. The growth,
which started with the mobilization of the 44th Division and the arrival
of the first conscripts at Fort Dix, continued to the time World War II
hostilities ceased. Hundreds of thousands of Americans passed through the fort’s
portals to train and prepare for shipment to combat areas across the Atlantic.
With the war’s end, activities at this New Jersey post did not cease. Thousands
of American soldiers were returning to Dix from overseas for separation
processing or reassignment. Without breaking stride, the post, which had more
than tripled in total acreage during the World War II period, continued to
bustle with debarkation and separation activities.
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