Fort McClellan

Coordinates: 33°42′39″N 85°44′14″W / 33.71083°N 85.73722°W / 33.71083; -85.73722
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Buckner Hall at Fort McClellan in 2014.

Fort McClellan, originally Camp McClellan, is a decommissioned

brownfield land have been redeveloped as a mixed-use community
. The portion of the post which has not been redeveloped is currently owned by the Alabama Army National Guard and is used as a training facility for units from all across the state, also housing the Alabama Army National Guard’s Officer Candidate School, for enlisted soldiers looking to earn their commission.

Early history

Located in the Choccolocco Foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, Woodstock, Alabama, was founded as a private industrial town by the Woodstock Iron Company in 1872. Woodstock was later renamed Anniston and was opened to the public in 1883; by 1890, it had a population of near 10,000 persons.[1] While Fort McClellan was the first and only long-lived United States Army post near Anniston, a temporary facility named Camp Shipp existed there during 1898–1899.

Camp Shipp – Spanish–American War

The

Santiago, Cuba while leading a charge in the Battle of San Juan Hill.[2]

Camp McClellan – World War I

In 1912, there was renewed interest in Anniston for having a nearby Army training facility. Alabama's Third District congressman

National Guardsmen were sent to the area for maneuvers. Officials of the participating Army War College found the terrain highly suitable for artillery training, and advocated purchase of the land.[3]

On March 17, 1917, the Federal Government acquired 18,952 acres (76.70 km2) of this land for $247,000 (equivalent to $5,874,109 in 2023).[3] On April 6, 1917, Congress declared war on Germany and it has been suggested that without it "it’s likely that Fort McClellan as we remember it would never have been born".[4] The Department of War formally established Camp McClellan on July 18, 1917, named in honor of Major General George B. McClellan, General-in-Chief of the Union Army, 1861–1862. Camp McClellan was one of 32 mobilization camps formed to quickly train men for World War I.[5]

Like the other National Guard mobilization facilities, Camp McClellan used hastily constructed wooden buildings for headquarters, mess halls, latrines, and showers, with rows of wooden-floored tents for housing the troops. There were 26 blocks of training areas composed of central buildings and tents, each designated for a particular function (infantry, artillery, ammunition, etc.). Overall, about 1,500 buildings were built, including a base hospital with 118 buildings. The Anniston city limit at that time was a circle 1.3 miles (2.1 kilometers) in diameter. The Camp McClellan reservation was approximately a square some 3.0 miles (4.8 kilometers) on each side, adjoining the northeast quarter arc of the city limits and extending northward along the Anniston to Jacksonville, Alabama, pike. The training blocks were in the northern part of the reservation. An existing Southern Railway line was close by the western boundary; a terminal facility called Remount Depot was built near the southwest corner of the reservation and, farther north, a spur into the camp was constructed.[citation needed]

The first troops arrived in late August 1917; by October there were more than 27,000 men from units in New Jersey, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, and the District of Columbia training at the camp under the 29th Infantry Division, commanded by Major General Charles G. Morton. Other troops included the 1st Separate Negro Company of Maryland, the 6th Division, the 157th Depot Brigade, the 11th and 12th Training Battalions, and the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Development Regiments.[6]

Fort McClellan – permanent post

Following the

Armistice with Germany on November 11, 1918, and the signing of the Treaty of Versailles (June 18, 1919) officially ending the war, most of the mobilization camps were closed. Nine facilities were placed on "caretaker status"; Camp McClellan was included, intended to be used for special training in the Army's 9th Corps Area. Congress and the public had little interest in maintaining these camps, much less in upgrading them as permanent facilities. In 1926, however, Congress approved funds for permanent facilities, and new buildings were started at Camp McClellan for the headquarters, officer quarters, barracks, and a central hospital. On July 1, 1929, by War Department order, the post was designated Fort McClellan and a permanent installation. This would be a post for one regiment of Infantry having 1,500 officers and men and a summer camp with a capacity for 6,400 civilian trainees.[7]

As the Great Depression started, unspent funds initially allocated for military construction were diverted into programs to stem the unemployment. Construction on the permanent facilities slowed, but in 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt allocated Works Progress Administration (WPA) funds for Fort McClellan. In the next three years, an estimated $1,785,000 (equivalent to $39,192,950 in 2023) in WPA funds was used for constructing new roads, the Fort McClellan Army Airfield,[8] and additional permanent buildings. Included was a radio facility with a high-power transmitter (call letters WUR) for Morse-code communications, Most of the buildings were Spanish Colonial Revival architecture in style.

During the 1930s, the Army 22nd Infantry Regiment had the role of Post Garrison, responsible for training units of the Army's

Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC), units within the Organized Reserve, and the annual encampment of the Alabama Army National Guard (the 32nd Infantry Division). In addition the Post Garrison maintained the headquarters for District "D" of the Civilian Conservation Corps
(CCC), handling 45 CCC camps in Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, and Tennessee.

World War II

As

Pacific Theater of Operations
.

Major expansion (1941–44)

About $6.5 million in Federal Funding was made available for construction to accommodate quarters and other facilities for up to 50,000 military personnel at Fort McClellan. Overall improvements included 74 miles (118 km) of new roads, sewage facilities for 50,000 persons, a huge general hospital with 80 wooden buildings connected by 4.5 miles (7.2 km) of catwalks, 5 theaters plus an amphitheater seating 12,000 persons, 27 warehouses, and many ammunition–storage bunkers. Hundreds of five- and fifteen-man hutments, arranged in Company-level groups, were built for personnel being trained. Colonel John L. Jenkins was the Commanding Officer (1941–1944) during most of the construction period.

The land area of Fort McClellan was also greatly expanded. Directly to the east, a mountainous peninsula connecting to the

John Pelham, a hero in the Confederate cavalry during the American Civil War
, who was raised in that area.

At peak, there were officially 2,170 officers and 42,126 enlisted personnel at Fort McClellan.[9] The station complement tripled in number; this complement included two detachments of the Women's Army Corps (WAC). In the war years, a total of nearly 500,000 men were trained at Fort McClellan.

Basic and special training

Replacing the 27th Division, in 1942, the Army began training new recruits and draftees at Fort McClellan under what was called the Branch Immaterial Training Center. Recruits received eight weeks of basic training, and were then sent elsewhere for combat training or specialized schools. In 1943, this became the

Infantry Replacement Training Center (IRTC). Under IRTC, the basic training was increased to nine weeks and included situations corresponding to combat in European areas such as training within simulated urban areas, actions under live artillery fire, and crouching in foxholes with tanks moving overhead.[10]

In addition to the IRTC, there was training at Fort McClellan of special troops such the 92nd Infantry Division with African-American soldiers from all states. The 92nd Division trained during 1942–1943, then were deployed overseas to fight in Italian campaigns.[citation needed]

Prisoner of war camp

During the war, Fort McClellan became the temporary home for many captured enemy soldiers; a 3,000-capacity Prison Internment Camp for

prisoners of war (POWs) was built in 1943. The camp also served to receive prisoners who would go on to three other POW camps in Alabama. At the end of the war in Europe, the camp at Fort McClellan held 2,546 men. A cemetery on the reservation marks 26 German and 3 Italian prisoners of war who died while in captivity.[11]

Post–World War II missions

After the war ended with Germany and then Japan, the IRTC at Fort McClellan trained soldiers for occupation duty until November 1946, at which time the activity was redesignated a Recruit Training Center. The number of troops being trained dwindled rapidly, and the installation was placed on inactive status on June 30, 1947; only a small maintenance crew remained on the post.

Under pressure from the Alabama Congressional Delegation, in early 1950, the Army began plans to again use the area for National Guard training. With the onset of the Korean War in June 1950, these plans were accelerated. Brigadier General Theodore R. Wessels was assigned as Commander (1950–1952) and $10,000,000 (equivalent to $126,639,004 in 2023) in funds were allocated for facility restoration. In 1951, Fort McClellan was officially reactivated, with missions to have a National Guard Training Brigade and to operate the Chemical Corps replacement training center. Wessels is often called the "Father of the New Fort McClellan."

Chemical Corps

Funding was appropriated to build specialized facilities at Fort McClellan for what was initially called the Chemical Corps School (CCS). In 1952, the CCS began operations and facilities were completed in 1954. The CCS offered eight weeks of basic training followed by eight weeks devoted to chemical warfare training.[12]

In September 1953,

sulfur mustard and nerve agents.[13]

In 1962, the name of the CCS was changed to the U.S. Army Chemical Center and School. Also in 1962, the U.S. Army Combat Development Command Chemical Biological-Radiological Agency, moved to Fort McClellan. In 1973 both of these operations were relocated to

]

In 2017–2018, H.R. 3666, The Fort McClellan Health Registry Act, was introduced to Congress, aiming to establish a registry of persons who were exposed to chemical agents during their military service at Fort McClellan.[14]

Military Police Corps

The

Fort Gordon
, Georgia, was officially transferred to Fort McClellan on July 11, 1975.

The Military Police School provided training programs in general policing activities, corrections and detention operations, police and criminal intelligence operations, combat support operations, and security. The School also operated the Department of Defense Polygraph Institute. The Military Police School was transferred to

Fort Leonard Wood
, Missouri, in 1999.

Women's Army Corps

WAC Area, Fort McClellan, 1954

The Women's Army Corps (WAC) was the women's branch of the U.S. Army. In 1942 it was created as an auxiliary unit, the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) and converted to the WAC in 1943. The Women's Army Corps School was founded at Fort McClellan on September 25, 1952.

College juniors in a map reading course at WAC School, Fort McClellan, instructed by Capt. Ann B. Smith, July 1964.

About two years later, official ceremonies were conducted to establish the post as the first permanent home of the U.S. Women's Army Corps Center, the WACC.[15] The WAC provided the receiving, processing, and training operations for all female officers and enlisted personnel entering the U.S. Army. Civilian summer training was also conducted at the WAC during the 1950s. Fort McClellan remained its home until the Corps was disestablished and its flag retired in 1978. Participating in the final ceremony was Major General Mary E. Clarke, the last director of the Women's Army Corps and soon appointed the Commanding General of Fort McClellan (1978–1980), the first female officer ever to command a major U.S. Army installation.[16]

Vietnam War training

In 1966, to meet special infantry needs of the Vietnam War, an Advanced Individual Training Infantry Brigade was activated at Fort McClellan. The Fort was renamed the U.S. Army School/Training Center and Fort McClellan. During 1969, this Training Brigade, along with the Women's Army Corps Center and the Army Chemical School, made Fort McClellan the only U.S. Army installation in the United States with three major missions. After training more than 30,000 men forces in Vietnam were reduced, and the Training Infantry Brigade was deactivated in April 1970.[17]

US Border Patrol training

The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 authorized the hiring of 500 additional United States Border Patrol Agents. The original Border Patrol academy was not able to accommodate such a large class size, so a satellite academy was built on Fort McClellan. The 226th class of Border Patrol basic training was the only class to utilize the satellite academy. Despite plans for additional basic training classes, the Border Patrol never returned and the idea was abandoned.

Closing and present use

During the last decades of the 20th century, Fort McClellan was 'home' for an average military population of about 10,000 people, including about 5,000 who were permanently assigned, and employed about 1,500 civilians.[18]

In 1995, the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) Commission voted to permanently close Fort McClellan. No Troops were sent to this base after 1995 due to it being closed, except for basic training, the chemical school and the MP school. The official closing ceremony was held on May 20, 1999, at which Major General Ralph G. Wooten, Commanding General and Chemical School Commandant (1996–1999), conveyed thanks from the Department of the Army to Fort McClellan and the surrounding communities:

For more than 81 years, Fort McClellan set the standard of excellence in training America's sons and daughters to defend freedom in two world wars and a myriad of conflicts and operations. In the last generation, we were singularly responsible for providing our Army with the world's finest military police and chemical soldiers. Our pride is justified by our spectacular success!

— Major General Ralph G. Wooten, Fort McClellan Closing Ceremony, 20 May 1999

At the time of closure, Fort McClellan was home to the U.S. Army Chemical School, the U.S. Army Military Police School, the Training Brigade, and the Department of Defense Polygraph Institute. The Chemical School, Military Police School, and the Training Brigade relocated to

U.S. Army Maneuver Support Center of Excellence. The DoD Polygraph Institute relocated to Fort Jackson
, South Carolina.

Military and Governmental occupants

A portion of Fort McClellan continues to be operated by the

Department of Homeland Security
. The Noble Training Facility (NTF) was integrated into the CDP training center.

McClellan community

In early 1999, the local community leaders of Anniston and Calhoun County established the Fort McClellan Joint Powers Authority for the purpose of overseeing the redevelopment and reuse of Fort McClellan. On April 30, 2009, Alabama Governor Bob Riley signed into law Act # 2009-337 authorizing "the incorporation of development authorities for the purpose of developing real and personal property of closed military installations in Alabama." In March 2010, the McClellan Development Authority was officially certified as a non-profit public corporation charged with the future economic development of the former fort. In 2014, ordnance cleanup was completed after 11 years of environmental remediation. As of September 2015, more than 3,100 acres are back in use 3,000 are for sale, and a little more than 3,000 acres are set to go up for sale in the next three to five years.[21]

Carved from the developed portions of the original reservation, McClellan is a 10,000-acre (40.0-km2) master-planned, mixed-use community offering opportunities for residential, commercial, industrial, retail, education, research, and technology development. Since its opening, McClellan has become home to over 900 residents and a work place for more than 3,000 employees.[22]

Mountain Longleaf National Wildlife Refuge

In 2003, the

U.S. Department of the Interior, established the Mountain Longleaf National Wildlife Refuge
on 9,016 acres (36.1 km2) in undeveloped land on the reservation of the former Fort McClellan. It takes its name from some of the last-remaining mountain longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) forests in the southeastern United States.

As a relatively new wildlife refuge, Mountain Longleaf has not yet developed any sizable tourist facilities. A single information kiosk is located at the junction of Bain's Gap Road and Ridge Road South, near the center of the McClellan community. Additionally, part of the reserve is closed to the general public, pending environmental cleanup. Otherwise, there are limited opportunities for hiking, photography, and wildlife observation at the refuge. Work is underway to restore the environment from the ecological problems introduced by the long use of the area for Army field training.

Public Health Issues

Recently the

Veterans Administration has established a page under the heading "Potential Exposure at Fort McClellan - Public Health" That page in part[further explanation needed
], states the following: "Some members of the U.S. Army Chemical Corp School, Army Combat Development Command Chemical/Biological/Radiological Agency, Army Military Police School and Women's Army Corps, among others, may have been exposed to one or more of several hazardous materials, likely at low levels, during their service at Fort McClellan".

In 2016, a group of former service veterans from Fort McClellan compiled original environmental engineering sources papers that strongly indicates that the Fort was a former remote test location for the Chemical Weapons experiments program out of Edgewood, Maryland and the former Biowarfare Germ Program out of Fort Detrick, Maryland. The veterans are currently working towards obtaining a new GAO Office report on the spill sites at the base, to confirm whether or not it was a part of the infamous PROJECT 112 battery of military experiments that started up in the 1960s. Fort McClellan was also the site of open air burn pits that were used in staging the CBRNE tests around the base until 1975. Potential exposures could have included, but are not limited to, the following: Radioactive compounds (cesium-137 and cobalt-60) used in decontamination training activities in isolated locations on base; Chemical warfare agents (mustard gas and nerve agents) used in secret military experiments and CBRNE field tests on the troops without ever warning them; friable indoors asbestos pollution inside the barracks buildings which all required remedial cleanup actions; a (TCE) SuperFund contamination site at the Anniston Army Depot where commuter workforce veterans worked who were living at the barracks at Fort McClellan; and full-face exposures to CS Riot Control gas for military qualifying classes. [

unbalanced opinion?
]

To date, there are a total of ten significant environmental spill sites that have been identified by the medical patient group of the Fort McClellan service veterans. The veterans argue that the sciences for toxicity have changed over the years, and that multiple or mixtures or combinations of low-dose exposures are just as harmful to human health as short bursts of high-dose events.https://www.gao.gov/products/NSIAD-98-228

In 2008, the Environmental Protection Agency issued a final Pathways Report on the aroclor PCB contamination zone caused by a former Monsanto Factory, and the Fort McClellan Veterans are covered by the exposed population declarations in this report under the defined category of "Commercial Visitors". http://www.annistoncag.org/uploadedFiles/Final_Pathways_Analysis_Report%20%20Nov%2008(1).pdf To date, the Dept. of Veterans Affairs has refused to acknowledge or comply with this important toxic exposure declaration. [

editorializing
]

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
19705,334
19807,60542.6%
19904,128−45.7%
U.S. Decennial Census[23]

References

  1. ^ Gates, op. cit., pp. 140–143
  2. ^ a b "Fort McClellan". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Retrieved October 29, 2019.
  3. ^ Phillip Tutor:No WWI, no Fort McClellan. Does Anniston prosper? Anniston Star, Consolidated Publishing, April 6, 2017
  4. ^ "Camp McClellan - World War I Centennial". www.worldwar1centennial.org. Retrieved October 29, 2019.
  5. ^ Reed, Mary Beth, Charles E. Cantley, and J. W. Joseph; Fort McClellan: A Popular History, New South Associates, 1996, pp. 71–83
  6. ^ Primary reference for this section is Reed, Mary Beth, Charles E. Cantley, and J. W. Joseph; Fort McClellan: A Popular History, New South Associates, 1996, pp. 84–105
  7. ^ Freeman, Paul. "Ft. McClellan Army Airfield / Henry J. Reilly Army Airfield, Anniston, AL". Abandoned and Little-Known Airfields. Retrieved September 25, 2012.
  8. ., pp. 51-76.
  9. ^ Hutchinson, Daniel; "WWII POW Camps in Alabama," Encyclopedia of Alabama; http://www.encyclopediaofalabama.org/face/Article.jsp?id=h-1418
  10. ^ "Articles". www.mcclellan.army.mil. Retrieved October 29, 2019.
  11. ^ Nicole Kwan (September 19, 2014). "Ft. McClellan Health Act: The health hazards of PCBs". Fox News. Retrieved September 20, 2015.
  12. ^ Morden, Bettie J. (1990). "The Women's Army Corps, 1945–1978". history.army.mil. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History. pp. 144–151. Retrieved October 29, 2019.
  13. ^ "Articles". www.mcclellan.army.mil. Retrieved October 29, 2019.
  14. ^ "Transition Force – U.S. Army Garrison, Fort McClellan, Alabama," http://www.mcclellan.army.mil/Info.asp?article_id=11
  15. ^ Alabama National Guard Archived September 9, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Tutor, Phillip (April 17, 2021). "McClellan Still Swarms with Soldiers, Thanks to National Guard". The Anniston Star. Retrieved May 17, 2021.
  17. ^ Jacki Lowry (September 17, 2015). "20 years after the vote to close Fort McClellan, officials are making progress toward a revival". Yellow Hammer Alabama News Center. Retrieved September 20, 2015.
  18. ^ "Development Zones". McClellan Development Authority. Retrieved October 29, 2019.
  19. ^ "U.S. Decennial Census". Census.gov. Archived from the original on April 26, 2015. Retrieved June 6, 2013.

External links

33°42′39″N 85°44′14″W / 33.71083°N 85.73722°W / 33.71083; -85.73722