Camp Wadsworth

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Camp Wadsworth
Spartanburg, South Carolina, U.S.
Camp Wadsworth, South Carolina (map).jpg
27th Division's 1918 map of Camp Wadsworth, South Carolina
Coordinates( 34°56′25″N81°59′10″W / 34.94028°N 81.98611°W / 34.94028; -81.98611 )
Area2,000 acres
Site history
Built1917 (1917)
In use1917–1919 (1917–1919)
FateBuildings and equipment salvaged, site developed as residential neighborhood
Battles/wars World War I

Camp Wadsworth was a World War I-era training facility for the United States Army. Located near Spartanburg, South Carolina, the post was in operation from its opening in July 1917 until it was inactivated in March 1919, following the Armistice that ended the war.

Contents

Creation

As the United States began to expand the United States Army in preparation for entry into World War I, the United States Department of War planned to enlarge the peacetime Regular Army through a combination of mobilizing units of the National Guard and drafting men into the wartime National Army. [1] This plan called for the creation of 32 new mobilization and training centers, evenly split between the National Army and the National Guard. [1] Each post was to be responsible for organizing and training a complete army division. [1] The National Army camps were equipped with heated barracks and other facilities, while the plan called for National Guard camps, which were needed sooner because National Guard members could be available for training more quickly than draftees, to consist primarily of tents and a small number of temporary structures. [1] As a result of these construction requirements, the War Department intended for most National Guard training sites to be located in the southern United States, where milder winters and warmer temperatures were more prevalent than in the north. [1]

Many cities and towns lobbied to have one of the wartime encampments located nearby, anticipating the temporary economic boom such a facility might bring to the local area. [2] The city leaders of Spartanburg were among those who vied for one of these training facilities; their lobbying and marketing efforts were successful, and Newton D. Baker, the Secretary of War, and Leonard Wood, the commander of the Army's Eastern Department, approved Spartanburg for a National Guard camp in May 1917, after having made personal inspection tours of the area. [2]

The area chosen for the camp was approximately three miles outside of the city; at the time, a small number of African-American cotton farmers leased part of the land, but most of it was undeveloped and heavily wooded. [3] On July 4, 1917, the landowner leased a 2,000-acre tract to the city; two days later, the mayor conveyed to the federal government permission to use the land. [3]

Description

Secretary of War Newton D. Baker approved the Spartanburg site where Camp Wadsworth was constructed. Newton Baker, Bain bw photo portrait.jpg
Secretary of War Newton D. Baker approved the Spartanburg site where Camp Wadsworth was constructed.

The land approved for construction of the training camp was a large plateau with rolling hills and small streams. [3] On the east, the selected site was bordered by Fairforest Creek, the largest stream in the area. [3] On the west, it was bordered by Blackstock Road. [3] At its northern edge, the proposed facility included the Piedmont and Northern Railway, an interurban electric railroad which became its primary rail line. [3] To the south, the future Camp Wadsworth was bordered by Holston's Creek. [3]

Construction

James S. Wadsworth, the Union Army officer for whom Camp Wadsworth was named. Gen. James S. Wadsworth - NARA - 528634.tif
James S. Wadsworth, the Union Army officer for whom Camp Wadsworth was named.

On July 13, 1917, the War Department indicated that a division of the New York National Guard would be organized and trained at the new Spartanburg-area camp. [3] Later in the month, the Department of War announced that the facility could be called Camp Wadsworth in honor of James S. Wadsworth, a prominent resident of New York who had served as a brigadier general in the Union Army during the American Civil War, and had been killed during the Battle of the Wilderness. [3] [lower-alpha 1]

The contract to build Camp Wadsworth was awarded in mid-July, and construction started immediately, with a two-month deadline for completion. [3] Thousands of civilian workers cleared trees, laid pipes for water and sewage, built roads, and erected temporary warehouses and other structures; they were later assisted by an engineer regiment from North Carolina. [3]

Occupation

Scaling a climbing wall at Camp Wadsworth. Wall scaling at Camp Wadsworth, South Carolina - NARA - 533639.tif
Scaling a climbing wall at Camp Wadsworth.

Occupation of the post began in August; all the units of the New York National Guard's 6th Division, later federalized as the 27th Division had assembled at Camp Wadsworth by the end of September, and trained there until departing for France in May 1918. [5]

Rifle Range, Glassy Mountain, South Carolina. A remarkable photograph made at U.S. Rifle Range, Glassy Mountain showing where bullets strike ground at the dark targets LCCN2007664212.tif
Rifle Range, Glassy Mountain, South Carolina.

Camp Wadsworth was used for individual training, including drill and ceremony and bayonet practice; it was also used for unit-level exercises that gave commanders and staff practice at planning and executing large scale maneuvers. [5] In addition, the 27th Division created live fire ranges in the Glassy Mountain area of Greenville County, [lower-alpha 2] which served as the primary training sites for rifle, machine gun, and field artillery; these ranges permitted soldiers to gain the live fire experience required for service on the front lines. [6]

The Camp Wadsworth cantonment also included facilities for improving soldier welfare and morale, including YMCA and YWCA buildings which housed education and training programs, a post theater which featured live performances, and several gymnasiums and athletic fields. [4]

Units stationed at Camp Wadsworth

In addition to the 27th Division, Camp Wadsworth was the organization and training site for the 96th Division; the war ended before the 96th Division was completely organized and trained, and it demobilized at Camp Wadsworth in early 1919. [7]

The 15th New York Infantry Regiment, a unit of African-American soldiers and white officers later federalized as the 369th Infantry Regiment, arrived at Camp Wadsworth to begin its training. [8] Tension with the local population, who had been assured that no black soldiers would be sent to Camp Wadsworth, caused the Army to rapidly transport the 369th to France to complete its organization and training. [8] The 369th Infantry was assigned to the 93rd Division, an organization made up of other African-American units like the 369th; the 93rd Division's regiments served in combat after being integrated into French Army brigades. [8]

The Camp Wadsworth garrison consisted of several specialty units, including military police, construction workers, cooks and bakers, and a remount depot. [9]

Recitation room, Army School of Nursing, Camp Wadsworth, South Carolina. Army School of Nursing, Camp Wadsworth, S.C. -- recitation room LOC 28981178872.jpg
Recitation room, Army School of Nursing, Camp Wadsworth, South Carolina.

Several non-divisional units also organized and trained at Camp Wadsworth, including anti-aircraft machine gun battalions, signal battalions, corps artillery parks, and pioneer infantry regiments. [10] There were also several military schools on the base, including one for training nurses. [9]

Camp Wadsworth was also the organization and training site of the Slavic Legion; [10] intended as a regiment of non-naturalized volunteers from countries in the Balkans, the unit was only partially organized when the end of the war ended the requirement for more soldiers in Europe, and the proposed unit was demobilized at Camp Wadsworth after the Armistice. [11]

Inactivation

Beginning in February 1919, the War Department carried out salvage operations at Camp Wadsworth, and reallocated usable equipment and materials to posts which remained open. [12] Several buildings were sold and moved to other locations by the purchasers. [12]

Most of the area which included Camp Wadsworth is now within the Spartanburg city limits, and has been developed as the Wadsworth Hills residential neighborhood. [13]

Association with prominent individuals

Major General John F. O'Ryan, commander of Camp Wadsworth and the 27th Division during World War I. MG John F. O'Ryan.jpg
Major General John F. O'Ryan, commander of Camp Wadsworth and the 27th Division during World War I.

Notes

  1. Wadsworth's son James Wolcott Wadsworth and grandson James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr. were prominent New York politicians; the younger Wadsworth served as a United States senator during World War I, and visited the camp for the Thanksgiving holiday in 1917. [4]
  2. Map coordinates 35.13803393046529, -82.33281005217162), 26 miles from the main camp.

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Tent and Trench", p. Chapter 1.
  2. 1 2 "Tent and Trench", p. Chapter 2.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Tent and Trench", p. Chapter 3.
  4. 1 2 "Tent and Trench", p. Chapter 7.
  5. 1 2 "Tent and Trench", pp. Chapter 4, 5.
  6. "Tent and Trench", p. Chapter 6.
  7. "Tent and Trench", p. Appendix B.
  8. 1 2 3 The African-American Soldier, p. 136.
  9. 1 2 "Tent and Trench", p. Appendix B: Base troops.
  10. 1 2 "Tent and Trench", p. Appendix B: Non-divisional troops.
  11. Americans All!, p. 63.
  12. 1 2 Order of Battle of the United States Land Forces in the World War, p. 855.
  13. "Wadsworth Hills".
  14. The US Army In World War I, p. 55.
  15. Cutting Edge, p. 9.
  16. "The Harlem Hell Fighters Commissioned".
  17. 1 2 "During WWI, Camp Wadsworth Brought the World to Spartanburg".
  18. "Official Wadsworth Orders".
  19. "History of First Vermont and 57th Pioneer Infantry", pp. 25–26.
  20. 1 2 African Americans in the Military, p. 145.
  21. The Story of the 27th Division, p. 145.
  22. "Headstone Applications for Military Veterans, 1925-1963".
  23. "Tent and Trench", p. Chapter 4.
  24. The War Record of the Fifth Company, pp. 41–42.
  25. "Chronicle and Comment", p. 327.
  26. Postcard History Series: Spartanburg, South Carolina, p. 122.

Sources

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