AMERICA’S
entry into World War II brought many changes to the home front.
Northeastern Oklahoma felt the impact firsthand on January
8, 1942, when the Muskogee Phoenix confirmed a report naming
the Cookson Hills as the site for a planned military cantonment.
The complex would be named Camp Gruber in honor of the late
Brigadier General Edmund L. Gruber, composer of “The
Caisson Song.”The camp was located on Highway 10, eighteen
miles east of Muskogee, Oklahoma. Manhattan Construction Company
of Muskogee was awarded the building contract, and a work
force of 12,000 men began construction in February 1942. The
production pace in the first month was so hectic that a building
was completed every twenty minutes, twenty-four hours a day,
seven days a week. It took four months to build the camp,
at a project cost of thirty million dollars.
When
construction was completed in late May of 1942, the main post
occupied 260 acres with 2,250 buildings. Included in the mass
of buildings were a 1600-bed hospital, 479 barracks, 19 post
exchanges,12 chapels, and various social and recreation centers.
The camp had a central post office with three branches. At
one time, the 88th division post office ranked fourth in the
state for volume of business. Camp Gruber was a city within
itself.
The vast
parade ground was nearly two miles in length, and lined by
barracks on one side. The barracks were painted white with
green trim, and built off the ground. Other buildings in the
complex had concrete bases. Gravel sidewalks linked the buildings,
with the exception of the hospital which had a wooden sidewalk
and covered walkway. The streets inside the main post were
paved. East-west streets were lettered alphabetically; north-south
routes were numbered. A bus service provided transportation
within the camp, at a cost of five cents. A rail system extended
tracks into the post, allowing easy access for loading and
unloading of supplies and troops.
Civilian
newspapers were available for the troops, in addition to the
camp newspaper, The Gruber Guidon, which was published weekly.
The Guidon helped acquaint the servicemen to the post and
surrounding area. The camp had two officer clubs and three
service clubs for enlisted men. Three guesthouses within the
complex were available for spouses, families, or friends.
Physical
recreation facilities were provided for all service personnel.
Three swimming pools, a sports arena, twenty-four softball,
and ten baseball diamonds were located throughout the complex.
Camp Gruber soldiers, known as the "Huskies of the 173rd
Field Artillery," played Service League Football with
area colleges. Hunting restrictions applied on the post, but
fishing was allowed on nearby Greenleaf Lake. The camp theaters
brought the latest movies to the troops, who watched the films
on wooden benches. The auditoriums were large; four theaters
seated over 900 persons. Boxing matches and USO shows provided
special entertainment. Famous visitors included actor Cary
Grant, and Joe Louis.
Camp
Gruber had its own celebrities. In civilian life, Private
Arthur Johnston, 88th Division, 351st Medical Detachment,
was the Hollywood composer of hits such as "Pennies From
Heaven," and "Just One More Chance." Another
notable soldier stationed at Camp Gruber was actor William
Holden. Ironically, Holden was stationed at a camp where Americans
held German POWs, but one of his most famous roles was as
an American POW in Stalag 17.
Camp
Gruber opened on May 21, 1942, with Colonel H.C. Luck assigned
as post commander. The first infantry division at the new
facility was the 88th. The division originated in 1917 at
Camp Dodge, Iowa, and during World War I became know as the
"Cloverleaf" division. On July 15, 1942, the 88th
was reactivated at Camp Gruber under the division command
of Major General John E. Sloan. The 202nd field artillery
opened fire on October 5, 1942, and began training exercises.
Private Lee Pray, Quartermaster Detachment, was already at
home on the new post. Private Pray was training on part of
his family’s 1400 acres requisitioned by the U.S. government.
Extra
security was necessary for a special visitor to Camp Gruber.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt arrived on Sunday, April 18, 1943,
to watch the 88th division parade. After enjoying the parade,
the President ate chili con carne and visited with the troops
who were scheduled for deployment. The 88th division trained
nearly a year at Camp Gruber. After additional training in
Louisiana, the unit left Fort Sam Houston, Texas, for Europe.
Camp
Gruber made local headlines on June 5, 1943, when the Muskogee
Phoenix released an army disclosure of plans to establish
a prisoner of war camp at Gruber. When completed, the facility
had a capacity of 5,750 prisoners, with branches located at
Bixby, Haskell, Morris, Okemah, Okmulgee, Porter, and Wetumka.
In 1944, Glennan General Hospital in Okmulgee was added as
a branch for the treatment of POWs. The prisoner camp was
located across Highway 10 and one-half mile south of the U.S.
complex. The facility had three main compounds, which were
surrounded by double barbed wire fence; outside the fence
stood guard towers. In the middle of camp was a central control
tower. The post was equipped with a mess hall, showers, and
a canteen, where items such as cigarettes and beer could be
purchased. There was also a soccer field, chapel, and camp
theater. Walkways and gravel roads ran throughout the camp.
The prisoner
barracks were painted green and white, and had small windows.
The quarters were heated with natural gas. Barrack walls were
painted gray inside, and lined with homemade shelves. The
beds were iron-frame, and some men had pictures of family
or Adolph Hitler posted above their bunks.
Camp
Gruber only housed German captives, veterans of Field Marshall
Erwin Rommel’s Afrika Korps. The first prisoners of
war were received May 29, 1943. Former Camp Gruber guard Theophiel
Hecht remembered the night. “The first bunch we brought
in came at night. We had to frisk them down. We were up all
night and then they went to the showers. One guy escaped but
we caught him. They were all counted.”
The prisoners
arrived by train and were then marched or transported by truck
to the compound. After arriving at camp, the POWs were counted
and told to throw their clothing into a big pile. The POWs
were issued khaki uniforms with "PW" painted on
the back, in addition to toothbrushes, soap, and other personal
items. After a shower, the prisoners were allowed to eat.
Meals consisted of roast beef, sauerkraut, potatoes, other
vegetables, puddings, and tea. Boxes containing food items
also arrived from Germany. The German people were fearful
of American animosity toward the internees, but they were
so well fed that a weight gain of ten pounds was not uncommon.
Under
the 1929 Geneva Convention, POWs could be required to work,
if that work was to benefit their captors. In turn, the captives
were paid eighty cents daily. Camp Gruber POWs worked in two
areas. Farmers in need of help used them to harvest crops.
During December 1943, more than 4,000 acres of spinach were
harvested in Muskogee County. Prisoners also worked at a rock
quarry located three miles from Camp Gruber. The POWs walked
to the site. For security purposes, traffic along Highway
10 was stopped for thirty minutes before and after the prisoner
working hours.
The stonework
was used for several camp projects, and the prisoners were
allowed to use the rocks for crafting artwork in the prison
compound. Miniatures produced were: the Brandenburg gate,
a six foot square stone mosaic map of Africa, a tank destroyer,
a Black Forest mill, and other intricately detailed works.
Sundays
were a day of rest, and the prisoners played soccer. Every
Sunday, a Swedish Red Cross representative visited the camp.
Camp Gruber personnel were not allowed to search the Red Cross
car. The captives were well treated. Theophiel Hecht later
recalled an incident where an American sergeant was punished
for "mistreatment" of the prisoners.
“We
were coming back from the rock quarry and the prisoners were
chanting and causing a commotion. The guards were getting
nervous. The sergeant in the command car stood up, took out
his pistol and fired one shot into the sky. The prisoners
all jumped. He said, “I made a mistake, I shouldn’t
have done that.” He was reported and they busted him
down to a private. That’s how we treated the prisoners.”
The guards
who had prison duty were called “Military Police Escort
Guards” and took classes in jujitsu to assist with prisoner
control. Prisoner attitude was initially arrogant, and they
rebelled in their own way. Kurt Trummer, a former German POW,
recalled a Sunday afternoon in the compound, when “down
went the American flag, up goes the Swastika.”
Some
of the men tried to escape. Theophiel Hecht related an incident
where a prisoner sneaked away from his job at the rock quarry.
He decided to return to camp, but the guard, not believing
he was a POW, told him to go home. The German replied that
he would like to go home, but he lived too far away. After
checking with the main post, the guard let the prisoner in.
On July
14, 1943, the 42nd Infantry Division was reactivated at Camp
Gruber under the division command of General Harry J. “Hollywood”
Collins. Like the 88th division, the 42nd had a history of
World War I service. General Douglas McArthur, its most famous
member, gave the division its nickname when he claimed, “The
42nd Infantry Division stretches like a Rainbow from one end
of America to the other.” Basic training began in October
1943, but constant transfers and replacements hampered the
division’s progress. In July 1944, officials at the
War Department notified the division commander that intensive
training and preparation for overseas duty must be completed
within six months. Several months later regiments of the 42nd
were restricted to Camp Gruber on November 11, 1944. Troop
trains left Camp Gruber for Camp Kilmer, New Jersey on November
13, 1944. The next stop was Germany.
Soldiers
with “bunk fatigue” alleviated their boredom with
a trip to Muskogee, which became a “home away from home.”
Victory Bus Lines provided transportation to and from the
camp. In 1942, a one-day fare was 34 cents, round-trip was
61cents. Once in Muskogee, a soldier had the choice of five
movie theaters, numerous eating places, a skating rink, Red
Cross facility, and other activities which were less wholesome
in nature. Emile Bonagera of the 232nd field artillery later
recalled, “You had to go buy moonshine in Muskogee to
get a real drink.”
Muskogee
adopted the troops at Camp Gruber and took them into their
hearts and homes. Earlene Salyers remembered her childhood,
when soldiers filled the house at Christmas. “They were
here by themselves and Daddy [Sergeant Robert Crane] brought
them home with him. You hated the thought of them spending
Christmas alone.”
Because
of the increase in population, Muskogee had a housing shortage.
The city did not seem to mind and was alive with constant
activity. Soldiers were seen everywhere. Salyers also remembered,
“Little boys saluted the soldiers, and the soldiers
were always giving candy to the kids. They didn't have a sugar
ration. Everyone tried to be nice to them, because you realized
they were fighting that war for you.”
Deployments
were hard on both soldiers and civilians. When the 42nd Division
was deployed, the first wave left the camp by train, but the
second wave left by truck convoy in December 1944. “When
the 42nd left, people lined up and down the streets, and everyone
waved. Soldiers sat on the hoods and fenders of the transports
and tossed candy and little American flags to the kids. It
was hard to see them go, very hard, because you knew a lot
of them personally, and you knew a lot of them wouldn't be
coming back. A lot of people cried that day.”
Service
at Camp Gruber was not confined to combat soldiers. The infantry
divisions did not completely evacuate the post, since some
soldiers and units were permanently stationed at the camp.
Drilling and training of all types were conducted at the post.
Sergeant Robert Crane worked in the motorpool, 1881st Medical,
and trained ambulance drivers. His daughter recalled, “He
came from a farm and could drive anything. A lot of those
boys came from places like New York and didn't know how to
drive. He had to teach them.” In addition to men training
for combat, Camp Gruber had a WAC detachment. The unit was
unique, for its members were black.
Civilian
employment at the post began during the construction phase
and continued into the war. Area residents occupied a variety
of jobs inside the camp and supplemented the military in areas
such as the post office, dental clinics, motorpools, laundry,
and the post exchange. During the war, Camp Gruber was the
largest civilian employer in eastern Oklahoma.
Water
supply became a problem in 1944. Greenleaf Lake, created by
a dam built on a small creek, provided the water supply for
Camp Gruber. In 1943, the post experienced a water loss of
6,000,000 gallons daily. There was obviously a problem with
the dam, but the leak could not be found and continue to drain
the water supply. Heavy rainfall in 1943 helped counter the
water loss, but the next year was very dry. The drought conditions
and water leakage nearly dried up the lake. Lieutenant Colonel
Hal C. Horton, executive officer at the camp, was duck hunting
one winter morning when he spotted a flock of ducks swimming
in open water; however the rest of the water in the area was
frozen over. Colonel Horton reported the site and the leak
was promptly plugged.
A tense
moment in Camp Gruber’s history came at the military
trial and court-martial of five German POWs. The men were
indicted for beating fellow prisoner Johannes Kunze to death
on November 4, 1943. The incident had occurred at the Tonkawa
prisoner camp, but the trial was held at Gruber since it was
under provost marshal jurisdiction. Court-martial proceedings
began in closed-door session on January 17, 1944. Fear of
trial publicity and prisoner of war reaction throughout the
country called for an element of secrecy. Former camp guard
Theophiel Hecht recalled, “Everything in the camp was
hush-hush [during the trial]. Only certain ones went in there.”
The five were found guilty and sentenced to hang. The executions
were carried out on July 10, 1945, at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
In January
1945, the 36th Army Corps Headquarters were transferred from
Fort Riley, Kansas to Camp Gruber. The corps commander at
Camp Gruber was Major General Charles H. Corlett. On April
22, 1945, disaster again struck Muskogee, in the form of a
tornado. Army ambulances from Camp Gruber helped transport
the injured to area hospitals. The city suffered a water shortage
following the tornado, and the army pumped water from the
Arkansas River to supply the area.
German
prisoner morale dropped as the war went on. The captives were
denied access to outside news but tried to get information
through other means. Theophiel Hecht recalled one of those
ways. “One guy was an electronics whiz. He made a ham
radio. He couldn't send but he could pick up a German broadcast.
Of course, they thought all of our stuff was propaganda. In
the end, they started to realize things weren't so good.”
May 8,
1945 was VE Day in Europe. After three years overseas, Camp
Gruber’s Third Infantry Division would be returning
stateside. The 86th “Black Hawk” was initially
stationed at Camp Howze, Texas, when activated on December
15, 1942. The youthful age of its corps earned the 86th a
new name — “Kid Division.” The division
was in combat for forty-two days and was the first allied
division to cross the Danube. While in Europe, the “Kid
Division” served with four different American armies,
and liberated over 200,00 allied prisoners of war. After serving
in the European campaign, the 86th was to report to the new
division home at Camp Gruber. Retraining for the Pacific theater
was scheduled to begin soon after the unit arrived at Camp
Gruber on July 22, 1945.
Muskogee
citizens were anxious to welcome the division home, and numerous
festivities were planned. The August 6th bomb at Hiroshima
changed those plans, and orders were issued for the 86th to
proceed immediately to the West Coast. After a two-week stay,
the division departed Camp Gruber on August 7, 1945.
The infantry
divisions returning to Camp Gruber compiled a remarkable record
of service. Like the “Kid Division,” the 88th
“Cloverleaf” acquired a new name during World
War II. After breaking through a German resistance line at
Santa Maria, the 88th encircled the retreating troops. Blaine
Greer remembered the episode afterwards, “Nazi Sally
came back on the radio whining that ‘those blue cloverleafed
devils are after us again.’ So from then on we were
tagged the nickname – ‘The Blue Devils.’”
“The
Blue Devils” were the first allied troop element to
enter Rome on June 4, 1944. The 88th saw 344 days of combat,
and casualties were high (15,173 dead, wounded, and missing).
The men of the 88th were awarded numerous military honors,
including two Congressional Medals of Honor.
December
1944, was the last major German offensive on the western front.
The 42nd “Rainbow” Division went into combat during
the Battle of the Bulge. By April 1945, the unit was in Munich.
Some German troops were so impressed with the 42nd, they though
of them as part of Roosevelt’s “Rainbow SS.”
Ironically, it was the “Rainbow SS” that liberated
the notorious Dachau concentration camp on April 29, 1945.
A patrol from the 42nd was also responsible for the capture
of SS General Von Oberg, the “Butcher of Paris.”
The division was in combat for 114 days.
Emile
Bonagera, 232nd Field Artillery, recalled a story about a
friend during the war, “He was captured in Germany.
He persuaded a German fraulein to help him. She said she would,
providing that he got a letter to her son -- a POW in Camp
Gruber, Oklahoma. He got away, safe and sound, and threw the
letter in the ditch.”
Camp
Gruber closed the prisoner compound in May 1946. The highest
number of POWs confined at the camp, 4, 702, occurred on October
3, 1945. During the camp’s three year history, eight
men escaped. They were quickly recaptured, or turned themselves
in. The former captives did not return immediately to Germany;
some were sent to work in war-ravaged countries to help repair
damages. Food, clothing, and shelter shortages were prevalent
in Europe. To prepare them for conditions at home, POW rations
were cut in May 1945. The prisoners thought the Americans
were being cruel.
Mary
Dill, of Wagoner, Oklahoma, became acquainted with several
prisoners while working at Camp Gruber. After the war, she
corresponded with them, sending clothing and “care packages”
to the former captives and their families.
Not everyone
felt kind toward the Germans. Upon their return to Camp Gruber,
angry American troops shot and smashed the POW stonework.
Tensions were particularly high after hearing of numerous
German atrocities to allied prisoners.
Camp
Gruber closed at the end of the war, and dismantling the camp
began. The buildings, with few exceptions, were sold or donated
for civilian use. The remaining concrete foundations are consumed
by grass, but represent the magnitude of the camp in its prime.
The prisoner compound no longer has buildings, and the area
is overgrown with thicket. Salvaged stonework, and a drainage
ditch inscribed “PW 1943,” are the only visible
indications of the German prisoners of war.
Camp
Gruber reopened in 1977, for reserve and active unit training.
In 1988, the National Guard Air Assault School was opened.
The school is the only air assault training facility for the
National Guard, and is rated number one of all air assault
schools in the nation.
by Janet
Allen |