This is my first attempt at writing anything longer than a letter, so please be patient with me. It's the true (as best I can recall) story of my time in Uncle Sam's Army.
In January of 1960 I was a recent graduate of the US Army Signal School at Fort Gordon, GA after 16 weeks of radioteletype training. When the orders came out, mine said I was to report to Fort Belvoir, VA at USAPR&DC Headquarters. “What the heck is USAPR&DC?” was the first thing I thought. Over the next two weeks at home on leave, I asked everyone I knew what that meant. Nobody had an answer for me.
Upon arrival at Fort Belvoir, I received directions to USAPR&DC Headquarters. Duffle bag in hand, I shuffled off the bus in front of a big sign that said, “Welcome to the US Army Polar Research and Development Center”. That was a shock. Who knew there even was such a thing?
Life at Fort Belvoir was somewhat laid back compared to the rigid schedules at Ft. Hood in basic and Ft. Gordon in radioteletype school, and I quickly adapted to the daily routine. Mostly we reported to the Com Center where we swapped yarns about our past civilian lives and talked about radio. The folks who had been there a while told tales about Greenland, where we would soon be going. One of the guys said there's a beautiful girl behind every tree. He neglected to mention there are no trees in Greenland. Camp Tuto, the base camp, was closed for the winter, and we would all be shipping out in April to reopen the camp. The seasoned troops explained that some of us would stay at Camp Tuto, and others would be assigned to “heavy swing” duty. Still others would be stationed at Camp Century, later dubbed “City Under the Ice” by Walter Cronkite.
When April rolled around, we packed our duffle bags and boarded buses for a nearby Air Force base. I had no idea what to expect until I saw the huge C-124 as the buses pulled up alongside it. It was a 4-engined cargo hauler, and we were to be the cargo. Inside it was bare aluminum walls with a row of web benches down each side. Our bags and gear were piled in the middle, and we rumbled off on our big adventure. The trip was long, LOUD and cold. Did I mention LOUD? We made a fuel stop at Gander, Newfoundland and finally arrived at Thule AFB, Greenland about 16 hours after leaving the States. Thule would become “downtown” for us hicks in the sticks.
At Thule we got aboard buses and made the 14-mile trek up a dirt road to Camp Tuto, located at the edge of the ice cap. Everything was still buried in snow, so the first order of business was to get into the supply hut, a canvas “Jamesway” structure. Once we dug our way to the door and opened it, we found the inside was also packed with snow. That put a dent in our morale, but we set about shoveling aisles to get to the supplies.
Our barracks were orange prefabbed single-story buildings set in neat rows . There was no way to bury pipes in the permafrost, so all plumbing was above ground. There were no toilets or showers in the barracks. We had communal showers and 6-hole outhouses set up in several places throughout the camp, so there were lots of dirty, constipated folks walking around there. Having your butt frozen to a toilet seat was no fun. Emptying the half-drums under the holes was no fun either, but that's another story.
After clearing a path to the doors of the barracks, we made ourselves at home. There were windows down each wall of the barracks, and the experienced troops explained that the windows were how to tell the time. In the morning, the sun shines in this side, and at night it shines in that side. The sun was very low in the sky and only dipped below the horizon briefly for a semi-twilight. It was a little weird getting used to the sun circling the horizon rather than rising and setting.
At the com shack, about ½ mile from the barracks, we were assigned duty shifts of 12 hours on, 12 hours off, 7 days a week. It's not like we had anywhere to go for entertainment anyway, so we might as well work. We got acquainted with the radios and learned that only rarely would we be using the teletypes. Most of our communications would be using CW (International Morse Code) and voice with an occasional incoming teletype. Due to atmospheric conditions, there were times when radio signals would be totally unreliable, and CW was the most reliable mode we had.
As the camp stirred back to life after its long winter nap, there was lots of activity on the edge of the ice cap just above the camp. Trucks were running in a steady stream hauling materials and supplies up to be loaded onto the heavy swing for transport to Camp Century. The heavy swing was a group of sled trains pulled by D8 and D9 Caterpillar tractors on 54” wide low ground pressure track pads. There were usually 5 – 6 trains, each with 5 or 6 cargo sleds. One train was the command train, and it consisted of a command “wanigan” plus a barracks wanigan, a mess hall and a generator sled. As the radio operator, the command wanigan was my office and sleeping quarters. It was linked behind the mess hall, and the barracks was ahead of the mess hall. The generator was right behind the Cat.
The trail to Camp Century had been explored and marked previously with poles and green flags. The flags were several hundred feet apart, making it easy to stay on the trail during good weather and daylight. Bad weather, however, brought things to a screeching whoa. Blowing snow obscured vision during storms, so the heavy swing waited until the storm passed to resume travel. That sometimes presented a problem when the sleds' skis would freeze to the surface, and snow would bank against the sides of the trains. That meant every stop of more than a couple of hours would require a Cat with a blade to scrape the snow away from the trains and break each set of skis loose from the surface. Weather wasn't the only reason for delays. Mechanical breakdowns slowed progress as well. The 138 mile trip took a week to ten days each way with weather and mechanical delays.
Since the trains only made about 2 – 3 miles per hour, we often walked alongside for exercise. The dry cold was quite comfortable just wearing a long sleeve wool shirt and wool trousers. Sometimes we played football during mechanical breakdowns. We used frozen reconstituted milk in a quart carton as a ball. Missing a pass could be deadly if it hit the receiver in the head.
Speaking of frozen food, our food storage was the roof of the mess hall. No need for a freezer inside, as Mother Nature handled the task very well. The tractor driver whose ineptitude caused more mechanical breakdowns than most was designated as the cook. His cooking skill was a distant second place to his tractor driving skill. One morning as I entered the mess hall, I asked the cook what was on the menu for breakfast. He replied that we were going to have grapefruit, Spam, eggs and toast, except he threw out the grapefruit. I asked what was wrong with it, and he said he cut one open and it was all pink inside, so he figured it was ruined. He had tossed the whole case of Texas Ruby Red Grapefruit off the train a couple of miles back. I was considering the ramifications of lynching him on the spot, but calmer heads prevailed.
To Be Continued...
In January of 1960 I was a recent graduate of the US Army Signal School at Fort Gordon, GA after 16 weeks of radioteletype training. When the orders came out, mine said I was to report to Fort Belvoir, VA at USAPR&DC Headquarters. “What the heck is USAPR&DC?” was the first thing I thought. Over the next two weeks at home on leave, I asked everyone I knew what that meant. Nobody had an answer for me.
Upon arrival at Fort Belvoir, I received directions to USAPR&DC Headquarters. Duffle bag in hand, I shuffled off the bus in front of a big sign that said, “Welcome to the US Army Polar Research and Development Center”. That was a shock. Who knew there even was such a thing?
Life at Fort Belvoir was somewhat laid back compared to the rigid schedules at Ft. Hood in basic and Ft. Gordon in radioteletype school, and I quickly adapted to the daily routine. Mostly we reported to the Com Center where we swapped yarns about our past civilian lives and talked about radio. The folks who had been there a while told tales about Greenland, where we would soon be going. One of the guys said there's a beautiful girl behind every tree. He neglected to mention there are no trees in Greenland. Camp Tuto, the base camp, was closed for the winter, and we would all be shipping out in April to reopen the camp. The seasoned troops explained that some of us would stay at Camp Tuto, and others would be assigned to “heavy swing” duty. Still others would be stationed at Camp Century, later dubbed “City Under the Ice” by Walter Cronkite.
When April rolled around, we packed our duffle bags and boarded buses for a nearby Air Force base. I had no idea what to expect until I saw the huge C-124 as the buses pulled up alongside it. It was a 4-engined cargo hauler, and we were to be the cargo. Inside it was bare aluminum walls with a row of web benches down each side. Our bags and gear were piled in the middle, and we rumbled off on our big adventure. The trip was long, LOUD and cold. Did I mention LOUD? We made a fuel stop at Gander, Newfoundland and finally arrived at Thule AFB, Greenland about 16 hours after leaving the States. Thule would become “downtown” for us hicks in the sticks.
At Thule we got aboard buses and made the 14-mile trek up a dirt road to Camp Tuto, located at the edge of the ice cap. Everything was still buried in snow, so the first order of business was to get into the supply hut, a canvas “Jamesway” structure. Once we dug our way to the door and opened it, we found the inside was also packed with snow. That put a dent in our morale, but we set about shoveling aisles to get to the supplies.
Our barracks were orange prefabbed single-story buildings set in neat rows . There was no way to bury pipes in the permafrost, so all plumbing was above ground. There were no toilets or showers in the barracks. We had communal showers and 6-hole outhouses set up in several places throughout the camp, so there were lots of dirty, constipated folks walking around there. Having your butt frozen to a toilet seat was no fun. Emptying the half-drums under the holes was no fun either, but that's another story.
After clearing a path to the doors of the barracks, we made ourselves at home. There were windows down each wall of the barracks, and the experienced troops explained that the windows were how to tell the time. In the morning, the sun shines in this side, and at night it shines in that side. The sun was very low in the sky and only dipped below the horizon briefly for a semi-twilight. It was a little weird getting used to the sun circling the horizon rather than rising and setting.
At the com shack, about ½ mile from the barracks, we were assigned duty shifts of 12 hours on, 12 hours off, 7 days a week. It's not like we had anywhere to go for entertainment anyway, so we might as well work. We got acquainted with the radios and learned that only rarely would we be using the teletypes. Most of our communications would be using CW (International Morse Code) and voice with an occasional incoming teletype. Due to atmospheric conditions, there were times when radio signals would be totally unreliable, and CW was the most reliable mode we had.
As the camp stirred back to life after its long winter nap, there was lots of activity on the edge of the ice cap just above the camp. Trucks were running in a steady stream hauling materials and supplies up to be loaded onto the heavy swing for transport to Camp Century. The heavy swing was a group of sled trains pulled by D8 and D9 Caterpillar tractors on 54” wide low ground pressure track pads. There were usually 5 – 6 trains, each with 5 or 6 cargo sleds. One train was the command train, and it consisted of a command “wanigan” plus a barracks wanigan, a mess hall and a generator sled. As the radio operator, the command wanigan was my office and sleeping quarters. It was linked behind the mess hall, and the barracks was ahead of the mess hall. The generator was right behind the Cat.
The trail to Camp Century had been explored and marked previously with poles and green flags. The flags were several hundred feet apart, making it easy to stay on the trail during good weather and daylight. Bad weather, however, brought things to a screeching whoa. Blowing snow obscured vision during storms, so the heavy swing waited until the storm passed to resume travel. That sometimes presented a problem when the sleds' skis would freeze to the surface, and snow would bank against the sides of the trains. That meant every stop of more than a couple of hours would require a Cat with a blade to scrape the snow away from the trains and break each set of skis loose from the surface. Weather wasn't the only reason for delays. Mechanical breakdowns slowed progress as well. The 138 mile trip took a week to ten days each way with weather and mechanical delays.
Since the trains only made about 2 – 3 miles per hour, we often walked alongside for exercise. The dry cold was quite comfortable just wearing a long sleeve wool shirt and wool trousers. Sometimes we played football during mechanical breakdowns. We used frozen reconstituted milk in a quart carton as a ball. Missing a pass could be deadly if it hit the receiver in the head.
Speaking of frozen food, our food storage was the roof of the mess hall. No need for a freezer inside, as Mother Nature handled the task very well. The tractor driver whose ineptitude caused more mechanical breakdowns than most was designated as the cook. His cooking skill was a distant second place to his tractor driving skill. One morning as I entered the mess hall, I asked the cook what was on the menu for breakfast. He replied that we were going to have grapefruit, Spam, eggs and toast, except he threw out the grapefruit. I asked what was wrong with it, and he said he cut one open and it was all pink inside, so he figured it was ruined. He had tossed the whole case of Texas Ruby Red Grapefruit off the train a couple of miles back. I was considering the ramifications of lynching him on the spot, but calmer heads prevailed.
To Be Continued...
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