Traveling
Tuesday: West Virginia During WWII
West Virginia is the only state in America to form by
seceding from a Confederate state. (Wikipedia has an interesting article about how that occurred). Nearly eighty years after joining the Union, West
Virginia played a large role in World War II. Factories, mills, and mines expanded
their workforce to produce huge quantities of materiel for the U.S. military
and its Allies. Interwoven Hosiery manufactured socks for the army and navy,
while other companies made tires, planes, jeeps, trucks, and parachutes. The
railroad was kept busy transporting goods and servicemen and women.
The state is proud of the fact that it provided the fifth
highest percentage of soldiers: nearly 220,000. Additionally, more than 1,000
of its women donned uniforms to serve in the auxiliary services.
Here are some of West Virginia’s award recipients:
- Hershel Williams received the Medal of Honor for his bravery on Iwo Jima.
- Harrison Summers took out thirty-one German soldiers during exceptionally heavy fighting.
- Foster Feathers searched for landmines on Normandy.
- George Roberts, the Army Air Corps first black cadet was a combat pilot.
Now the Greenbrier Valley Airport, the field was used
by the Army Air Force during the war. Other air fields include Cumberland,
Elkins, Moundsville, and Buckhannon.
And what about those enemy alien diplomats? Rather than immediately shipping them home,
the U.S. interned the Germans and Italians at the Greenbrier Resort in White
Sulphur Springs. Diplomats from Hungary also stayed at the Greenbrier. The
Japanese were sent to The Homestead Resort in Virginia. One article I found
indicated that despite being allies in the war, the Germans and Italians did
not get along (read: acrimonious), and the Italians were moved to the Grove
Park Inn.
Children of German Diplomats at the Greenbrier |
Reasoning for a “high-end” experience for these
individuals was the idea that if they were well-treated, U.S. embassy personnel
would receive the same treatment. Internment was only supposed to last a couple
of days, but instead dragged on for seven months because of red tape. Prisoners
were exchanged during the summer of 1941 by way of Madagascar, South America,
and other locations.
In late 1942, the Army purchased the property and
converted it to the 2,000 bed Ashford General Hospital. Opening in October
1943, the facility served over 25,000 casualties before closing in 1946.
Thank you for your service, West Virginia.
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