United States Army in World War II: The Technical Services

The Corps of Engineers: Construction in the United States

by Lenore Fine and Jesse A. Remington

1972

Table of Contents

Foreword

Preface

Chapter 1: Legacy of World War I

A Backward Glance—Mobilization: 1917—Centralization—Congress Investigates—The Compromise of 1920

Chapter 2: Lean Years

The Construction Service, 1920–1938—Preparedness and Public Works—Mobilization Plans

Chapter 3: Coming of the Emergency

The Expansion Program—The Quest for Funds—Questions of Responsibility—Quartermaster Plans and Preparations—Construction Gets Under Way—The Period of the Phony War

Chapter 4: First Steps Toward Mobilization

The Defense Program—Early Preparations—Creating an Organization—Site Selection—Mounting Pressure

Chapter 5: Launching Defense Construction

Policies and Policymakers—Engineering—Real Estate—Selecting Contractors—Negotiating Contracts

Chapter 6: The First Camps

The Administrative Setup—Preliminary Work at Camp Sites—Lumber and Other Materials—Construction Equipment—Labor—Management and Supervision—Nearing the Goal

Chapter 7: The Reorganization of Late 1940

The Engineers’ Predicament—Growth of the Engineer Mission—A Separate Corps?—Reorganization and Restaffing—Transfer of Air Corps Construction

Chapter 8: Completing the Camps

The Deficit Problem—Additional Funds—Winter Construction—Closing Out Contracts—Maintenance and Operation

Chapter 9: Creating a Munitions Industry

Status of the Program—December 1940—Dollars Versus Days—Demands for Greater Speed—The Steel Shortage—Completing the First-Wave Plants

Chapter 10: Planning Ahead

Advance Planning—Camps and Cantonments—A New Approach—Munitions Projects—A Stronger Organization—The Building Trades Agreement

Chapter 11: The Public Image

Publicity and Public Relations—Congressman Engel Investigates—House and Senate Committee Investigations

Chapter 12: Real Estate: A Fresh Departure

The Case of the Brokerage Contracts—Changes in Organization and Procedures

Chapter 13: Toward a Four-Million-Man Army

Budgetary Politics—Contractual Refinements and Reforms—The Pentagon Project

Chapter 14: The Transfer

A Test for the Engineers—Reaching a Decision—The “Madigan Bill”—Consolidation

Chapter 15: The Impact of War

The All-Out Program—The War Construction Command—The Big Push—Peak Construction

Chapter 16: The Materials Battle

Bare Essentials—Procurement Problems—Lumber Crisis—The Last Ounce

Chapter 17: Wartime Contracts

Cost-Plus-A-Fixed-Fee—Modified Fixed-Price—Competition and Negotiation—Renegotiation

Chapter 18: Cutback and Continuation

Curtailment—Topping Out—Late Programs

Chapter 19: Airfields for Very Heavy Bombers

The Technological Barrier—Breakthrough and Advance, 1942–1944—New Horizons

Chapter 20: Atomic Mission

MED: Origins and Early Efforts—Clinton and Hanford—Zia

Appendix—Army Construction in the Continental United States, 1 July 1940–31 August 1945

Bibliographical Note

List of Abbreviations

Index

Tables

1. National Army Cantonments, 1917

2. National Guard Camps, 1917

3. Appropriations for Maintenance and Repairs

4. Construction Workers in the United States, June 1940

5. Schedule of Minimum Fees for Construction Services

6. Schedule of Average Fees for Architect-Engineer Services

7. Schedule for Housing National Guard Divisions

8. Revised Induction Schedule for Fall 1940 Quota of Selectees

9. Reserve Officers on Active Duty With Construction Division, 13 December 1940

10. Number of Persons Employed on Projects Under Jurisdiction of Construction Division, OQMG, July-December 1940

11. Cost of Air Corps Projects

12. Summary of Quartermaster Projects Completed and Under Way, 5 December 1941

13. Revised Schedule of Fees for Architect-Engineer and Construction Services, 23 June 1941

14. Division Engineer Service Command Assignments

15. Status of Projects, 15–31 March 1942

16. Hospital Cost Estimates

17. Breakdown of Delaying Factors, 31 May-31 October 1942

18. Lumber Purchased by CPA, 1942–1945

19. Variations in Barracks Capacity

20. Unfinished Construction, January 1944

Charts

1. Organization of Construction Division of the Army, April-November 1918

2. Volume of New Construction in the United States, 1925–1939

3. Organization of Construction Division, OQMG, June-November 1940

4. Organization of Engineering Branch, Construction Division, OQMG, September 1940

5. Organization of Fixed Fee Branch, Construction Division, OQMG, November 1940

6. Organization of Construction Division, OQMG, 16 December 1940

7. Organization of Office of Assistant Chief of Engineers, December 1940

8. Organization of Operations Branch, Construction Division, OQMG, January to March 1941

9. Rate of National Guard Inductions

10. Rate of Selective Service Inductions

11. Progressive Improvements in Divisional Cantonment Layouts

12. Value of Work Placed by Month on Quartermaster Construction Program, 1 July 1940 to 30 November 1941

13. Comparison of Costs—Quartermaster Construction Program, 1 April to 15 December 1941

14. Organization of Defense Projects Branch, Construction Section, OCE, April 1941

15. Construction by the Corps of Engineers at Air Corps Stations—U.S. Army

16. Position of Corps of Engineers in War Department After 9 March 1942

17. Organization of Construction Division, OCE, April 1942

18. Value of Work in Place, Monthly Additions

19. Organization of Engineering Branch, Construction Division, OCE, Spring 1942

20. Dollar Value of Work Placed During 1943

21. Field Employment During 1943

22. Organization of Military Construction, Civil Works, and Real Estate Divisions, OCE, December 1943

23. Value of Work Placed on War Construction Program, Continental United States, June 1940-August 1945

24. Tentative Design Curves for Flexible Airfield Pavements

25. Design Storm Index

26. Wheel Loads as Columns of Concrete 3 Feet 8 Inches in Diameter

27. Organization of Manhattan Engineer District, April 1943

Maps

1. Inland Zone and Five Strategic Areas

2. Quartermaster Construction Zones

3. Boundaries of Engineer Divisions, December 1942

4. Clinton Engineer Works

5. Hanford Engineer Works

Illustrations

Camp Custer, Michigan—Tents at Camp Wheeler, Georgia, 1917—Barracks and Lavatories, Camp Dix, New Jersey—Brig. Gen. Richard C. Marshall—Old Hickory Powder Plant, Tennessee—Chanute Field, Illinois, Showing Dilapidated Structures—Post Chapel, Randolph Field, Texas—Officers’ Club, Fort Belvoir, Virginia—Camp on Levee, Arkansas City, Arkansas, During 1927 Flood—Col. Charles D. Hartman—USS Houston Passing Through Panama Canal—Barracks Burning at Hickam Field After Japanese Attack—Maj. Gen. Julian L. Schley—Maj. Gen. Edmund B. Gregory—Equipment Arriving at Borinquen Field, Puerto Rico—Maj. Gen. Richard C. Moore—Ferdinand J. C. Dresser, Forrest S. Harvey, and Francis Blossom—Barksdale Field, Louisiana, in Late 1930s—Excavation at Fort Devens, Massachusetts—Robert P . Patterson—Harry W. Loving—Capt. Leslie R. Groves—Michael J . Madigan—Frank E . Lamphere—Mess Hall, Camp Grant, Illinois—Hangar Construction, MacDill Field, Florida—Site of Plum Brook Ordnance Works, Ohio—Cantonment Construction, Camp Edwards, Massachusetts—Clearing Swamps at Camp Blanding, Florida—Railroad Bridge Over Big Piney River, Camp Leonard Wood, Missouri—Camp San Luis Obispo, California—Building Barracks, Camp Leonard Wood, Missouri—Prefabricating Yard and Sawmill, Camp Blanding, Florida—Standard Chapel, Exterior View—Standard Chapel, Interior View—Bonneville Dam—Col. Brehon B. Somervell—Col. Wilhelm D. Styer—Maj. Clinton F. Robinson—Col. Edmund H. Leavey—Brig. Gen. Thomas M. Robins—Camp San Luis Obispo After Heavy Downpour—Pouring Concrete in Subzero Weather, Pine Camp, New York—Camp Blanding, Florida, Late November 1940—Men of the 29th Division at Camp Meade, Maryland—Barnes General Hospital, Vancouver, Washington—Spillway Under Construction, Camp San Luis Obispo—Aerial View of Camp Jackson, S.C—Frank R . Creedon—Construction at Indiana Ordnance Works, 1940—General Grant (M3) Rolls Off Assembly Line—Night Shift at Work, St. Louis Ordnance Plant—Constructing Standard Igloo Magazine—Somervell Addressing Construction Force—Morgantown Ordnance Works, West Virginia—Experimental Steel Barracks—Lake City Ordnance Plant, Missouri—James P . Mitchell—Flag Raising at Radford Ordnance Works, Virginia—Fitzpatrick Cartoon on Senator Truman—John J . O’Brien—Pentagon Building, Main Entrance—Cartoonist’s View of Controversy over Pentagon Site—Concrete Drainage Culvert at Brookley Field, Alabama—Paving Runway, Lowry Field, Colorado—Bradley Field, Windsor Locks, Connecticut—Fort Worth Aircraft Assembly Plant, Texas—Maj. Gen. Eugene Reybold—Transfer Proposal Approved by the President—Hutments, Fort Sill, Oklahoma, July 1942—Maj. Gen. John R. Hardin—Col. Samuel D. Sturgis, J r—Pentagon Under Construction—xvii Page Heart Mountain Relocation Center, Heart Mountain, Wyoming—Brig. Gen. James H. Stratton—Harry B. Zackrison—Bachelor Officers’ Quarters, Sioux Fails Army Air Force Base, South Dakota—Corbetta Beehive Magazine Under Construction—Wood Truss Construction, Pennsylvania Ordnance Works—Col. Fred G. Sherrill—Airmen on Grounds of Stevens Hotel—Double-Decker Bunks in Permanent Barracks, March Field, California—Winter Construction at Mountain Home Air Base, Idaho—Holston Ordnance Works, Tennessee—Work in Progress on Tulsa Bomber Modification Center—Conference at Stockton Test Track, California—240,000-Pound Pneumatic Roller—Brig. Gen. James C. Marshall—Col. Kenneth D. Nichols—General Groves as Head of the Manhattan Project—Mrs. Jean M. O’Leary—Cemesto Houses on Black Oak Ridge—Y-12, Electromagnetic Process Plant—First Pile Area at Hanford, June 1944—S-50, Thermal Diffusion Plant Under Construction—K-25, Gaseous Diffusion Plant Nearing Completion—Separation Building at Hanford, Summer 1944—View of Los Alamos

Illustrations are from the following sources: E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., Inc.: page 26. National Archives: pages 78, 108, 386, 515. AGC, Carolinas Branch: page 147. United Press International, Inc.: page 159. Charles T. Main, Inc.: page 197. Leeds, Hill and Jewett, Inc.: pages 283, 299. St. Louis Post-Dispatch: pages 326, 337. Library of Congress: page 436. Stone & Webster Engineering Corp.: pages 530, 534. J. A. Terteling & Sons, Inc.: page 595. Sverdrup & Parcel and Associates, Inc.: page 597. Atomic Energy Commission: pages 671, 685, 688, 689, 691, 692, 699. Other photographs came from Department of Defense files and through the courtesy of private individuals.