US Naval Training Center - Anchor Yearbook (San Diego, CA)
- Class of 1989
Page 6 of 112
Page 6 of 112
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Page 6 text:
“
HISTORY
The NAVAL TRAINING CENTER, San Diego, had
its inception in 1916 when Mr. William Kettner, Con-
gressman from the Eleventh Congressional District of
California and spokesman for the San Diego Chamber
of Commerce, interested the Honorable Franklin D.
Roosevelt, then Assistant Secretary of the Navy, in
establishing a naval training activity on the shores of
San Diego Bay. Due to the Nations entry into World
War I, further development of this plan was postponed
until 1919, when Congress authorized acceptance by
the Navy of the present site of the Training Center. The
original grant consisted of 135 acres of highland donated
by the San Diego Chamber of Commerce and 142 acres
of tideland given by the City of San Diego. Construction
work began in 1921, and on IJune 1923 the U.S. Naval
Training Station, San Diego, was placed in commission
under the command of Captain tlater Rear AdmiraD
David F. Sellers, US. Navy.
At the time of its commissioning in 1923 the station
bore little resemblance to its present size or arrange-
ment. At that time Camp PaulJones housed the entire
population of the station and the maximum recruit
strength was 1,500. The period of recruit training was
then sixteen weeks. The shore line of San Diego Bay
extended considerably further inland than at present,
and the land now occupied by Preble Field, the North
Athletic area and Camp Farragut was entirely under
water. The recruit parade ground was located on the
present site of the Public Works garage. During the
192015 the Recruit Receiving and Outgoing Units were
housed in the Detention Unit, known as Camp Ingram,
which consisted of a group of walled tents adjacent to
the south boundary of Camp Paul Jones. Until Camp
Lawrence was completed in 1936, recruits spent their
first three weeks of training under canvas in this Det-
ention Unit.
In 1939 a construction program was commenced
which within three years was to increase the capacity
of the station four-fold. This expansion went hand in
glove with a large scale program of harbor improve-
ments by means of which the channel and anchorages
in San Diego Bay were deepened and 130 acres of filled
land were added to the eastern boundaries of the sta-
tion. By 1941 Camp Luce had been completed, and the
construction Camps Mahan, Decatur, and Farragut
was already well under way when theJapanese at tacked
Pearl Harbor. Virtually all this construction work was
completed by September, 1942, when the capacity of the
station had reached its wartime peak of 33,000 men,
25,000 of whom were recruits. The period of recruit
training during World War II varied between three
weeks and seven weeks.
In April, 1944, the Secretary of the Navy changed the
status of the Training Station to that of a group com-
mand and redesignated it the US. Naval Training Cen-
ter, San Diego. Under the Center Commander were
established three subordinate commands: The Recruit
Training Command, The Service School Command and
the Naval Training Station.
The years immediately following World War II saw a
considerable reduction in population of the Training
Center despite a post-war expansion of the Service
Schools, and by the end of 1949 the population of the
Center had dropped to a twenty-year low of 5,800 men.
Six months later, when the Communists invaded the
Republic of Korea, and immediate expansion of all
Naval training activities took place and by September
of 1950 the Center was again operating at nearly full
capacity.
During the early months of the Korean conflict it
became apparent that the demand for trained personnel
in the rapidly growing Pacific Fleet would require
further expansion of this training center. Accordingly
steps were taken by the Navy Department to reactive
Camp Elliott, formerly a World War II Marine Corps
training camp which is located ten miles north of San
Diego on Kearny Mesa. On 15January 1951 Camp Elli-
ott was placed in commission as Elliott Annex of the
Naval Training Center for the purpose of conducting
the primary phases of recruit training. In March, 1953,
in line with the planned reduction in size of the Navy,
training at Elliott Annex was discontinued and it was
placed in an inactive status. During its two years of
operation, over 150,000 recruits received training there.
Late in 1952 projects were approved to convert some
recruit barracks into classrooms and to extend training
facilities by construction of a permanent recruit camp
on the undeveloped Training Center land lying to the
south and east of the estuary. The six converted bar-
racks went into service as recruit classrooms in April,
1953, and construction work on the new camp was
completed in 1955.
In late 1965, the demand for trained Navy men to man
the additional ships and overseas billets, required to
meet the Vietnam crisis, brought the on-board popula-
tion to a record of over 18,000 recruits, the highest since
Korea. At the same time a military construction pro-
gram got underway with the foundation ofa new 8,000-
man mess hall being laid adjacent to Bainbridge Court.
In addition, an ambitious five-year program was for-
malized for the construction of modern barracks, TV
classrooms and administration facilities. The face lift-
ing of the Recruit Command was completed by the early
1970's.
”
Page 7 text:
“
In the furtherance of its mission of supplying trained
naval personnel to the fleets and ships of the United
States Navy, each of the three subordinate commands
of the Naval Training Center has important roles to fill.
The Naval Training Station has the responsibility of
conducting most of the Centers administrative busi-
ness and furnishing a wide range of services necessary
to the daily life of the large community which the Cen-
ter has become. The Administrative Command has the
responsibility of maintaining the Centers buildings
and grounds, and through its facilities all personnel on
the Center are housed, fed, clothed and paid, and
receive their medical and dental care. The Naval Train-
ing Station also provides such other community servi-
ces as recreational and Navy Exchange facilities; com-
munications, postal and transportation services;
and police and fire protection.
Under the Service School Command are grouped
more than twenty Navy Schools in which recruits as
well as men from the fleet receive training in the spe-
cialized duties of certain ratings. Most of these are
Class 0A" schools, where non-rated men learn the skills
and information necessary to them to perform a specific
petty officer rating. Among these schools are those
which train electricians mates, radiomen. Other schools
teach specialized skills such as teletype maintenance
and stenography. The present capacity of the Service
Schools is about 5,000 men.
Today after six decades of service to the Navy the
Naval Training Center San Diego still faces with confi-
dence the challenges of an unsettled world.
”
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