Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD)

 - Class of 1923

Page 14 of 173

 

Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 14 of 173
Page 14 of 173



Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 13
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Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 15
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Page 14 text:

THE DEFENDER also of patriotic and military socie- ties, business and social groups of many kinds, including Chambers of Commerce, the American Legion, the Knights of Columbus, manu- facturers, bankers, merchants, agri- cultural societies and especially of men of civilian occupation, who hold commissions in the Reserve. All of these have rendered import- ant service and more particularly the Military Training Camps Asso- ciation of the United States, which has developed into a nation-wide non-political, civilian organization acting as a self-starter in the re- cruiting work of other civilian groups. Its relation to the War Department is indicated by a letter from the Secretary of War, reading in part as follows: IYAR DEP,iR'rM1sNT November 28, IQ22. Mr. Charles B. Pike, Military Training Camps Assn., 210 Mallers Building, Chicago, Illinois I am pleased to inform you that I accept in principle the pat- riotic offer of the Military Train- ing Camps Association submitted to me by you on October Ioth, 1922, and I hereby extend to the llmlis W- IIIMTSWOTWII Military Training Camps Associ- ation formal recognition as a co- operating agency in fostering the voluntary military training of citizens. To promote cooperation between the Military Training Camps Association and the agencies of the IVar Department, I authorize the appointment of Civilian Aides to the Secretary of War, these Aides to comprise a Chief Civilian Aide and an Aide for each corps area, each State and for the District of Columbia. The Chief Civilian Aide will be appointed directly by the Secretary of War on nomination by the Military Training Camp Association, other Civilian Aides on nomination by the Military Training Camps Assoc- ation and with approval of corps area commanders concerned. The foregoing Civilian Aides will be appointed for a period of four years, subject to renomination and reappoint- ment at the close of that period 4' 'F ' 'Q 4' The Military Training Camps Association is further authorized to create a system of county and local chairmen-thus completing in detail a nation-wide organization for Citizens, Military Training Camp recruiting in the time of peace and for such wider func- tion as may be requested by the VVar Department ' 4' ' ' 'k I am highly appreciative of the patriotic motives which have led the Military Training Camps Association to make the valued offer which has been accepted above, and Clmiriuan of lln' Srnalr Clllllllllifffl' Military .-Xllairs Pagf 7'lzirzm1

Page 13 text:

--l' THE DEFENDER weight and heightg in any case you trained to a condition of bodily fitness. All these things you know but to some benefits for yourself and others you may not have given thought. Vv'hen you wrote your application for the Citizens' Military Training Camp you were given a physical examination, it was not very severe, but it served to impress both you and your friends with the importance of physical health. At the camp you passed another test and then entered on a course of training which has certainly given you a greater sense of physical well-being. You were taught also some basic facts of per- sonal and social hygiene and sanitation to carry back to your own home town and pass on to your comrades, thus becoming yourself the missionary of a new gospel of physical health and efliciency. Perhaps now you can get posted in your town hall or post oflice the printed standards of bodily condition and capacity and so help to make a new generation of able-bodied youth. Something, too, you learned at camp about the duties of a citizeng you must have felt occasionally, as never before, the thrill of patriotismg the whole train- ing tended to develop in you certain habits and ways of thinking which will make you more worthwhile in the town in which you live. You have found that a Citizens, Military Training Camp is a place where military, physical and civic training are combined to make a better citizen. . YVhen you heard about the training camps the idea aroused a quick response but you Wm. LAss1'r1zR Maj. Cm. U. S. Jrmy 1,11 gr Twrlve probably never thought how difli- cult it is to make this opportunity known to a million or more young men who come each year to the proper age for admission. The mere broad-casting of information about the camps is in itself a tremendous task. VVhen one considers the amount of time, energy and money,involved in an ordinary primary or general election even within the confines of one State one has some idea of what is needed in publicity. The VVar Department has en- trusted as far as possible the con- duct of these camps to the nine Corps Area Commanders through- out the United States. To each Headquarters is attached a Citi- zens' Military Training Camp Of- ficer, who is primarily responsible for recruiting within the area. The Corps Area Commander has at his service also for this purpose the Regular Army Officers, who are his Chiefs of Staff with the Reserve Divisions and also the Ofiicers who are detailed as R. O. T. C. instruc- tors at schools, colleges and uni- versities. In brief, the entire re- sources ofthe regular establishment are available and have been used effectively for the promotion of citizen training. For the past three years the War Department has had the help



Page 15 text:

-1 THE DEFENDER -- v look forward with pleasurable antic- ipation to the results to be achieved by this plan of cooperation. Yours very truly, . CSignedD JOHN W. WEEKS. Secretary of War. Pursuant to this action by the NVar Department the Military Training Camps Association at its new Headquarters in Chicago made the following nominations as Civi- lian Aides to the Secretary of War and they were duly confirmed: Chief Civilian Aide, Charles B. Pike, 210 Mallets Bldg., Chicago. Corps Area, First, Pierpont L. Stackpole, Box 1955, Boston. Second, James D. Williams, 61 Broadway, New York. Third, Horace B. Hare, Belle- vue Ct. Bldg., Philadelphia. Fourth, Clark Howell, Jr., Atlanta Constitution, Atlanta. Fifth, Benson R. Hedges, Huntington Natl. Bank Bldg., Col- umbus. Sixth, Noble B. Judah, 134 So. LaSalle St., Chicago. Seventh, Charles S. Walker, ISt and Vine Sts., Des Moines. Eighth, W. S. Hendrick, Mor- Cl , 'II lU?11l3S KAHN , F I ris Plan Bank, San Antonio. l!l11'7llfl7l Ouff L'p7'6',YL'1llC1flUL'J' 40Nl'Nl1fli': . Mi1imryAgai,.S Ninth, Roy C. VVard, 312 California St., San Francisco. At the same meeting the Association elected the following National Officers:-Henry S. Drinker, Honorary President, Charles B. Pike, President, Charles S. Dewey, Treas- urer, Tom R. Wyles, Secretary, George F. James, Executive Secretary. An Execu- tive Committee was appointed to include: John A. Holabird, Chairmang WVm. Marshall Bullitt, Grenville Clark, Arthur F. Cosby, Charles G. Dawes, Robert Homans, Phelps Newberry, Albert T. Perkins, Henry Reilly, Joseph T. Ryerson, Horace C. Stebbins, Archibald G. Thacher and all national officers ex-officio. You are naturally interested in the Military Training Camps Association because its primary concern is for the Citizens' Military Training Camps. To promote this work it has effected an organization during the current year in accordance with the thought of the Secretary of WVar by the appointment of Civilian Aides in every State, and also the District of Columbia,and the selection by them of their own representatives in every county so far as time has permitted. It was diflicult to inform young men truly in re- gard to the camps of 1923. In one county after considerable newspaper announcement, many possible candidates were found to be still under the impression that the camps were intended for those only who have had some military training, that they are not really free of expense or that enrollment implies enlistment in the Regular Army. To Page Fourfrcn

Suggestions in the Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD) collection:

Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 36

1923, pg 36

Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 153

1923, pg 153

Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 127

1923, pg 127

Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 163

1923, pg 163

Citizens Military Training Camp - Defender Yearbook (Camp Meade, MD) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 51

1923, pg 51


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