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By Fred Carl
Wire and Linemen for messages
One of the keys to victory in modern
warfare is making sure information about battle conditions gets to command.
This way command can direct reinforcements of soldiers and supplies where
they can help most. This is the mission of the U.S. Army Signal
Corps, getting the message through. During the civil war flags, scouts
and horse mounted messengers were the carriers of communications.
During WWI wireless and telephones were employed. During WWII radio,
radar and telephones were used. During the Gulf wars radio,
radar and satellites were and are the cutting edge communications tools.
As a WWII Signal Corps laboratory
Camp Evans supported the Signal Corps mission with "phenomenal" radio,
radar and countermeasures developments. As important as radio
and radar were to victory, the bulk of WWII communications were done over
telephone wires. Camp Evans played a roll in telephone wire
equipment development worthy of being recounted in volume III of the official
history of the Signal Corps in WWII: "The Signal Corps - The Outcome".
The device developed in Wall
was the MX-301/G. It is described as "indeed one answer to wireman’s
prayers" It was a high-speed telephone wire dispenser.
It could lay wire silently, rapidly and without dangerous rotating reels.
It was originally designed for laying wire from an aircraft at speeds up
to 110 miles per hour. In the field linemen found they could adapt
the device to lay wire from a backpack, vehicles traveling 60 miles an
hour or even shoot wire out using bazooka rockets.
The rapid
dispensing of wire was very important. General Eisenhower expected
to need 500 miles a day of "assault" wire or 67,000 miles a month of all
types of wire just in Europe. In reality, after the D-day invasion
breakout the troops were advancing so quickly there was no time to recover
used wire. 75,000 miles of assault wire and 200,000 mile of all wire
was used a month. Without excellent devices to quickly dispense the
wire, like the MX-301/G, communications could not have kept up with the
troops.
In the Pacific theater the dense jungles
made a formidable barrier to easy communications setup. Once
the wire was dispensed the wire had to be elevated onto poles or palm trees
to prevent vehicles or tanks from cutting the wires.
Wall resident, Mr. Warren Cochran,
was a lineman in the Pacific. He was one of the Signal Corps
men who made sure the message got through to help bring about victory.
He was warned by his commanders not to use safety equipment when he climbed
a pole to repair a line. Often the Japanese soldiers would cut the
telephone lines, position a sniper, then wait for the U.S. soldier to climb
the pole to repair the cut. Your safety equipment would save you
from a fall but would keep you from getting down quickly if the sniper
missed on his first shot. Years later as a Bell System employee
Mr. Cochran would not face this type of occupational hazard when he helped
maintain the secure telephone system at Camp Evans.
Besides snipers and surprise attacks the
WWII Pacific theater soldiers had to defend themselves against Japanese
soldiers who hid in deep caves. One night the camp Mr. Cochran
was sleeping was attacked by a Japanese soldier who possibly hid
in a cave waiting to attack U.S. troops.
Right beside, not behind, the soldier
in every war in the 20th century was the Signalman. He was installing
or maintaining telephones, radio or radar in the thick of battle.
These devices were as essential to victory as bullets. Many of these devices
were designed right in Wall at Camp Evans.
Camp Evans was called upon to
help eliminate the problems of Japanese hidden deep in caves. The
solution was classified, messy and shows the desperation of the problem.
This is a story for another day.
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