CAMP HALE AND THE 10TH MOUNTAIN DIVISION
Colorado's tough ski troops helped win WWII
by Louis Dawson
During the Russian-Finnish war in the winter of 1939-40, Finnish
ski troops used skis and guerrilla raids to bring the Russians
to their knees. The Russians rallied in the spring and won the
conflict, but the world took notice of the Finn's keen resistance,
which used their winter skills to great advantage.
Charles Monot "Minnie" Dole (founder of the National Ski Patrol,
U.S.) was one American who saw the importance of what the Finns
had done. Dole formulated a plan to form American ski troops and
went to Washington with his idea, where it was treated with "polite
derision," as Dole later stated. He kept presenting his idea,
however, and eventually found a sympathetic ear in Chief of Staff
General George Marshall. Meanwhile, in the Balkins, invading Italians
had been driven into the mountains by the Greeks. Winter hit.
More than 10,000 Italians died of exposure (in addition to 25,000
battle deaths). It was a disaster and the US Army took notice.
As a result of Dole's persistence and the Balkins debacle, on
November 15, 1941, the 87th Mountain Regiment was created to specialize
in mountain and cold weather warfare. The tyro infantry began
training at Fort Lewis, Washington. To begin, winter training
was mandated for picked men from various divisions. Dole was frustrated,
however: due to the military bureaucracy, many ideal candidates
were still being sent to other divisions. Dole took action and
assigned his assistant to ply a key General's female staffer with
a three martini lunch. Soon after, Dole had a mandate to recruit
for the new regiment. Incidentally, this was the first time in
the US that a non-government entity did military recruiting. It
was hard to find men for the new regiment. Right off, the recruiting
method gave the impression that this was no ordinary group of
soldiers. For example, three reference letters were required.
Moreover, many famous skiers and climbers signed up; where the
stars led, others followed. Many ivy leaguers and "non-army" types
joined out of a mistaken notion that it would be easy -- at least
elite -- duty. As a result of the recruiting effort, the new regiment
had the highest percentage of college educated men ever assembled
in one division, and the intelligence level was so great that
more than two-thirds of the soldiers would qualify as officers.
Even a former assistant of Albert Einstein was recruited, and
huddled over math problems in the evening. Not only were the troops
bright and many of them well educated, but the level of outdoorsmanship
was extremely high, with many men joining who already had the
requisite backcountry survival skills.
Elite duty it was; but it wasn't easy. "We climb to conquer,"
was the new regiment's motto, and their training was designed
to make this a reality. While at Fort Lewis, the new troops did
a rare (but not the first) winter ascent of Mount Rainier under
the leadership of Corporal Peter Gabriel, a famous Swiss mountaineer
who had recently immigrated and been head of a ski school in New
Hampshire. During the Rainier ascent the hard-men carried 85 pound
packs. The troops rounded off their stint in the Northwest with
numerous trips near Mount Rainier, and several trips into the
Olympic Mountains, including a 40 mile west/east crossing of the
Olympics.
On December 6, 1942, the 87th moved lock-stock-and-barrel to
Camp Hale, a location high in the Colorado Rocky Mountains
As a result of the successful training at Fort Lewis, the War
Department had decided that mountain troops would be a part of
the U. S. Army, and they began a search for a training camp site.
The top location, West Yellowstone Montana, was ruled out because
of nearby trumpeter swans. Aspen was considered, but there was
not enough space for 15,000 men! Finally, a site was chosen at
9,200 feet in the Eagle River valley in the Colorado Rockies,
near a railroad siding called Pando, just to the north of Tennessee
Pass (near Leadville). It was named Camp Hale, after General Irving
Hale from Denver.
To build Camp Hale, the army sent in thousands of construction
workers. The "Pando Constructors" graded three miles of the valley
as flat as a golf course and channeled the river into a straight
ditch. With the nearby mountains, cliffs, and rivers, in many
ways it was an ideal spot to train mountain troops. Camp Hale
was completed November 16, 1942, and more than 11,000 troops moved
in three weeks later. Presently, the flats of Camp Hale are still
obvious at the site, as are the many foundations of what were
innumerable buildings, warehouses and meeting halls.
Life at the camp had a severe downside. Thousands of lowlanders
were tormented by the altitude. A pall of coal smog hung over
the valley, causing a chronic cough known as the Pando hack (after
nearby Pando). In winter, the temperature hovered below zero for
days, while strenuous drills never stopped. In the spring, the
camp was a sea of mud. Recreation was problematic. Leadville,
the nearby town and a former mining center with plentiful recreation
for single men, was placed off limits because of prevalent prostitution
(the town was opened back up a few months before the soldiers
left Camp Hale). It was a nine-hour expensive trip to Denver by
train. The clubs at Hale only served watery beer. Many of the
soldiers called it "Camp Hell," and wags were fond of saying,
"Anyone who transfers to combat from the mountain troops is yellow!"
The training was endless and harsh; but iron sharpens iron. Out
of "Camp Hell" marched one of the most competent divisions in
modern warfare. In fact, a German general said that the 10th was
the finest division he had ever faced. Aside from days of rock-climbing,
alpine travel, and weapons practice, the winter training was what
really set the mountain troops apart. In the two years at Camp
Hale, two major maneuvers were carried out on Homestake Peak (near
the 10th Mountain Division Hut) and in other mountains surrounding
the camp, such as the Resolution Creek area. The first was a disaster
that came to be known by some as the "retreat from Moscow." Some
soldiers deliberately froze their feet to get out of the hills.
One trooper exclaimed, "I'd damn well rather have frostbite than
stay up in this hell." Fortunately, with better planning and training,
the next winter the men redeemed themselves in an exemplary training
action in the same terrain.
For those with pervious ski experience, the ski training at Camp
Hale was casual, if not fun. Yet for those new to the planks,
it could be harsh. The southern recruits called their skis, "mah
to-chuah (torture) boards," and one Sergeant Major ceremoniously
chopped up his skis and burnt the pieces in a fire. Perhaps the
epitome of klutsy ski training was the Manual of Skis, a series
of ceremonious movements meant to replace the well known rifle
acrobatics of the Manual of Arms. Problem was, long skis were
a little harder to handle than a rifle, and the heavy windmilling
planks were dangerous to those who made the mistake of standing
near a soldier who was "presenting skis."
The first campaign of the mountain troops was the ironic invasion
of Kiska in the Aleutian Islands. A chapter of World War II that
exemplifies the folly of war, the Kiska invasion came about because
the Japanese decided on a strategic occupation of these windlashed,
arctic hunks of real estate, and the United States could not abide
such an affront. Things got out of hand when the 7th Infantry
took Attu Island from the Japanese, but the island almost took
them in the process. During the Attu campaign, more than 12,000
men succumbed to trenchfoot alone. It was clear that men trained
for the cold and wet were needed, so the 87th Mountain was selected
as the invasion force for the second Japanese occupied island:
Kiska.
A huge operation ensued. The troops had yet to see real battle,
but they were primed. They were first moved to Fort Ord, California,
for amphibious training. Equipped with the latest wet and cold
weather gear and transported by more than 100 ships, they left
San Francisco on July 27, 1943.
On August 15, under the cover of morning darkness they made a
beach landing on Kiska. Soon, their first fighting -- battalion
headquarters was under attack! More shots -- men dying -- then
nightfall. The next day, the men realized that they had been fighting
each other. Finally, after days of fear and misery, it was discovered
that the Japanese had left before the invasion!
With few losses, considering the confusion and weather of Kiska,
the 87th returned to Camp Hale in December of 1943. It was during
that winter that 33 troopers made the legendary 4-day ski traverse
from Leadville to Aspen (in February of 1944), and successful
training was done in the surrounding terrain by the now hardened
troops.
Yet all was not powder snow twinkling in a rosy sunrise, and
morale continued at a low ebb. Persistent rumors held that they
would never see battle. The last straw was when, on June 22, 1944,
the men were moved from Camp Hale to Camp Swift, Texas, to take
part in maneuvers. Suddenly they were learning how to handle 4,000
mules, and rappelling off buildings to break the boredom. Something
had to give, and it did.
General George Hays, a true military leader with a WW1 Congressional
Medal of Honor, was given command of the men. Morale was still
low when Hays took charge. But by intensely training the men as
a group, he made them into a proud and hardened army. Finally,
on November 7, 1944, the outfit officially became the 10th Mountain
Division.
With the debacle of Kiska behind them, their new status as a
Division, awesome training, and inspiring leadership, the men
were ready for real warfare.
By January of 1945, the 10th was in Italy. The Germans had taken
the Italian high ground and established positions in the Apennine
mountains to guard the route to the Po Valley. It was the 10th's
job to take the high ground back, and take it they did. Using
ropes and the cover of darkness, the Division's rock specialists
climbed the 1,200 foot rock face of Manicinello - Campiano Ridge
(A.K.A. Riva Ridge), and on the morning of February 19, 1945,
the soldiers of the 10th took the Germans on top of Campiano Peak
in a devastating surprise attack. The troops again engaged the
Germans in the Battle of Mount Belvedere. This was the big one
-- the battle to gain the upper hand. The 10th had the summit
in 24 hours, and the Division's engineers even built an aerial
tramway to move material and wounded from the summit. The 10th
went on to participate in the PO River offensive and were the
first of the allied forces to reach and cross the PO River. Losses
were heavy; 990 soldiers gave their lives while fighting in Italy
(and during Kiska). In the end, the 10th had gained a reputation
as one of the toughest and most competent groups of soldiers to
fight in World War II.
While skis were never used in combat by the 10th Mountain Division,
they were use for patrols before the Riva Ridge operation, and
at least one of those patrols participated in a brief gun battle
after removing their skis and proceeding on foot.
Hardship aside (or perhaps because of it), the men of the 10th
developed a strong camaraderie, and many of them gained or at
least reinforced a great love for skiing, mountains, and Colorado.
After the war, hundreds of 10th veterans returned to Colorado
to settle down. One veteran jokingly stated that the one thing
he learned in the army, "was to never ski uphill on skis again."
Perhaps that's why many 10th Vets went on to become involved in
the post-war ski resort boom, during which many of the nation's
ski lifts were built. Yet aside from ski resorts, many 10th veterans,
with their ski skills, knowledge of the land, and enthusiasm,
went on to become key figures in the development of the United
States' mountaineering tradition both in skiing and climbing.
10th Mountain veteran Fritz Benedict founded the 10th Mountain
Division Memorial Hut System. Veteran Bil Dunaway made the first
ski descent of Mount Blanc in Franc, then settled in Aspen Colorado
for a long career of as a newspaperman and prolific mountaineer.
Ski racer Toni Matt was a vet, as was Dartmouth coach Walter Prager
and Aspen ski pioneer Friedl Pfeifer. Paul Petzoldt, famous mountaineer
and founder of the National Outdoor Leadership School, was also
a recruit. California ski pioneers Hans George, Ed Heath and Wally
McPherson are also 10th Mountain veterans.
The 10th Mountain Division was deactivated in 1945. In 1985,
a new 10th Mountain Division was organized at Camp Drum, New York.
The original "10th" is memorialized by monuments at Camp Hale
and at the summit of Tennessee Pass on Colorado Highway 24.
No doubt, the saga of the 10th Mountain "ski troops" contributed
more to the legitimacy of ski mountaineering in the United States
than any other event. A popular (yet apocryphal) anecdote of the
day sums up the public's acceptance of the troops and their ilk:
A trooper is on maneuvers atop 13,209-foot Homestake Peak. He
picks up the radio voice of a pilot landing at Peterson AFB in
Denver. "Am at 11,000 feet, coming in for a landing, gliding gliding
gliding," said the pilot. The trooper keys his mike and says "This
is Private ------ of the mountain troops, am at 12,000 feet, walking
walking walking."
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