at Camp Peary used for training in 1945 During
World War II, beginning in 1942, the
United States Navy took over a large area on the north side of the
Virginia Peninsula in
York County, Virginia which became known as Camp Peary, initially for use as a
Seabee training base. The
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) extended a spur track from its Richmond-Newport News main line tracks to the site from nearby
Williamsburg, and established Magruder Station near the former unincorporated town of
Magruder. As part of the process of converting the property to a military reservation, all residents of the entire towns of Magruder and
Bigler's Mill had to vacate. The town of Magruder was a traditionally
African-American community, established for
freedmen after the
American Civil War. It had been named for
Confederate General
John B. Magruder. A Civil War field hospital had occupied the site of Bigler's Mill near the York River. Although the graves in the church cemetery were not moved, many of the residents and the local Mount Gilead Baptist Church were relocated to the
Grove community, located on
U.S. Route 60 in adjacent
James City County a few miles away, where a number of displaced residents from an area near
Lackey known simply as "the Reservation" had earlier relocated under similar circumstances during
World War I when what is now the
Naval Weapons Station Yorktown was created.
Seabee training At the outset of the War, the preliminary training of the Seabees had been carried out at Naval Training Stations across the country. That lasted a short period until boot training was consolidated at Camp Allen Virginia.
Camp Allen was replaced by Camp Bradford which in turn was replaced by Camp Peary. The initial
Seabee recruits of WWII were men who built
Boulder Dam, America's highways and
New York City skyscrapers. At Naval Construction Training Center Peary, Seabees were taught basic
military order, discipline, weaponry,
stevedoring, and
construction trades. The Camp opened in November 3rd of 1942 with the 36th CB the first to train there while the first organized there was the 61st CB. Another 100,000 men would go through the camp before training there ceased in June of 1944. During that period the Seabees established over 60 trade schools on the base. In June of 1943 the dynamite and demolition school opened. Some of its first graduates included the first six classes of Seabee volunteers for the
Naval Combat Demolition Units. After June 1944 Seabee boot camp was moved to Camp Endicott,
Quonset Point, Rhode Island. Eventually, the farming enterprise made the news and it is from this history that the base derives its "The Farm" moniker used today.
German prisoners-of-war Camp Peary's mission changed when a new need presented itself to the Navy. A portion of the land became a detention center for
German prisoners of war in the United States (POWs). Many of them were
Kriegsmarine crewmen from captured German
U-boats and from ships the Germans thought lost at sea with crews presumed dead. It was important to keep the German authorities unaware of their capture, since knowledge that they had survived would mean that secret code books and
Enigma machines thought lost at sea could also have been compromised. Learning that these men were being held as POWs, would almost certainly have caused the Germans to change the secret codes that had been broken by Allied
codebreakers, thus, extra secrecy was necessary. There is information about life at the Camp and the German PoWs in the Herman Recht papers held by the
College of William and Mary, a set of letters written by a clerk at the Camp. Many of the former POWs stayed in Virginia and the United States after the war, and became naturalized as U.S. citizens. == Post-World War II use ==