World War II A
U.S. Army base named Camp Croft was organized on what is now the area of the Camp Croft CDP during
World War II. The base served as an
Infantry Replacement Training Center and trained 60,000 soldiers per year from 1941 to 1946. Among the trainees was
Henry Kissinger. Kissinger was naturalized at Camp Croft and would later serve as
Secretary of State under President Nixon. In the later years of the war, a prisoner-of-war camp was established at Camp Croft and almost 1,000 German prisoners were held there. After the war, Camp Croft was not retained as a military installation and the land was returned to civilian control. The former base was redeveloped partly as a residential neighborhood and partly as
Croft State Park. ==Demographics==