World War II Soon after the creation of the
Seabees at the beginning of
World War II, the
U.S. Navy built a West Coast replacement and recuperation center for Naval Construction Battalions returning from overseas.
Camp Parks was established on 26 November 1942, having been named in honor of
Rear Admiral Charles W. Parks,
Civil Engineer Corps (CEC), the
World War I chief of the
Bureau of Yards and Docks. Adjacent to Camp Parks to the east, was
Camp Shoemaker and the
U.S. Naval Hospital Shoemaker, also built during the war. The three Navy bases located side by side were called "Fleet City." In April 1945 over 20,000 troops were on the three bases. Seabee had 71 battalions sent through Camp Parks during the war. U.S. Naval Hospital Shoemaker at its peak had 3,031 Seabee patients. The hospital closed in 1946. Camp Shoemaker had a disciplinary barracks for up to 2,097, the men had both work duties and recreational activities. The confined men built cargo nets and wooden pallets for the Navy. The base football team was called the
Fleet City Bluejackets. In 1945, on its huge paved parade ground, Camp Parks could muster more than 20,000 men and hundreds of officers. It was the home for Seabee battalions returning from the Pacific Theater of Operations after a year or more of construction duty. They came to Camp Parks for medical treatment, military training and reorganization. The base housed up to 20 battalions at a time. Most battalions prepared for a second tour in the Pacific. Many Seabees were hospitalized, and those no longer fit for duty received their discharge. After their initial leaves, personnel were given training and battalions were returned to fighting strength. In 1946, at the end of
World War II, the
United States Secretary of the Navy disestablished the three facilities, and from 1946 to 1951, the Navy leased much of the land to the County of
Alameda for use as
Santa Rita Jail. Thousands of Quonset huts and barracks and other buildings were subsequently dismantled through sales conducted by the War Assets Administration.
Cold War Camp Parks sat unused until the United States Air Force established it as a basic training center in 1951 during the
Korean War, and renamed the facility
Parks Air Force Base. The Air Force almost completely rebuilt the base. Base personnel were initially housed in temporary facilities and ate from a field mess. The first group of airmen arrived at Camp Parks in the summer of 1951, and mass training began in March 1952 as the 3275th Air Indoctrination Wing. In 1953, Air Base Defense classes started as the Air Force transitioned the base defense mission from the Army. The Air Force first terminated basic training and then reinstated it that year, all in response to Defense Department budget problems. In 1956, base operations started to change as basic training and the Air Base Defense School moved to
Lackland Air Force Base. It is estimated about 6,800 recruits graduated from basic training at Parks AFB between 1951 and 1956.The base transitioned from an
Air Training Command facility to a
Continental Air Command installation. In January 1957, the 2349th Air Base Wing and the 2349th Personnel Processing Group started operations as part of the Fourth Air Force. The nearby regional Air Force hospital changed its designation at that time, too. Personnel processing continued as the primary base operation until 1959 when the base closed. Parks Air Force Base was notable as one of the few air force bases without a functional runway on site. In July 1959, the installation was transferred to the
United States Army. From 1959 to 1973, it was operated in a standby status under the jurisdiction of the
U.S. Sixth Army,
Presidio of San Francisco. In June 1965, U.S.
Coast Guard Squadron One used the range facilities for small arms training in preparation for deployment to
Vietnam. Training was completed with pistols, rifles and machine guns under the auspices of the U.S. Navy. In 1973, the U.S. Army determined that Camp Parks was needed as a mobilization and training center for Reserve Components in the event of war or natural disaster. On 11 December 1980, the Army designated Camp Parks as a semi-active installation, renaming it
Parks Reserve Forces Training Area.
Radiation experiments From 1959 to 1983, tests were conducted at Camp Parks to determine the effects of radiation on crops and livestock. Various experiments included growing crops in plutonium-enriched soil, exposing sheep to the radioactive isotope
cobalt-60, simulating the effects of radiation on ship hulls, exposing an abandoned complex to sand containing lanthanum-140, and exposing dogs to damaging gamma rays. All radioactive material was disposed of on site and some areas were later closed off. Concerns have been raised about the safety of these experiments. James L. Thomas, a former radiation safety officer at Camp Parks, said, "They wouldn’t be allowed to do that today. It would never be approved. Never." However, there has been dispute over these concerns. A 2014 inspection of a small area of Camp Parks found that "there is no evidence that radioactive material or sources were stored or used on the property." Dr. John Ainsworth, former scientific director at Camp Parks, said that there was little controversy over their studies at the time. == Current mission ==