Colonel Robert Sink, commander of the
506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, one of the first units to train there, did not like the name. He thought it would prompt
superstitions among the arriving young recruits, who after traveling down Route
13 would pass the Toccoa
Casket Company and arrive at Camp "Tombs". Sink persuaded the War Department to change the name to Camp Toccoa. Permanent barracks only became available after the first trainees had begun to arrive.
Jump training was initially done at the nearby
Toccoa municipal airport. Following a training accident, the airport was considered to have a runway too short for safe
C-39 and
C-47 take off and landings. All further jump training was relocated to
Fort Benning, Georgia. Camp Toccoa also lacked a rifle range, so trainees were marched to
Clemson Agricultural College, a military school in South Carolina, to practice at the college's shooting range. All paratrooper trainees were required to regularly run up
Currahee Mountain (
elev. ), which overlooked Camp Toccoa. This arduous task was memorialized in the HBO series,
Band of Brothers, with the shout " up, three miles down." Members of the
506th Parachute Infantry Regiment refer to themselves as "Currahees" (it is anglicized name derived from the
Cherokee word
gurahiyi, which may mean "standing alone"). Currahee Mountain is on the distinctive unit insignia of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, in recognition of the peak's importance in the formation of the regiment. Notable units that underwent training at Camp Toccoa were: •
501st Parachute Infantry Regiment: attached to the
101st Airborne Division •
506th Parachute Infantry Regiment: attached to the 101st Airborne Division •
507th Parachute Infantry Regiment: attached to the
82nd Airborne Division and the
17th Airborne Division •
511th Parachute Infantry Regiment: attached to the
11th Airborne Division •
517th Parachute Infantry Regiment: attached to the 17th Airborne Division and the
13th Airborne Division • 457th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion: attached to the 11th Airborne Division • 295th Ordnance Heavy Maintenance Company: completed basic training at Camp Toccoa, from July 21, 1943, through November 24, 1943. • 296th Ordnance Heavy Maintenance Company: completed basic training at Camp Toccoa, from July 21, 1943, through November 24, 1943 In 1943, comedian
Bob Hope visited Camp Toccoa. He told the recruits, "You guys are so rugged, you look like
Wheaties with legs." After the
defeat of Japan, the War Department returned Camp Toccoa to state control in 1946. ==Post-war use==