| FORT PICKETT HISTORY |
| THE ARMY POST
In late 1941, as war drew
closer to America’s shores, a team of Army surveyors visited the site of
a former Civilian Conservation Corps camp near the small rural town of
Blackstone, Virginia. There they found enough land, water and other
resources needed to establish a post large enough to simultaneously train
more than one infantry division. The site also offered easy railroad
access to both mountain and coastal training sites. By December 1941,
45,867 acres of land in Nottoway, Dinwiddie, Lunenburg and Brunswick Counties
were acquired and cleared to prepare for construction of the first buildings.
Elements of the Virginia
National Guard had their first taste of what is now Fort Pickett on Dec.
6-7 when the 1st Battalion, 116th Infantry, camped here on the way back
to its home station at Ft. Meade, Md., having completed a series of war
games in North Carolina. After the 116th left on Dec. 8, no Virginia
Guard commands returned to train at Pickett until 1950, shortly after the
beginning of the Korean War.
The rapid development of
Fort Pickett became a top priority after U.S. entry in WW II. Two
rail spurs were built to the camp in 1942-1943 to increase logistical efficiency
and the rapid movement of troops on and off post. Air transportation
to and from Pickett became available with the completion of a four-runway
airfield in late 1942. The tower was placed beside the only hangar
built on post, and its steel beam frames and cinder block foundation are
still visible today. Since each cement runway was 5,269 feet long
and 300 feet wide the Blackstone Army Airfield was large enough to allow
the safe landing of the Douglas C-47 “Gooney Bird”. Fighter planes
could use the runway in an emergency, although none were stationed at the
airfield. Aircraft fuel was delivered by rail and contained in fuel
trucks, since permanent storage tanks were not constructed until after
World War II. The airfield remained virtually unchanged until the
1990’s.
By the end of 1942, more
than 1,400 buildings were completed and in use across the post, including
approximately 1,000 enlisted barracks and 70 officer’s quarters.
Twelve chapels, the post hospital complex (later greatly expanded) and
six firehouses were built, along with warehouses, headquarters and administrative
buildings. To assure an adequate water supply for the post and its
potential 60,000-soldier population, the Army built and maintained its
own water pumping, filtration and sewage treatment plants.
In the 1980’s the Army transferred
control and operation of these facilities to the town of Blackstone.
For recreation, there were
four movie theaters (two more were added later), a field house with a gym,
several enlisted clubs, a main post exchange and several “satellite” PXs.
By war’s end, more than 300 additional buildings were constructed, including
female barracks and facilities for two prisoner-of-war camps. HOME
|
MG GEORGE E. PICKETT, CSA
19TH CENTURY MAP |