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Naval Station Great Lakes

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Naval Station Great Lakes
Part of Navy Region Mid-Atlantic
North Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Naval Station Great Lakes insignia
Naval Station Great Lakes is located in Illinois
Naval Station Great Lakes
Naval Station Great Lakes
Location in Illinois
Naval Station Great Lakes is located in the United States
Naval Station Great Lakes
Naval Station Great Lakes
Location in United States
Coordinates42°18′33.08″N 87°51′0.25″W / 42.3091889°N 87.8500694°W / 42.3091889; -87.8500694
Site information
Owner United States of America
Controlled by United States Navy
Site history
In use1911 – present
Garrison information
Past
commanders
Captain William Bulis, USN
GarrisonRecruit Training Command
Great Lakes Naval Training Station
Great Lakes Building 1
Nearest cityWaukegan, Illinois, U.S.
Area193.2 acres (78.2 ha)
Built1906
ArchitectJarvis Hunt, Et al.
Architectural styleClassical Revival, Federal Revival
NRHP reference No.86002890[1]
Added to NRHPSeptember 15, 1986

Naval Station Great Lakes (NAVSTA Great Lakes) is the home of the United States Navy's only boot camp, located near North Chicago, in Lake County, Illinois. Important tenant commands include the Recruit Training Command, Training Support Center and Navy Recruiting District Chicago. Naval Station Great Lakes is the largest military installation in Illinois and the largest training station in the Navy. The base has 1,153 buildings situated on 1,628 acres (6.59 km2) and has 50 miles (80 km) of roadway to provide access to the base's facilities. Within the naval service, it has several different nicknames, including "The Quarterdeck of the Navy",[2] or the more derogatory "Great Mistakes".[3]

The original 39 buildings built between 1905 and 1911 were designed by Jarvis Hunt.[4]

The base is like a small city, with its own Fire Department, Naval Security Forces (Police), and Public Works Department.

One of the landmarks of the area is Building 1, also known as the clocktower building. Completed in 1911, the building is made of red brick, and has a tower over the third floor of the building. The large parade ground in front of the administration building is named Ross Field.

Major tenant commands

Recruit Training Command

In 1996, RTC Great Lakes became the Navy's only basic training facility. The Base Realignment and Closure Commission of 1993 resulted in the closure of Naval Training Center San Diego, California and Naval Training Center Orlando, Florida, their associated Recruit Training Commands, and the consolidation of US Navy enlisted recruit training to Great Lakes. Approximately 40,000 recruits pass through Recruit Training Command annually with an estimated 7,000 recruits on board the installation at any time. RTC Great Lakes has been active for over 100 years.

Training Support Center

TSC Great Lakes is the Navy's premier technical training command. It has an annual throughput of 16,000 sailors a year. TSC supports the following six learning sites:

  • Center for Surface Combat Systems (CSCS)
  • Surface Warfare Officers School Command Unit (SWOSU)
  • Center for EOD and Dive (CNEODD)
  • Center for Naval Leadership (CNL)
  • Center for Personal Development (CPD)
  • Center for Service Support (CSS)
Navy Junior ROTC cadets from Hamilton High School, Ohio, practice marksmanship at the Fire Arms Training Simulator (FATS)

The following rating training class A-schools are located at Naval Station Great Lakes:

Culinary Specialist (CS) A-school was also taught at TSC Great Lakes until December 10, 2010, when the school graduated its final class. The course has been consolidated with the US Army's parallel program and relocated to Fort Lee, Virginia.

Hospital Corpsman (HM) "A" School has been moved out of Great Lakes. The last class graduated on July 27, 2011. Its last class was Class 11-125. The school has relocated to the Medical Education and Training Campus at Fort Sam Houston, Joint Base San Antonio, Texas.[5] This change has merged Air Force, Army, and Navy Medical staff to a centralized location.

In addition, all Navy rates that require basic electrical knowledge and troubleshooting training complete Apprentice Technical Training (ATT) school. This includes the Mineman (MN) and Sonar Technician (Surface) (STG) rates, as well as some aviation rates prior to detachment to their respective school locations in San Diego, CA and Pensacola, Florida. Boatswain's Mates complete Surface Common Core (SCC) Basic Maintenance Training and engineering rates complete Basic Engineering Common Core (BECC)

History

Great Lakes was approved in 1904 by Theodore Roosevelt.[6] Construction was supervised by Navy Captain Albert R. Ross. Chicago-area architect Jarvis Hunt designed the original 39 buildings and Lt. George A. McKay was the civil engineer for the construction on the 172 acres (70 ha) wilderness location.[7] $3.5 million ‎($119 million today) was appropriated to finance construction. President William Howard Taft dedicated the Naval Training Station in 1911.[8] On 3 July 1911, Joseph Gregg was the first recruit to arrive. He would graduate in the first class of 300. 55 years later, he was buried at the Naval Station Cemetery 5 July 1966.[7][9]

John Philip Sousa led the Great Lakes Naval Station Band in the mid- to late 1910s. Great Lakes also had a Radio School including two 400 feet (120 m) towers constructed in 1915.[8] From 1911 to 1916 around 2,000 recruits a year were trained at Great Lakes.[7]

World War I

Victory spelled by sailors on the parade grounds at Great Lakes during World War I.

At the start of 1917, just prior to the United States entry to World War I, Great Lakes was under the command of Captain William A. Moffett and had 39 permanent brick buildings, over 165 acres (67 ha), and about 1,500 Sailors. At the close of the war, there were 776 buildings, with 1,200 acres (490 ha) and about 45,000 Sailors in training. 125,000 had been trained at Great Lakes during the war.[7]

Interwar period

In 1923, Naval Reserve Air Base, Great Lakes was commissioned. Recruit training slowed after the war and halted in 1933.[7] In 1932, Great Lakes had 102 buildings on 507 acres (205 ha). A harbor was constructed around that time at a cost of $1 million ($22.3 million today).[8]

On 1 July 1933, Great Lakes was closed and placed in a maintenance status.[10] It was reopened 1 July 1935 after lobbying by local businessmen and the Congressional Delegation from Illinois.[8] In 1936, aviation training was moved from Great Lakes to Naval Air Station Glenview.[7]

On 9 December 1940, the Class A Service School opened for its first class.[7]

World War II

A company of African American recruits at Great Lakes, August 1943.

On 7 December 1941, Pearl Harbor was attacked by Japan, and around 6,000 sailors were training at Great Lakes. This grew to 68,000 in six months; by September 1942, over 100,000 sailors were training at Great Lakes. The base grew to 1,600 acres (650 ha) in the next 10 months. By mid-1943, there were over 700 instructors at the Class A service schools.[7]

The Navy selected Great Lakes to be the site of the first African American trainees. On 5 June 1942, Doreston Luke Carmen of Galveston, Texas was the first recruit to enter the segregated training facility at Camp Robert Smalls. In September 1942, segregated "Negro Service Schools" were opened. The policy of segregation led to small service school classes with only four or five students in a class. By 1944 Great Lakes began to integrate training and all training was integrated by mid-1945. The Golden Thirteen were commissioned in March 1944 after training at Great Lakes.[7]

Four million served on active duty in the Navy during World War II. Over one million sailors were trained at Great Lakes.[7]

1946 to 1960

Modernist glass and steel US Navy Gunnery school, Great Lakes. Designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, dedicated in 1954, demolished 2012.

In 1948, a boot camp for WAVES (female recruits) opened at Great Lakes, first graduating 5 October 1948. In 1951, female recruit training left Great Lakes for United States Naval Training Center, Bainbridge, Maryland.[7]

Great Lakes hosted the Commander, Ninth Naval District from 1945 until the District was disestablished on 30 June 1979.

In March 1954, new facilities at Great Lakes for training Gunner's Mates, Fire Controlman, Opticalman, and Instrumentman were dedicated, at a cost of $2.2 million ($25 million today). At the time, the 95,000 square feet (8,800 m2) Gunnery School was said to be the largest all glass structure in the world.[7] Designed by Bruce Graham (co-designer of the former Sears Tower and John Hancock Center) of the Chicago office of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, the Gunnery School was demolished in 2012 after hands-on training transitioned to computer-based training in 2005. In 2008, an attempt was made to preserve the structure that was described as a "Cathedral of the Cold War".[11][12][13]

Starting in the late 1950s, new barracks, mess halls, classrooms, and staff offices at the Recruit Training Center were built for around $8 million. These facilities served the Navy until the late 1990s rebuild of the recruit training facility.[7]

1960s and 1970s

A view of the former Great Lakes Naval Hospital during demolition in 2013.

On 9 December 1960, Great Lakes Naval Hospital (building 200H) was dedicated replacing the original hospital, building 1H. During the Vietnam War, the hospital cared for over 11,000 patients at the 478,000 square feet (44,400 m2), 825 bed facility.[14] Demolition of the hospital began in January 2013 after its services were transitioned to the Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center in 2010.[14][15][16]

In August 1965, facilities at Great Lakes were used as a morgue in the aftermath of the crash of United Airlines Flight 389.[17]

In the early morning hours of 11 March 1967, Rear Admiral Howard A. Yeager, Commander, 9th Naval District, was killed by a fire at his quarters at Great Lakes. Admiral Yeager and two hospital corpsman (WAVES) died attempting to save the Admiral's wife, who was under medical care for multiple sclerosis. She also died several days later.[7][18]

On 28 September 1972, 18 were injured at Great Lakes when a tornado struck two of the base housing areas.[19]

1979 riots

In 1979, there were some instances of violence between sailors at Great Lakes and civilians of North Chicago. In June 1979, more than 300 sailors armed with bricks and rocks rioted in North Chicago for at least two consecutive nights in protest after a group of civilians infiltrated the base and beat a sailor. Two hundred sailors were said to have climbed the fence, entering North Chicago and clashing with local police. Sixteen persons were arrested, with five injuries on the first night. Five were arrested by police, with 16 in custody of Navy authorities on the second night. Additionally, six sailors and five police officers were injured on the second night of riots and a police cruiser was overturned. Sailors claimed unfair treatment and harassment in the North Chicago entertainment district known as the "strip".[20][21] Local officials disputed the claims. The six-block entertainment district or "strip" was eventually placed off limits indefinitely by the base commander.[22]

In the aftermath of the rioting, 58 summary courts-martial were conducted, 19 sailors were found not-guilty, and the base commander Captain Robert D. Colvin was replaced by Rear Admiral Thomas L. Malone Jr.[23][24]

Days after the riots on 28 June 1979, four black males were sought in connection with the robbery of the Great Lakes Naval Station branch of the Citizens Bank of Waukegan. Around $125,000 ($524,759 today) was stolen. The bank manager was abducted from his home in Zion and was held captive along with several others until the automatic lock of the bank vault allowed it to be opened the next morning. No one was harmed in the robbery.[25] Payday for the base was set for the following day.[26]

1980s

In 1984, 34 people were arrested in a drug sting called Operation Blueboy, in which investigators posed as sailors based at Great Lakes. Nineteen of those arrested were cab drivers, while others were tavern employees on the North Chicago "strip".[27]

The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places as Great Lakes Naval Training Station historic district in 1986 covering 1,932 acres (7.8 km2), 43 buildings, 14 structures, and six objects.

In September 1986, a US naturalized Pakistan immigrant shot three, killing a senior instructor, after it became clear that he would be dropped from an electronics training program at Apprentice Technical Training in Great Lakes.[28] He was sentenced to life in prison and a dishonorable discharge in 1987.[29]

1990s

The North Chicago "strip" was well known for prostitution, drugs, and crime by the early 1990s, when it became further isolated from the base after King Drive railroad crossing was closed, cutting the city's connection to Great Lakes. Following the September 11 attacks in 2001, food deliveries from off base were further restricted, continuing the area's economic decline.[30]

Base Realignment and Closure of 1993

A 2011 aerial view of some of the recruit training facilities constructed during the recapitalization of RTC that followed BRAC 1993.

The 1993 Base Realignment and Closure Commission recommended the closure of recruit training in San Diego and Orlando making Great Lakes the sole US Navy site for recruit training.[31] The recommendations were predicted to result in a net gain of over 8,000 military and civilian jobs to Great Lakes.[32]

Base Realignment and Closure of 2005

Recruits stand at attention for a special ceremony commemorating the centennial of Great Lakes.

The 2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission recommended a realignment of Great Lakes that would result in the loss of around 2,000 jobs. At the time, Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich pledged to retain as many of the jobs as possible.[33] The Naval Station Great Lakes and the Recruit Training / Boot Camp portion were not slated for closing. Almost $800 million had been invested in building new barracks ("ships"), Battle Stations 21, as well as numerous upgrades around the base, including a non-denominational chapel, and reception center for civilian families. It is the United States Navy's only boot camp facility. Approximately 40,000 recruits pass through RTC annually with up to 7,000 enrolled at the installation at any time.

Geographically, the station separates the affluent North Shore from the more industrial Waukegan/North Chicago area, the latter now announcing numerous redevelopments across their span for strip malls and New Urban residency communities.

Athletics

The Great Lakes Bluejackets played intercollegiate football from the 1910s to the 1940s including a victory in the 1919 Rose Bowl and a 1943 victory over the undefeated Notre Dame Fighting Irish football squad. Some of the football greats that played for Great Lakes included George Halas, Johnny Lujack and Otto Graham. Notably, Paul Brown, Weeb Ewbank and Frank Leahy were coaches for Great Lakes football as well. In 2010, Northwestern Wildcats football announced they were exploring the possibility of holding practice at Great Lakes.[34]

Great Lakes baseball teams had a record of 188 wins and 32 losses during World War II. In one of the more famous games, in July 1945, Chief Petty Officer Bob Feller pitched a shutout with 10 strikeouts against the Chicago Cubs.[7]

Museum

Great Lakes Naval Museum.

The National Museum of the American Sailor is one of the museums operated by the Naval History & Heritage Command. As an official Department of the Navy Museum, the National Museum of the American Sailor's mission is to select, collect, preserve, and interpret the history of the United States Navy with particular emphasis on the Navy's enlisted Sailor.

Movies

Scenes of the training center are shown in the 1944 movie The Navy Way and the 1952 movie Skirts Ahoy!.

See also

References

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from Great Lakes History. United States Navy.

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ "Recruit Training Command". Navy.
  3. ^ Webb, Brandon; David Mann, John (2012). The Red Circle. Macmillan. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-250-01840-3. ... Naval Station Great Lakes (or unofficially, Great Mistakes)
  4. ^ Jarvis Hunt Buildings. math.uic.edu. Retrieved July 13, 2008.
  5. ^ Public Affairs Office, Navy Medicine Support Command (April 28, 2008). "Naval Medicine Training Command (NMTC) Fort Sam Houston, Commissioned". Corpsman.com (A Medical Enlisted Military Web Community, For all Military Services). Retrieved 2010-11-20.
  6. ^ "Chicago Awarded Training Station". The Milwaukee Journal. 24 November 1904.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "About Naval Station Great Lakes – History". Naval Station Great Lakes. Retrieved 8 February 2015.
  8. ^ a b c d Slaton, Deborah J. (18 July 1985). "Great Lakes Naval Training Station – NRHP Nomination form" (PDF). Historic Architectural Resources Geographic Information System. Retrieved 7 February 2015.
  9. ^ Thornbloom, Scott A. (10 November 2009). The grave of the first trainee at Naval Station Great Lakes, Seaman Recruit Joseph Wallace Gregg. US Navy. Retrieved 8 February 2015.
  10. ^ Associated Press (3 July 1933). "Great Lakes Naval Station discarded after 22 years". Gettysburg Times.
  11. ^ Amer, Robin (18 August 2012). "The demise of Building 521". WBEZ.
  12. ^ Kamin, Blair (3 February 2008). "Why the Navy should act to save this 'box'". Chicago Tribune.
  13. ^ Black, Lisa (25 January 2008). "Navy gunnery school site under the gun". Chicago Tribune.
  14. ^ a b "History of Naval Health Clinic, Great Lakes". Naval Health Clinic Great Lakes. Archived from the original on 6 September 2009. Retrieved 9 February 2015.
  15. ^ "History". Blood Donor Processing Division, Great Lakes. Archived from the original on 10 February 2015. Retrieved 9 February 2015. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  16. ^ Boylan, Jim (10 January 2013). "Demolition of 200H, 68H now underway". Lake County Journal.
  17. ^ UPI (17 August 1965). "Naval Base being used as Morgue". Reading Eagle.
  18. ^ "Navy Probes Adm. Yeager Death". Chicago Tribune. 12 March 1967.
  19. ^ UPI (29 September 1972). "Great Lakes slammed by Twister, 18 hurt". Beaver County Times. Beaver County, Pennsylvania.
  20. ^ Associated Press (26 June 1979). "Sailors Riot in Illinois". The Sumter Daily Item. Sumter, South Carolina.
  21. ^ UPI (1 July 1979). "Environment caused sailor uprising". Beaver County Times.
  22. ^ Huddleston, Joesph A. (27 June 1979). "Naval Officials consider lifting Great Lakes curfew". The Milwaukee Sentinel.
  23. ^ Associated Press (18 August 1979). "Navy tightens rules at training station". The Day. New London, Connecticut.
  24. ^ Associated Press (3 July 1979). "Admiral takes over Great Lakes". Lakeland Ledger. Lakeland, Florida.
  25. ^ Leeds, Patricia (29 June 1979). "$125,000 Great Lakes Bank Holdup; 4 sought". Chicago Tribune.
  26. ^ UPI (28 June 1979). "Bank Robbed on Naval Base". The Pittsburgh Press. Authorities said the four described only as "black males," broke into the manager's home near Zion, held him and his brother overnight and took them to the base branch of the Citizens Bank of Waukegan early today.
  27. ^ UPI (27 April 1984). "Drug Arrests Made in Great Lakes Sting". The Milwaukee Journal.
  28. ^ Associated Press (16 September 1986). "Failing Recruit Shoots 3 at Illinois Navy Base". The Milwaukee Journal.
  29. ^ Enstad, Robert (20 March 1987). "Sailor Sentenced To Life Term". Chicago Tribune.
  30. ^ Kim, Gina (26 March 2005). "North Chicago "strip" set to make way for shops, hotel". Chicago Tribune.
  31. ^ Associated Press (20 March 1993). "Facing shrinking resources, Navy sacrifices Orlando Base". The News-Journal. Daytona Beach, Florida.
  32. ^ "1993 DoD BRAC Recommendations" (PDF). US Department of Defense. March 1993. p. 241.
  33. ^ "Gov. Blagojevich vows to fight for Great Lakes Naval Training Center and do everything possible to save any jobs in jeopardy". 13 May 2005.
  34. ^ Rittenberg, Adam (26 May 2010). "Northwestern looks to practice at Navy base". ESPN.

Further reading