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| Entrance to Checkmate (2011) |
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| WHCA Communications Van (Roadrunner) |
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| The south lawn of the White House |
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| Don at Ft Monmouth, NJ Gov’t Housing (1965) |
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| Joanne and Don in April 1965 Long Branch NJ |
The WHCA Shop in Georgetown | |||
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Type Of Activity | WHCA Operations | ||
Location | |||
Location | 3248 M St NW Georgetown | ||
Date of Activity | 1965 to 1976 | ||
Coordinates | |||
Parts of the structure located on M Street predate 1838 when it was used as a tobacco warehouse that opened up directly onto the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. In the 1850s, the building was purchased by John E. Reeside and Gilbert Vanderwerken and converted into stables for their omnibus line. The building continued to be used as stables for the first horse car line, the Washington and Georgetown Railroad. It was later converted into a machine shop for streetcars. The parts of the building that face the canal and the facade of the M Street entrance remain from those earlier periods. After the demise of Washington's streetcars in 1962, the building served as the United States Defense Communications Annex E before being converted to WHCA’s base of operations in 1964.
I received my orders after I graduated Microwave repair school at Ft Monmouth to report to a street address in Washington D.C. in Nov of 1965. I loaded my family in the car and headed to my new assignment in WHCA. When I arrived in Washington, I tried to locate the address, not knowing the city I made several wrong turns and ended up in VA, several times so we decided to stop and get something to eat. Luckily, I had a contact number for MSG Joe Terrian, I called him, and he informed me that they had moved to a location in Georgetown, and Ft Monmouth gave me the wrong address. The old building had been razed and all that was left was a hole in the ground. Now I had passed that hole in the ground at least a half a dozen times that morning. The old location was located at 26th Street and D Street NW. This is where WHCA had occupied a building that was in the Olde Heurich Brewing Company in Foggy Bottom. The brewery buildings were razed to make room for the new Kennedy Center which occupies that space today, the old shop moved from 26th St in May 1965. It had been DC transits street car repair shop, a monstrous old facility. GSA rented it from O. Roy Chalk, gutted it and remodeled it. The new location fronted on M St with two entrances one was WHCA personnel and the second was a non affiliated DCA office that had had no access to the rest of the building. MSG Joe Terrian gave me WHCA's official address which was 3248 M Street NW. It was an unmarked white front building with no columns but having a few steps that went up to a black door. Behind that door was an iron security gate.
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| 3248 M St NW entrance 2017 |
WHCA’s Audio-Visual Branch stored all of their travel equipment at the shop on M Street. Everyone in the group had their own specific set of equipment... audio mixer, multiple for media feeds, tape recorders, mics and cables. Each individual was responsible to make sure everything was in working order in case of instant travel. The AV Group had their own maintenance shop at M Street where they maintained all the AV gear and stored all the trip packages there.
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WHCA’s Wisconsin Ave entrance in 1974 |
As you entered the facility and the Parking garage you immediately saw the WHCA dispatcher who monitored all incoming traffic and access to the parking garage. The call sign for the M Street dispatcher was Checkmate. The Transportation Group also had motor pool was equipped with a lift and a car wash facility. Transportation was responsible for the maintenance of all the WHCA vehicles including the rented station wagons from a civilian contractor and WHCA own trucks and Van's, the rented Chevy Kingwood wagons were eventually replaced with GSA supplied Ford wagons.
On the right was the entrance to the Radio and TV shops. These two groups maintained and repaired all of the Motorola radio Equipment(base stations and hand held units) HF /SSB radios as well as associated radio and paging consoles, all TV’s were also maintained in this area.
Material and Supply and was located between the Electronics Shop and Budget/Accounting who had a small office located between supply and WHCA Dispatch.
The Comm Center or 13a group had a secure office and crypto vault on the first floor, behind Transportation.
Crown Radio was located at the "M" street shop on the Second floor above the radio shop and wood shop. Access to the second floor was by using an outside stairway to the right of the driveway off Wisconsin Ave.
Crown Radio had two consoles one was the DC FM network. The other one was for the Nationwide System (E/F), and secure voice All of WHCA and USSS FM locations in the Washington DC area terminated there, as well as the Echo/Fox Nationwide air-to-ground Communications for AF1. That was the old E/F console built by Mario Lilla. It was operated from there until Crown Radio moved to the OEOB shortly after the new WECO 608 was cut into service there.
In the basement there was an underground storage vault below the radio shop which belonged to 13A. One nice feature at M Street was the basement barroom where we had our Friday afternoon off-duty beer call -- the most recently promoted guys bought the beer, there were many attitudes adjusted there. The Technical Library was also located in the basement behind the Keg.
In the five years that I was assigned to Camp David I was sent on roughly forty trips where I left from the shop. All of the equipment needed for every trip was staged at the shop, loaded on box trucks if needed or in the back of station wagon on smaller trips and all personnel would be provided transportation to the various D.C. Airports for departure. Upon the return from all trips and from all groups the equipment would be sent to the shop to test and or repair would be staged for the next trip.
The current store that occupies that spot where the door was located is "H & M". It cannot be verified if the white trim around the doorway of H & M is a reproduction or a real artifact of the facade of the entryway to The M Street door of WHCA. I do not know who had it before them, and maybe it was "Victoria's Secret". Part of the movie "True Lies" with Arnold Schwarzenegger and "No Way Out" with Kevin Costner were filmed in parts of the mall. Arnold may have crashed through the window of Victoria's Secret in the movie.
I remember the stories of the WHCA shop as being a secret CIA HQ where it was found out by a local Georgetown rag in the late 60s-early 70s.
The people that worked in Riggs Bank was saying that our paychecks were coming from different parts of the country which was true. Air Force had paychecks from Randolph AFB in Texas, Army checks were coming from Indianapolis, and Navy was from another place. They saw license plates of our POV's from states around the country going into the shop through one gate and then coming out in government cars from the other gate with radio antennas on them. They saw all the antennas fencing on the roof of the building and cameras and speakers down on the street level at all the buildings entrances/exits. WHCA personnel going into a warehouse type of building with suits and ties seemed out of place for this Georgetown location.
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| CIA building on M St |
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| The Exorcist Stairs |
In the early 1970’s the decision was made to move the shop to a more secure location in Anacostia. Over a period of time a phased move was coordinated to relocate all Groups and Departments to their new location. When WHCA vacated the location that was the “shop” in Georgetown the building was totally remodeled and was turned into a a very upscale mall, the Georgetown Park Mall now occupies the space on M St.
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| Georgetown Park Mall M St Entrance |
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| First floor interior of the Georgetown Park Mall |
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| Wisconsin Ave Entrance Today |
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| Rive Gauche Restaurant |
Camp David Catoctin Mountain, Md.
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Elevation
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1,900 ft. (579.1 m)
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Location
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Location
| Frederick County, Maryland, USA | ||
Range
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Appalachian Mountains
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Coordinates
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+39.648333N -77.466667 W
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November of 1965 to Camp David
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| Entrance to the Presidential Retreat (1942) |
Main Entrance to Camp David |
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| Hickory Lodge (1956) As one of the permanent staff assigned to Camp David, we were allowed to use any of the recreational facilities as long as the President or any VIP's would be visiting. The most popular facility used by the staff and their families was the swimming pool and bath house which was located near the Mess old mess hall and barracks. The pool also had a built-in trampoline where the kids loved to play. |
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| Camp David swimming pool (1966) |
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| The pool bath house (1965) |
| Staff Swimming Pool (2014) |
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| Aspen Lodge with new swimming pool (1969) |
Camp David was as dry as a Navy ship during my first years there. (Not that beer sometimes didn't occasionally find its way in). The bar in Hickory was instituted in '59 or '60
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| The lounge in Hickory Lodge with dance floor |
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| Fully equipped bar in Hickory Lodge |
The daily interface with NSF was frequent, they ran the Senior Petty Officer Mess (S.P.O.M.) which was the bar in Hickory, and also were in charge of the Medical Unit. There was a long-time icon, MCPO Adams who was in charge of the Medical Unit, and his "other assigned duties were to administer the rules and running of the bar in Hickory. They had a fully stocked bar, typical bags of chips, and a supply of Stewarts Infrared sandwiches that could be purchased. Draft beer was probably as cheap as $.25 a glass, and mixed drinks might have been $.45 each, a typical sandwich another $1.25.
This was
established as a NO CASH bar. Long before our Smartphone payment system was
even dreamed . Each visit you would check out and initial a "Chit"
which would be put in the register. Now remember, there were about 50 WHCA people,
and Marine Security Detachment of 35, and another 50 NSF troops that all had
access to the bar in Hickory. When you would be walking your rounds making Communications
checks, it was not uncommon to meet MCPO Adams, (a.k.a. Doc Adams) on one of
the trails. You would have the traditional courtesy of greeting and then he
would repeat your name (no name tags) and tell you $14.85! That would be your
current balance to date for the month. At the end of each month, you were required
to go to the S.P.O.M. or his office and make payment.
I
want to say, I think the only accepted method of payment was CASH! He knew to
the penny what every person on the entire complex owed on their accounts. Of
course, this was just one of his "other" assigned duties. I don't
think I ever saw him in the Medical Unit building, he did have a very good
staff that took care of regular "sick call" at 0800 each morning.
(This was in the 1967-time frame) "Doc" was a legend. Total class act and bartender supreme. there was another obscure rule. You could not buy
a round in the S.P.O.M. for your coworkers unless it was a published
"Promotion Party". I always wondered if this was a way to monitor
"drinking habits"
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Army One (1967)
In recognition to the Army Signal personnel and their unusual assignment POTUS The Presidential Train Ferdinand Magellan - White House communications via, 3WTE on wheels. We feature the U.S. Army Signal Corps., General Albert J. Myer, and Radio Railcar installation. One fall day in October 1956 12 noon EDT will long be remembered by hundreds of 14 MHZ SSB State side amateurs. It was the day W3WTE was, of all places, 60 feet below the Cleveland, Ohio, Railway Terminal Tower Station working the bands. The detail was called “Operation Earthworm” We have a QSL courtesy of W3WTE. “POTUS” an acronym, stands for President of the United States! The special railroad car of the White House was used when the President was away from home, equipped with a luxury living rolling home, a lecture platform, communications, safety and hospital car, press corps and energy car. This amazing city on wheels was at times a nightmare for the Secret Service, Railroad and logistics involved in the Presidents safety. There was an advanced two car train and each crossing was inspected by the Secret Service and rail authorities. Above radio control console occupies part interior of presidential communications General Myers Car. Multiple control panels, a maze of gadgets for radio broadcasts, radio photo transmission, tape recordings of presidential speeches and incoming and outgoing teletype printer copy. Two diesel AC generators are on the right side of car, can supply enough power to operate the train in any capacity. Mr. Charles Clemens K6QD spoke of his duties much earlier when first assigned to Presidential Communications in 1942. He was chosen to be the first CW operator between the Presidential Train and the White House via HF radio in railroad Car 1401, “The White House on Wheels.” Clemens explained some front seats had been removed and an operating table installed full of radio devices in their place. Telegraph lines alongside the tracks provided a lot of clicks that made it difficult to copy poor signals, mainly in the southwest part of the U.S.A. The clearance requirements for railroad cars prohibited using a real antenna. The radio operators used a wire inside an insulating tube mounted on standoffs about six inches above the metal roof of the car. This was later changed to a copper tube, the same size as the insulating tube, with much better results. Continued the frequency complement ran from 3 MHZ to 17 MHZ. (Car 1401 built in 1914 would be replaced in the 50s by the modern General Albert Myer car) Myer was the first Signal Corps Commander. Clemens K6QD Signal Corps operator said “I was supposed to contact a number of Army stations along our shakedown trip in 1942 riding the rails, none of them more than a couple of hundred miles from our route. As might be expected, results were poor and it was decided to contact WAR in the Pentagon at Washington direct. Successful contacts were made from New Orleans and on the way home. The only real difficulty came when we were close to Washington DC.” Clemens added “Overall, our results were encouraging and we were assigned the task of accompanying President Roosevelt on his swing stumping around the country visiting military bases and aircraft plants. Equipment and facilities were improved over the years and when Clemens left in 1948, the car had a small operating room, a code center, a small bunk room with four bunks, a lounge room and the baggage half of the car packed with equipment. Clemens continued “To make a long story quite short, I worked six years on the Presidential Train, traveling with Presidents Roosevelt and Truman in the United States, Canada and Mexico. We logged well over a hundred thousand miles.” Today, the train is no more, Old 1401 is gone, only known by gild of 1401 above the entry door, Gen. Myer car has been retired and the Ferdinand Magellan is restored and on display in Florida. The small detachment that Clemens knew had evolved into the White House Army Signal Agency and finally White House Communications Agency. They wouldn’t believe how much equipment they could eliminate by satellite communications today.
Partially scripted from March, 1975 Ham Radio Magazine article, “Brass Pounding on Wheels”, by K6QD CC Jr., and Railroad Magazine February 1953. Thanks to Glenn Laser W3WTE for a copy of the POTUS QSL. Glenn advised the card was found at a yard sale or Ham fest in WV and presented to him. - It would be a pleasure to sit and talk with Mr. Clemens today, but I believe he is a silent key because the call has been reissued several times. I can’t come up with anything on the two communications coaches whether they avoided he cutters torch. When the Ferdinand Magellan was taken out of service in 1958, The two communication railcars were moved and during the 1960’s and 70’s and stored at the New Cumberland Army Depot just outside of Harrisburg, Pa. The communications car was to be maintained by WHASA/WHCA out of Camp David. Their mission was to provide communications for the President, while on trips, whether campaigning for office, or traveling via rail. President Kennedy used Crate on one of the last official trips when he went to the Army Navy football game in Philadelphia in 1961.
The Radio car was a converted something and appeared to have been gutted and then built as required. There was a window installed so the operation could be viewed from the hallway that passed between the rail cars. As you were sitting at the console behind you, there was a large glass window which was by the walkway in the left side of the car. Looking out that glass window past the walkway was another large glass window which was on the car body. If anyone on the platform were to look into the car window, they would see the whole console and operators. The Radio Car had to be placed on the tracks, so it faced the Hospital car because of the coax connectors on the front end. The train had to be configured with the Hospital car toward the train engine and the Radio or Communications Car following. The coax connectors on the Hospital car were connected by coax jumpers to the coax connectors on the Communications Car. This was also because on the opposite end, (from the coax connector end) were connectors which carried audio to the end of the train. The last car would be an Observation Car where the President would ride, stand and speak to the crowds, who would come to see him while on campaign trips.
The Radio Car had a console installed which handled all the HF Comm. equipment, the audio amps and VU Meters for the audio PA function and two patch panels for audio routing. It also had rooms for the AC power generators, radio equipment, switchboard and a small Comm. Center. The radio console consisted of two HF Receivers (R-390A), two SSB/ISB Converters (CV-157) and a TTY converter (CV-116). The TMC GPT-750W transmitters were used for phone patch audio and TTY traffic. On the top of this car was two HF antennas designed by Collins Radio. Hard to explain, but in the center of the roof of the car the antennas were grounded to the roof using three 90 degree elbows. A total of six, three for each antenna about 6 to 8 inches in diameter which fed three pipes in each direction to the end of the cars. About 3' from the end of antennas, the three pipes were bonded together and fed at that point, with 50 ohm coax, to connectors on the trailing side of the car. The pipes were supported by insulators from the center ground, out to the ends.
The two cars were stored at Indian Town Gap Army Depot near Harrisburg, Pa. primarily because President Eisenhower used it several times and it was close to Gettysburg and his farm. In early 1967 I actually took a trip on the Presidential Train (Crate) from Harrisburg to Union Station in DC, and back. All of the guys from M Street came down for a tour we spent the night and went back the next day. It was a total farce, I think the officers wanted to get away for a couple of days and have a party. There was some story about LBJ taking a train ride to Philadelphia for the Army - Navy game, but of course it never happened. I have always wondered if LBJ ever knew that he had something other AF-1 at his disposal. In the late 1960’s the TMC GPT-750 W transmitter, R-390's and CV-157's were replaced with a Collins Radio state of the art transmitter/receiver, with automatic antenna tuners. The control units were mounted in the console, with the main TX / RX equipment mounted in two 6' 19" racks. There is no confirmation as to when “Crate” was removed from service or the disposition of.
After the Presidential Railcar Ferdinand Magellan was retired and acquired by the Gold Coast Railroad Museum in 1958, Crate and the Staff Car (Morn) were sent to storage at the New Cumberland Army Depot Just across the river from Harrisburg PA. Built out of an old hospital car in 1951, the General Albert J. Myer (labeled POTUS 1), USA 87325 the communications car, this car replaced the older ‘Car 1401′ which always accompanied the presidential train the Ferdinand Magellan. Following the Myer was the Morn (labeled POTUS 2), USA 89426 which was also built from a hospital car and was the living quarters for the personnel of the Myer. It included a small kitchen, bunk beds, a small bathroom with a shower and a living area.
WHASA/WHCA personnel from Camp David continued to maintain the communications equipment, through the late 60’s. The last time that I saw Crate was on July 27, 1966 when we returned from an overnight trip to Union Station in Washington D.C. Shortly after I was assigned to Cannonball just outside Mercersburg Pa. It wasn't until a couple of years ago when I started communicating with people that I had served with in WHCA that we tried to find out what had happened to Crate. One person remembers going up to the Depot in PA from Camp David to work on Crate in the fall of 1967. Another person says that during the “Fuel Crises” of 1973, they went up to the Depot to look at the cars for a possible rail trip by President Nixon to Key Biscayne FL. The trip was eventually made by commercial Airline. No one that we talked to seemed remember or know when Crate was decommissioned or where it was today! Recently I received a comment on my blog from an anonymous contributor identifying the whereabouts of Crate today along with several pictures. Several people were involved with supplying information relative with the suggested time line that follows. This is what we believe what happened To Crate! Crate remained in service and functional until it was stripped of all of the Communications equipment and retired from Presidential Service sometime in 1974. It is believed that the Communications Car (Myer) USA 87325 went to Ft. Belvoir VA and of the Staff Car (Morn) USA 89426 was sent to Ft. Eustis TX. It is not known why Crate was split up or what if any was the Army’s intended use of these cars. In 1978 Crate the Communications Car USA 87325 (POTUS 1) was purchased by NASA Kennedy Space Center Railroad System. As part of the effort, in 1978, KSC purchased an old Army Signal Corps communications car (U.S. Army 87325) for use as an office/tool room. This car was constructed during World War II as a hospital car and remodeled in 1950 as the “Presidential Communications Car” and accompanied the “Ferdinand Magellan” armored Presidential Pullman whenever the U.S. President traveled by train. (POTUS 1) U.S. Army 87325, which became NLAX 150 upon its purchase by NASA, the car was retrofitted for duty by the newly hired railroad crew, which became part of the new Transportation Operations team within KSC. “KSC to Start Rail Operations,” Spaceport News, March 17, 1978: 1-3.NASA disposed of General Albert J Myer USA 87325 in 1987, and it was acquired by the Gold Coast Railroad Museum. The museum was also informed about several other hospital style cars that were in Ft Eustis VA and they were also available. While the museum was at Ft Eustis they discovered that the Staff Car (Morn) USA 87325 was found! The Gold Coast Railroad Museum acquired both the Myer and Morn cars and Crete was re-united in FL at the GCRM! The paperwork relative to the acquisition of Crate was completed by the Florida Division of Surplus Property. Work was progressing on these cars when Andrew hit in 1992. Andrew caused extensive damage to the Gold Coast Railroad Museum and to the cars that they were restoring. FEMA claimed that they would put all non-profits back to their pre-Andrew condition. Myer, Morn, the Jim Crow combine, and Hospital car 89436 were selected to go to Steamtown for repairs. Rather than give the museum funds to restore the Myer and Morn, they along with a Hospital Car #89436 and a Combination “Jim Crow Car” were sent to the National Park Service Steam Town Park in Scranton PA for restoration. Patrick McKnight, Historian/Archivist for Steam Town Park told me that the Hospital Car and Jim Crow car were restored and returned to the GCRM. The Myer and Morn were not restored, due to a lack of funds and documentation of what the interiors of the Myer and Morn looked like. The communications equipment would have been removed when the cars were taken out of service, and NASA modified the interior when they purchased the Myer in 1978. The cars were placed in storage for several years until there was an Executive order issued to either donate or sell the Myer and Morn to the Hollywood Railroad Station Museum Inc.
In 2005, Tony Campos, project director at the Hollywood Railroad Station Museum, was tasked with creating a train to commemorate Dorothy Walker Bush dubbed the “Dorothy Walker Bush Great Floridian 2000.” The train was to include the 1924 FEC Engine 253, the Myer and Morn, a mail car used in Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show, a “Jim Crow” segregation-era car, and the Direct Orient Express ice cream parlor. He was granted $375,000 by the Florida Division of Historical Resources and was expected to have the cars ready for display by June 2006. In 2006, Campos acknowledged the restoration wasn't going to be completed on-time and cited hurricanes, a break-in, sketchy historical documents, lack of grant money, and a PBS documentary crew’s delay in filming the project. In October 2006, the Florida Division of Historical Resources sent a letter to Campos asking about the expenditures of the grant money. Campos then disappeared; he never responded, he didn't answer phone calls and is was hardly ever at his office at the station. It was requested he return the money or face legal action. The project director was eventually arrested for misappropriation of funds. He’s since been arrested and is thought to be out on parole as of this writing. The Cars remain on a rail siding in Miami. Technically they are still owned by the Hollywood Railroad Station Museum, however; neither the museum nor the Florida East Coast Railroad has any interest in restoring them. Dorothy Walker Bush Great Floridian 2000 – Florida's Forgotten Past Published on August 19, 2013 by Bullet What’s left of the failed project now sits rotting away behind a South Florida warehouse. Among them are two train cars thought to be presidential trains cars, with the names (POTUS 1) and (POTUS 2) stenciled on the sides of cars, sit on wood blocks at the front of the tracks.
According to this article Crate which consists of (POTUS 1) the Albert J Myer communications car and (POTUS 2) is the Morn Staff car sits on a railroad siding in Miami. No one that I have talked that actually was aboard Crate can remember if the cars that we maintained were actually labeled POTUS 1 or POTUS 2); however, a closer look at all of the photographs from this article and others that have been published leads me to conclude that the cars identified as POTUS 1 and POUTS 2 are likely to be Crate. Update: POTUS Train Cars Identified Published on November 7, 2013. By Bullet
By comparing the window pattern of the car identified as POTUS I, it is probably the communications car USA 87325. A close look at the HF antenna system unique to the communications car was a special system designed by Collins Radio. This was a complex system for the time. The overhead pictures of the antenna system on the cars in service in the 1960,s (below) and the car identified as POTUS I today appear to be the same.
Interior pictures of POTUS 1 and POTUS 2 that were used to try to identify the Radio Room and the Staff/Lounge areas was difficult but, I believe the picture below is of the Radio Room.
I believe that the POTUS 2 (Morn) can be identified as the Staff/Lounge car from the interior pictures that were provided by the article.
Some interior photos of Crate at Union Station in St Louis (1961) found in the JFK Library were also used in the comparison. These are the only known photos of the interior of the Staff/Lounge Car.
Since no one is interested in restoring these two railcars, the fate of Crate appears to be the salvage yard and extinction! Updates to the status of Crate can be found in the Railway Preservation News Subject: Hollywood Florida Railroad Museum & the Presidential Train
28 Aug 66 to York PA for Dallastown Rally with President Johnson Since this was my first trip I was teamed up with two other radio guys from the Shop in Washington DC. CWO Pierre Fontaine was assigned as the Trip Officer he was my CO at Camp David. Mr. Fontaine and I drove to York Pa. on Aug 28th to meet the radio guys who had driven from the shop in DC with all of the communications equipment. We met with a marketing representative from GTE at the Travelodge in York and advised him of the pending visit and the telephone circuits required for all of the Communication equipment necessary to Support the President, Secret Service and White House Staff during this trip. The Travelodge in York Pa.
Our first order of business was to meet with the Secret Service and Staff Advance people to get the Trip Itinerary and to determine the locations that we would use to install the Switchboard, Comm. Center and also identify sites for the FM radio base stations. The President and Mrs. Johnson would arrive on Air Force One at Harrisburg International Airport and motorcade the 39 miles to Dallastown. After his speech they would then return to Harrisburg International Airport for their departure back to Washington DC. The Motorcade route from Harrisburg Pa.to Dallastown Pa. With only six days to install everything we went to work. We met with the GTE operations people at their central office in York Pa. and obtained spaces for the WHCA Switchboard and Comm. Center in The GTE CO. Once that was taken care of we started our Radio Survey by driving the motorcade route in search of possible radio sites that would insure coverage of the entire route. We would discover two locations with radio towers already in place. These towers were located at the WXQXA-FM Radio station in York and the FAA radio site overlooking Harrisburg International Airport. These sites were ideal because they had direct line of site of Interstate 83, the main route of the motorcade would travel. Once permission and access was obtained to the radio sites, we would drive the entire motorcade route checking radio coverage. GTE was then contacted and the orders were placed for our remote keying lines to be run from the WHCA switchboard in York to each of the FM Radio base stations. Baker/Charlie (Secret Service) and Sierra (White House Staff) base stations were installed at WXQXA-FM and at the FAA radio tower in Harrisburg; the remote keying lines were installed and tested to the remote consoles at the WHCA Switchboard in York which was now operational. The 125’ FAA radio site near Harrisburg Pa. WXQXA-FM Radio Site in York Pa. By Friday we were finished with installing the radio network and all that remained was to set up the Presidential motorcade just before the arrival of Air Force One the next day. Early on Saturday morning we headed to the Harrisburg Airport with several Motorola (P-33) radios to be placed inside the vehicles that would make up the motorcade. The President's Limo had already arrived from DC and motorcade was complete and ready for the President and Mrs. Johnson. One final install needed to be completed, the Chopper Pack! Since LBJ took office the Secret Service required a surveillance chopper to be deployed to cover all motorcades that took place. This was to insure that no snipers were on billboards, radio towers, rooftops or any other vantage point. Local law enforcement officers would be positioned on freeway overpasses and at the on /off ramps. The chopper Pack consisted of two Motorola P-33 (B/C) radios to communicate with the USSS agents in the motorcade. Two headphones with push to talk microphones and a connection to the helicopter’s intercom system so the USSS agent on board could talk to the Pilots. The surveillance Chopper a Huey UH-1 This would be my first flight in a helicopter and I was a little apprehensive about the trip ahead. The chopper that was used was a US Army Huey UH-1, the type used in Vietnam; the pilots were both vets of Vietnam. The Huey has a large door on either side that could be opened during flight with jump seats facing outward. Once I secured the radios, I took my place in one of the jump seats with the Chopper Pack between my legs and tested the radios and intercom. I then fastened my lap belt and was ready for the flight. The USSS agent strapped himself next to me in a contraption called a monkey belt. This devise allowed him to move around and even stand while we were in the air. He then removed an M-16 from its carrying case, loaded it and sat down next to me. We were ready to go just as soon as Air Force One was on its final approach. LBJ and Lady Bird arrive at Harrisburg International Airport
LBJ is greeted by the crowd at Harrisburg International Airport Shortly after the President and first lady arrived at the airport and was greeted by Congressman N. Neiman Craley Jr. the entourage departed by motorcade. We were already in the air following the 29 mile route looking out for anything that might present a risk to the motorcade. Now I always thought that Helicopters went up and down, little did I know about their actual maneuverability until the USSS agent aboard spotted someone running across a field toward the highway and with the approaching motorcade told the pilot to turn around to check out the situation? The Pilot made a very sharp turn putting the Huey on its side, here I am looking straight ahead looking at the highway and the USSS Agent standing in up in the monkey belt. To this day I can’t believe he didn't fall out, I suppose the force from that tight turn was enough! It turned out that the person below never made it to the highway, and we continued on. The motorcade arrived in Dallastown and president and Mrs. Johnson were greeted by a friendly audience. Congressman N. Neiman Craley Jr. served as grand marshal of a parade to celebrate Dallastown’s 100th anniversary, where President Johnson spoke. The President addresses residents of Pa. in Dallastown Read the President’s Speech Here. The First Lady, Lady Bird Johnson is greeted in Dallastown The President had departed Harrisburg and headed back to Washington DC and we headed back to York to start packing up all of the equipment we had installed over the past week. On Sunday morning it was time to visit the two radio sites and retrieve the base stations Antennas and Coax from these locations and get them ready to return to Washington DC. Once all Of The equipment was inventoried and loaded on a truck. I left York and returned to Camp David. This would be the first of many trips world wide that I would participate during my assignment with the White House.
26 Oct 66 to Manila PI with President Johnson Manila is the capital of the Philippines and one of the 16 cities that make up Metro Manila, one of the most populous metropolitan areas in the world with a population of 20 million people. It is located on the eastern shores of Manila Bay on the western side of the island of Luzon. Manila was the site of the fiercest battle in the Pacific theater during the war. During the battle, Manila became a city of bloodbath in Asia where 100,000 civilians were killed. It was the second most devastated city in the world after Warsaw during the Second World War. Since then the city has been rebuilt. During the Marcos dictatorship, the Manila metropolitan area region was enacted as an independent entity in 1975 encompassing several cities and towns. During the Lacson era, also known as The Golden Age, Manila was revitalized and became once again the pearl of the orient, which Manila has earned before the outbreak of World War II. The leaders of the SEATO nations assembled at a Summit in Manila, hosted by Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos on October 24, 1966. In attendance were Prime Minister Nguyen Cao KY (South Vietnam), Prime Minister Harold Holt (Australia), President Park Chung-hee (South Korea), President Ferdinand Marcos (Philippines), Prime Minister Keith Holyoake (New Zealand), Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van Thieu (South Vietnam), Prime Minister Thanom Kittikachorn (Thailand), and President Lyndon B. Johnson (United States).
Although other subjects were discussed, the Vietnam War was the main topic. Prior to and Immediately after the Summit President Johnson would also make state visits, to New Zealand, Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, and Korea. On this particular trip to Southeast Asia the President also made a surprise trip to Cam Ranh Bay, Vietnam to visit with the troops fighting there.
While in the Philippines, President Johnson had several private meetings with President Marcos at Malacañang Palace, like the White House, this is the official residence of the President of the Philippines. The palace was made famous as the home of President Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos, who were its longest residents, from 1965 to 1986. As first lady, Mrs. Marcos oversaw the reconstruction of the palace to her own extravagant tastes. Including the former San Miguel Brewery Buildings, this was demolished upon Expansion, paving away to a park near the San Miguel Church. President Johnson and President Marcos also visited Corregidor to dedicate the opening of General MacArthur’s restored headquarters. The President also visited Battery Geary while on the island. In advance of the President’s visit temporary communications was established by connecting the location’s being visited and the WHCA switchboard in Manila. A temporary Command Post for the secret Service was also established for security reasons. Corregidor is an island at the entrance of the Philippines' Manila Bay. Due to its position in the bay, it has served as a focal point for the naval defenses of the capital city of Manila. During World War II.
Battery Geary was a battery of eight 13-ton, 12-inch mortars. Defiladed in a hollow on Corridor's Southern coast it was fairly well protected from Japanese shelling. However, on January 6, 1942, a Japanese bomb landed in a makeshift bunker killing 31 of Battery Geary's NCOs and cannons. This battery was pinpointed by the Japanese artillery and was subjected to heavy shelling. One direct hit by a 240-mm shell, which detonated the magazines of this battery in May 1942, proved to be the most crippling shot during the entire siege of Corregidor. Large chunks of steel were blown as far as the Malinda Tunnel, killing 27 of the battery crew instantly.
General MacArthur was ordered off of Corregidor Island to Australia, announcing to the people of the Philippines as he left, “I shall return”. After the dedication on Corregidor Island they visited The International Rice Institute in Los Banos and then to everyone’s surprise The President flew to Cam Ranh Bay, Vietnam to visit the troops. In October of 1966 President Johnson departed on a diplomatic visit to a number of countries in Southeast Asia. The war in Vietnam was raging on, and the President planned to meet with allies at a SEATO conference in Manila. Presidents Travel Itinerary October 1966
WHCA’s Role in the President's Manila Summit Although the Manila Summit wasn’t scheduled to start until October 24, 1966 the preparation for the President’s visit actually started on the morning of October 5, 1966 at Andrews AFB just outside Washington DC. On the tarmac sat a large C-141 transport plane. This transport would carry approx. 30 WHCA communications personnel and tons of communications equipment to Manila. Because of the length of the flight a comfort pallet was first loaded on to the plane, this contained an airline type kitchen and a rest room; the pallet also had airline style seats that would recline. The communications equipment was loaded last. When the cargo was secured, we were ready to leave. Manila was only one stop on a six nation Presidential trip so there would be five other C-141’s loaded with communications equipment at Andrews and sent to their assigned locations awaiting the Presidents arrival according to the travel itinerary. The first leg of the trip was from Andrews to Elmendorf AFB in Anchorage AK. After the plane was refueled and a new crew reported in, we departed for Komaki AFB in Tokyo, Japan. We departed Tokyo on October 7, 1966 and headed for Clark AFB in the Philippines. The equipment was loaded on trucks and was sent to Manila, while the communications personnel were flown to the city arriving at the U.S. Embassy about 4 PM on 7 October 1966, where we received an orientation of the facilities and our I.D’s to use during our stay. The equipment arrived at the Embassy the following afternoon and all of the Comm. Center secure voice and TTY equipment was unloaded and taken to the area where it would be installed. All of the FM and HF radio equipment was stored in the embassy until coverage surveys were completed and installation locations were selected. The final stop was the Philippine Telephone Central Office closest to the embassy and Malacañang Palace, this is where the switchboard would be installed and all circuits would be terminated. Also all of the Sierra FM radio circuits and paging system would terminate at the switchboard. Over the next two days radio surveys were completed checking coverage of all locations that the President, Secret Service and the White House Staff would be visit over the next two to three weeks. Baker, Charlie and Sierra FM base stations were installed at the Phillipinas Hotel, and the Telephone Co. Central office.
The US Embassy would become the WHCA base of operation. The Secret Service Command Post would be established there, all of the Baker and Charlie FM radios would terminate in the CP. The AV events would be staged and shipped out from the embassy. All of the Sierra FM radios would terminate at the WHCA switchboard at the Telco’s central office building. The Embassy also had an area large enough to handle all of the helicopter arrivals and departures. By October 12th the Comm. Center, Switchboard and radio equipment was installed and now manned around the clock. As the circuits were installed and tested the reliability of the network increased. The travel itinerary also included two side trips that Presidents Johnson and Marcos would take. The first was to the International Rice Institute in Los Banos, Laguna Philippines and then to Corregidor Island. Los Banos was about 60km from Manila, so we loaded a chopper and flew the radio equipment to the Rice Institute and installed it in about two hours. I volunteered to climb a 60 ft, pole to install an FM radio antenna. When I got to the top, I swung my leg around the pole so I would be able to use my hands, as I did the entire pole twisted with me, and almost threw me off. After recovering from a moment of panic I taped the antenna to the pole, connected the coax and made my safe decent. The next morning two of us again loaded equipment on a chopper but headed for Corregidor. We landed at the airstrip on Corregidor Island, we were met by the Military Governor of Corregidor Island. We were shown Gen MacArthur’s Headquarters and the remains of the Mile Long Barracks, the two of us then received an invitation to lunch with the Milatary Commander. I was never told what we had for lunch, and I never asked, as I remember I didn’t get sick! Everything was now installed and fully operational just waiting for the Presidents arrival on October 24th. I was assigned to work the CP and fly surveillance during the three days that the President was in Manila. The President and First Lady arrived as scheduled and were greeted by President and Mrs. Marcos. The summit convened that afternoon and adjourned the next day about noon. Then it was off to Corregidor and the dedication of Gen. Mac Arthur’s headquarters and visit to Battery Geary, at the conclusion of the dedication the President choppered to the International Rice Institute in Los Banos where he addressed representatives from several Southeast Asian countries. That concluded the day’s activities and the President returned to Manila. On the final day of the visit President made an Unscheduled Trip to Vietnam to visit with the combat troops at Cam Rahn Bay. Nobody knew in advance where they were going and it wasn’t until Air Force One was on its way back did we know where they had been. The next morning the President departed to go to the next stop in Bangkok, Thailand. We had to keep everything active until the President touched down in Thailand then our job was to tear everything down and again gather everything together to ship it back by truck to Clark AFB. There were a few members of the WHCA team that worked this stop, including myself that left Manila on November 1, 1966 to return to the US. We met with some additional personnel that were returning from other locations that the President had visited on this Asian tour. We were briefed aboard the aircraft that we were to be redeployed to various locations in the US that the President was planning to visit just Prior to the 1966 mid term elections. We left Clark AFB and flew to Yokota AFB near Tokyo to refuel, we then flew to San Francisco where went through customs. I was told that the next day that I would pick up radio equipment and go to Chicago IL to join a team that was already there setting up the trip site. When I arrived in Chicago on Nov 2 1966 I was picked up at O'hare International Airport where I loaded all of the equipment into the Vehicle and departed for the Chicago Hilton Hotel where I would be staying.
Two days ago I was enjoying warm weather in the Philippines and now I am in Chicago in the month of November, with only summer clothes. the closest thing I had to a coat was a rain coat! The Windy City lived up to its name thank God I would be there for only two days! Since the fund raiser was being held in the Hilton Hotel, the Switchboard, Comm. Center and one set of FM Radio base stations were already set up by the time that I arrived. Now we had to cover the motorcade route the President would take from O'Hare to the Hilton downtown. We choose the USSS Field Office on the near north side to install a second set of FM base stations for the motorcade.
Once the radios were operational I started to survey the motorcade route by driving the Kennedy expressway out to the airport to make sure we had good radio coverage. I was almost to O'hare when I was informed that the entire trip had been cancelled! I turned around and returned to the field office and removed all of the radio equipment we had just finished installing and returned to the hotel. On Nov 4 1966 we left Chicago and returned to Washington DC and home.
16 Jan 67 to Washington DC -Howard University CBR Training
Cannonball did have Decon a station at the entrance of the tower, where contaminated equipment and clothing could be disposed of and showers for personnel to decontaminate prior to entering.
The class also spent a day at the Washington DC Civil Defense Emergency Operations Center operated by the D.C. Office of Emergency Management located at the Lorton VA Youth Correctional Facility. We received a detailed overview of how the WHCA microwave network could accommodate any emergency Presidential address into the Emergency Broadcast System (EBS) using Mt Weather as the interface. While I was in class I was notified that I would be assigned to support President Johnson on an upcoming trip to a Conference of American States in Punta Del Este Uruguay in March of 1967.
26 Feb 67 to Washington DC-HF Radio Training In preparation of the upcoming trip to Punta Del Este I was sent to Cartwheel for a week of operational training the TMC-750 single sideband (SSB) transmitter, and the R-390/CV-157 single sideband (SSB) receiver and converter. This included ancillary TTY and Voice equipment necessary to communicate with Air Force One (AF-1) and other WHCA locations working on this particular trip. SSB Radio Console with TTY interface SSB TMC 750 Transmitter The TMC-GPT-750 was a 1KW transmitter and was installed in all of the towers and used primarily for support on overseas trips. When I returned home from Punta Del Este in March of 1967 we relocated to PA where I would be assigned to a microwave relay facility known as Cannonball as the NCOIC.
11 Apr 67 to Punta Del Este UR with President Johnson Punta Del Este is an upscale resort on the southern tip of Uruguay, southeast of Maldonado and about 140 km east of Montevideo. Although the town has a year-round population of about 7,300, the summer tourist boom often boosts the population by an extra 500,000. The Tourist season usually lasts until the end of March, but in 1967 all of the businesses remained open for an additional month because President Johnson was to meet with Latin American leaders at a summit hosted by Uruguay, in Punta Del Este, President Lyndon Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk arrived on April 11, 1967 to attend a summit conference with other American Chiefs of State. On April 13, 1967 President Lyndon Johnson addressed the conference of The Organization of American States (OAS). April 14, 1967, was the last day of the Latin American summit meeting in Punta Del Este, Uruguay. President Johnson met privately with the President of Uruguay for bilateral talks. Later in the morning Johnson and other Presidents met to sign the Declaration of the Presidents of America.
In the declaration, the Presidents agreed to create and support a Latin American Common Market; to bind the nations of the hemisphere in transportation, power, and river development; to expand Latin American trade; to intensify the battle against illiteracy and disease; to modernize agriculture and education; and to avoid unnecessary military expenditures. Eighteen of the Presidents signed the proclamation. The President of Ecuador refused to sign it. Bolivia, who boycotted the conference, also did not sign. After lunch, the President left Uruguay; he stopped briefly in Surinam and met with Surinam officials before returning to the LBJ Ranch late in the evening Presidents
Travel Itinerary April 1967
WHCA’s Role in the President’s Visit The WHCA communications team assembled at Andrews AFB on March 15, 1967 to support the Presidential visit to Punta Del Este, Uruguay. Approximately 30 tons of equipment and 25 personnel were loaded on a C-141 to support the four day trip starting on April 11, 1967. A similar team would be sent to Montevideo, Uruguay to also support this visit. After unloading the equipment we loaded onto a bus for the two hour trip to Punta Del Este. When the equipment arrived we started to prepare for the upcoming Summit. First priority was to perform a radio survey of the island to determine the best locations for the FM and HF transmitters so all of the upcoming events would have coverage. The locations for the switchboard and Communications Center were also chosen. Because there was also a WHCA team in Montevideo, we did not have to provide the communications support for the President's arrival in Montevideo and the motorcade to the conference site in Punta Del Este. The two systems of the TMC SBT 1KW transmitters were installed on the 12th floor of an office building on the southern edge of the city. Three FM base stations (Baker, Charlie and Sierra) were also install giving us line of site to almost any point in the city. A private residence was used as the HF receiving site in an area away from any heavy radio activity to minimize interference. Two R-390 A’s and CV-157’ receivers and single sideband converters were located at this location. The transmitters and receivers were tied together with voice circuits for phone patch and TTY traffic. The installation of all of our equipment was complete by March 30th 1967. With the exception of finishing pulling a few circuits and terminating them on the switchboard, we were ready for the conference. All locations were manned and operated on a 7 by 24 hr. basis until the conference was over and the President departed Montevideo. President Johnson arrived on April 11th and the conference took place as scheduled. On April 14, 1967 the President departed Punta Del Este and left Montevideo headed for Paramaribo Suriname to meet with the President of Suriname and then returned to the LBJ Ranch. It was time to tear everything down and pack everything back on a truck to go to Montevideo for loading and departure from Uruguay. On April 15th 1967 we departed for Suriname stopping at Lackland AFB to drop off passengers headed to Johnson City and the LBJ Ranch. after refueling we headed to Andrews AFB and home. When I returned home from Punta Del Este in March of 1967 we relocated to PA where I would be assigned to a microwave relay facility known as Cannonball as the NCOIC.
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It was November of 1965 when my experiences with WHCA began, I was assigned to Cactus which was the codename for the microwave installation at Camp David, and I would also work at another microwave location near Mercersburg Pa. This site was known as Cannonball and was a microwave relay station. I would travel to Cannonball for a week at a time and spent a total of eleven weeks there over a year’s period of time. This worked out very well because in March of 1967 I was transferred permanently to Cannonball.
We rented an apartment in the
Homestead apartments in Blue Ridge Summit Pa., that was next to the Post
Office. The entrance to the apartment is pictured below to the left of the Post
Office. We only lived there for a short period of time until Government Housing
at Camp David became available.
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| The Old Post office in Blue Ridge Summit Pa |
Behind the old
Blue Ridge Summit, USPS Office there was a two-story white house pictured in
the background was a WHCA rental where Don Cammel lived for over 3 years. Don
remembers that there were four single WHCA guys, and they convinced Mrs.
Warrenfeltz, (Warrenfeltz Realty in Cascade) to rent to four single military
guys. She dealt with a lot of Ft Ritchie folks and was cautious, but the owner
Robley Brown met with three of them and they convinced him they would take care
of his property. He was a great landlord, if they wanted to paint or upgrade a
room, and he would supply the materials. The rent was to include lawncare where
he would come cut the grass and trimming. They all used the lawnmower which he
kept in garage, and he lowered the rent by $25 a month in the summer. The
garage was not usable for a car, but they were able to store a lot of
"stuff" in there....remember a few Bell Boxes as storage containers
for treasures. Back porch had a spare refrigerator for the beer drinkers with
an "Honor Coffee Can" on the top. The local beer distributor would
stop every two weeks and leave a few cases and take money out of the can and
leave a receipt.
Across the street from Mrs Warrenfeltz Realty (her office was in a
converted back porch) there was a liquor store right on the State Line between
MD and PA. The prices competed with the Fort Ritchie Class VI store. The PA
State Police would watch people coming out the front gate of Fort Ritchie and
stop and liquor store. Drive ½ miles toward Blue Ridge Summit and then stop
them. Pennsylvania law was very strict on "Out of State" liquor, only
1 or 2 bottles of Federal Taxed booze could be brought into PA, and they also
only allowed 399 cigarettes without State Tax Stamps. That meant if a Military
person purchased two cartons of cigarettes and did not open one pack and smoke
at least one, they were illegal and would confiscate the tobacco products and
access a heavy fine. One soldier, knew the drill, opened a pack and smoke one,
but forgot he had an open pack in his jacket pocket! After about 2 years of
battle, they backed off, but clearly, they were picking on Military people
living in area.
Roger Zabkie
told me a story that around 1959 or 1960 he and another sergeant were ringing
out a newly installed lead-shielded cable. Since it was not color-coded the
technique was to terminate one end on a frame then ring out the other end pair
by pair. About halfway through the procedure they began getting strange
results, so they started walking along the cable’s path from the tower down to
the switchboard room, where the main distribution frame was located, eyeballing
the cable to try to determine the problem.
The cable was laced down on a Western Electric tray from the mainframe to where it disappeared into a passageway on its way to the tower. The tray was almost as high as the concrete ceiling, behind the switchboard operating position, and there, right smack in the middle of one of the tray’s crossmembers, was a hole.
That’s a bullet hole, says the sergeant. Can’t be said Roger. But he, being a veteran of WWII and Korea, knew a bullet hole when he saw one. How could a bullet hole have penetrated a steel cable tray and a lead-shielded cable there in one of the most secure pieces of real estate in the country?
Well there was a loaded M2 carbine mounted on the wall next to the switchboard, ready to defend a very secure facility from who knows.
As the story eventually came out, a bored young switchboard operator was killing time on a slow Sunday afternoon by fondling the carbine. When the switchboard lit up, he set the butt down on the floor and the gun fired a round into the ceiling. He tried to hide the event and might have gotten away with it except for the defective cable, as well as that he was overheard talking about it in his sleep a week or two after our discovery.
He
was of course shipped out to a new assignment as was the practice of any WHCA indiscretions. And the carbine was subsequently relocated to the
crypto room with the other firearms.
Don Cammel has an early memory of
life at Camp David. he arrived in 1967 and at that time, the 12 most junior
personnel lived in a barracks arrangement on Camp David. It was not a
traditional barracks or rooms, but one large room divided into 4 cubes with a
series of dividers and wall lockers. There were 4 troops to each cube, with the
4th cube as the recreation room with television, pool table and other
recreation items. He arrived with a duffle bag and a suitcase, his total
possessions at that time, and didn't own a car. Anytime anyone was going
anywhere off Camp, he would invite himself to ride along! There was lots of
time to use the other recreational facilities after hours and on weekends as
long as there was not an "official" visit.
On one Saturday morning, he put on a straw hat to shield the sun, and walked out the "back gate". He soon found himself in one of the largest patches of wild raspberries you could imagine. He discovered they were very sweet and ate quite a few. he then started collecting them in a plastic bag, with the overflow into his straw hat. It was very peaceful, and suddenly, he was approached by an older couple. The attitude was, he was infringing on their "private patch" of wild raspberries, and Oh, by the way, you shouldn't be in this area! Very friendly folks.
When I arrived in WHCA in 1965 and at that time
COL Jack Albright was our Commander, (retired as a MG) and he brought with him,
SGM Richard McCoy. The two of them looked at all the aging troops that had been
there forever, and decided to start recruiting young troops like me directly
out of their AIT training at the various schools. This effort was a huge risk,
but turned out to work very well for several years. There are probably about
30-40 troops from that time period that stayed in WHCA for their entire career.
Although we were all members of various branches, it was very rare to see one
of our coworkers in uniform. Most folks with the exception of the Command HQS
were on a first name basis and rarely addressed anyone by rank.
We were prohibited from displaying
the standard Military vehicle sticker on our POV's? Most of our troops used the
facilities at nearby Fort Ritchie and Fort Dietrick for Commissary/PX, and
medical appointments. We had this very small gold and black sticker about
2" x ¾" with the words, "CAMP THREE" would be attached to
your windshield behind the mirror. This was very difficult to view without
really studying the vehicle. When approaching the sentry at the Main Gate, we
often were delayed. Eventually the "Camp Three" stickers were
replaced with traditional Military Base decals. The only difference was these
were not affixed to our vehicles, but laminated and placed on the dash.
On the flip side, there was a
statement that authorized the sticker to not be permanently attached to the
vehicle. Many bases you would show it, and they were alert backup, and it was a
long day.
This was the only time we were ever taken to an army
post to qualify with any type of firearm.
It was the only time that I had the privilege to salute Mr. Fontaine
because he was in uniform. Two things I
can remember happening, first we never qualified with a rifle again,
and WHCA returned to a permanent assignment for those who chose to stay.
As I think back, there
are so many old times that had some really specific jobs that kept them out of
the front line with photo ops and airport arrivals, but they were all just as
important. I think of the folks like me, and Terry Fields at Cannonball, Louie
Bean at Corkscrew and Jim Hammond at Cowpuncher ran their own show and had an
important job, but how do you explain you were assigned to the White House
living in Mercersburg PA, or Boonsboro,
MD working on top of a mountain.
At that time WHCA was a tour
unlike any other for most of us. But the
DCSU Missions asked our personnel to take on responsibilities encountered by
very few Military personnel. As these National Missions & Threats evolved,
our outstanding DCSU personnel evolved with them and routinely performed
significant Emergency Actions with little regard for their (and family)
personal situations. How we took it all for granted while serving...a proud
Hand Salute to my former Comrades who served in DCSU, the Detachments, the COG
sites and the CCTs of the early 70’s.
When Det 3 from Cadre/Creed
qualified Don Cammel remembered that he was proud of his score of 141, the
highest of any of DCSU's finest. All the raw scores were turned into the Admin
section and they discovered that you needed 140 to qualify. He was the only
person that qualified. Real problem here...so they administratively added 40
points to everyone's score at DCAU so they would all qualify and printed the
Orders. his score was not changed. Fast forward about a month, and he got
called in by MAJ John F. DuGuay, the DCSU CDR and was told that he was being
sent to the FBI indoor range in DC for remedial training. Of course after a
couple of months nothing happened, and he never went for his remedial training.
Over the years we had loads of fun with the air
transport crews and sky marshals all because we were carrying concealed weapons
against air travel regulations. With every other flight being hijacked to
Cuba, I can understand why they were so touchy.
We lived in the off-site Quarters at Camp David
for over a year in 66/67. We referred to these quarters as the wagon
wheel, WHCA personnel consisted of four enlisted guys living there, as well as
the CO of DCSU who Maj. Duguay the rest was all U.S. Navy personnel. They were pretty nice for Government Quarters
and fairly new at the time, we lived in unit 6A and at the time there were ten
units built in a circle. Only E-5 and above were eligible and you waited
for openings based on rank. Foxville Gardens is only about 2 miles from
the front gate at Camp David. Just up Manhattan Rd. from the Wagon
Wheel used to be a trailer park that was also maintained by the Navy and
available to anyone on a space available basis.
Shortly after we moved into housing at Camp David, our son Robert was born in Waynesboro, PA on April 28, 1966.
Shortly after we moved into housing at Camp David, our son Robert was born in Waynesboro, PA on April 28, 1966.
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| Christmas (1966) Joanne and Don |
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Don and Bob, Christmas (1966)
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The games tailed off when we moved to LeMasters and
the guys either got married or were discharged, but the poker games continued
in San Clemente and Key Biscayne with the guys and pinochle when we socialized
with the families. Cards passed a lot of time for us, and it was a very
enjoyable way to get to know the people that you worked with. They did
like to party.
When I returned home from Punta Del Este in March of
1967 we relocated to PA where I would be assigned to a microwave relay
facility known as Cannonball as the
NCOIC.
Experiences at Cannonball
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Type Of Activity
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Experiences while at Cannonball
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Location
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Location
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Mercersburg Pa
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Date of Activity
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Mar 1967 to Jun 1970
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Coordinates
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+39.648333N -77.466667 W
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I spent many days and nights at Cannonball in the mid 60's. Two Microwave repairmen stationed at Camp David went TDY for a week at a time to Cannonball a microwave repeater tower which was located on a 2600 ft peak (Cross Mountain) near Mercersburg Pa. On Monday morning they would leave Camp David with enough groceries for a week’s stay in a concrete silo. There were no windows in the nine-floor structure so unless you went down to the entrance and went outdoors you had no idea of what the weather was like outside. There were two people permanently assigned to the facility (Terry Fields and Al Jensen) and when they went home in the evening, they were left without transportation at night, so keeping yourself occupied was a real challenge. Nobody knew what went on during nights and weekend when the guys were left alone and to this day almost nobody has incremented themselves.
LeMasters Pa (1967) |
The telephone system utilized at Cannonball tower was a 1A1 Key System since I knew nothing about the 1A1, and I was responsible for the installation and repair of new and existing equipment I attended training at the AT&T Training Center in Lemoyne PA.
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| 1A1 KSU Key Service Unit |
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| The old Post Office in Blue Ridge Summit PA |
White House Christmas Party (1967) | |
The Blue Room at the White House Christmas Party (1967) | |
Type Of Activity | Staff Event |
Location | |
Location | The White House Washington DC |
Date of Activity | December, 1967 |
December 1967 The Staff Christmas Party
I was only able to attend one party primarily because of driving distance from Mercersburg PA. and weather conditions..
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| The Marine Corp Orchestra |
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| The President and Mrs. Johnson in the Blue Room |
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| Bandleader Skitch Henderson |
| 1964 Staff Christmas Card |
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| 1965 Staff Christmas Card |
| 1966 Staff Christmas Card |
| 1967 Staff Christmas Card |
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1968 Staff Christmas Card
04 Aug 68 to El Paso TX -Ft Bliss Recruiting Trip WHCA sent recruiting teams to all of the Army, Navy and Air Force training centers in the US trying to find candidates in certain technical MOS’s. I was recruited by WHCA while I was attending Microwave School in Ft. Monmouth NJ. A team of four members from the organization, all in civilian attire, asked me wide variety of questions for about an hour. Then I was submitted to an intense background investigation necessary to obtain a Top Secret Security Clearance, and the successful completion of a polygraph examination was a mandatory requirement prior to being assigned to WHCA. The requirement for a polygraph examination was eventually eliminated by 1968. This entire process still took several months to complete and would usually be finalized before the candidate was finished with their schooling. In 1968 I was assigned to a four man team to go to Ft. Bliss TX to review, recommend and ultimately select candidates for future WHCA assignments, because Ft Bliss was the HQ for the US Army Air Defense Command there was a large Training Center on the Base. After a cross country airplane flight from Washington DC's National Airport to Chicago's O'Hare International to Dallas and finally to El Paso Airport. We also received meals on every leg of this flight so we ate four times on a flight that took five hours. We arrived in El Paso TX Sunday evening and got settled in our motel. The next morning we met with the Base Commander to obtain full access to all 201 files of the students currently attending any training that was taking place on the base. We were given permission to go to the base personnel unit and were given a contact to meet with so we could get started.
We immediately contacted the personnel unit and began reviewing hundreds of DD-201 files. Each of us separated the records of people that we thought would make good candidates. We then looked at military aptitude scores, current training courses, education and general backgrounds to make our final decision on who we would interview. The few individuals that remained were first gathered in a group while we explained what we were doing and let them know about WHCA and the process that we would follow to make our final decision and what it would take to qualify. We did give everyone in the room a chance to withdraw from consideration with no questions asked. For the next three days we conducted personal interviews asking many direct questions about their lives and background. As we completed the individual interviews we discussed the merits of each candidate and made our final selections. We met with the final seven candidates the next day to have them complete the administrative paperwork, which also included the forms needed to perform an extensive background investigation and obtain top secret security clearance. Once they graduated and received their security clearance they would receive their assignment in WHCA. Memories of Individual experiences of the WHCA recruiting process Roger Zabkie remembers that in 1955 when I was near the end of my 30-some weeks of microwave school at Ft Monmouth, two guys in civilian clothes interviewed several people in my class. Three of us were selected for WHASA, WHCA's predecessor. One went to High Point, one stayed in DC, and I went to Camp David, where I served for five years. No polygraph until three years later. John Cross In 1965, while I was attending 26 wks. of Microwave Radio Repair training at Fort Monmouth NJ, a WHCA recruiting team was looking for recruits when they graduated from training. I was more than halfway through training when I was pulled out of class for my Interview. After about an hour of rapid fire questions I returned to class. The next day I was sent to another meeting with about a dozen people there. We were given the paperwork to fill out for a TS security clearance, since I already had a secret clearance, I had all of the necessary information to quickly fill it out. I was then told about the Poly that would be scheduled in the near future. About a week later I took the Poly. After I was all strapped in, I was asked about twenty five questions (many the same as was asked during my interview) everything was going well until the last question, which was “Have you answered truthfully all of the previous questions” when I answered yes, the machine went wild. After a short consolation with the administrator I was given the test over and PASSED! When I graduated from Training, I had not heard anything about my security clearance. I was assigned to a Holding company and given the task of showing up every morning in uniform at Reveille and raising the flag. And then show up again at retreat to lower the flag while hanging around home the whole day. This lasted about three weeks when I received my orders to report to a street address in DC. From the dozen that had filled out the paperwork only three of us, Chuck Duval(who joined me at Camp David), Marty Schorn who went to Cadre/Creed, and I made it to the agency—a small number considering the pool of 1000 trainees. Charles Heyman comments I had the same Basic Training experience at Fort Dix NJ, Sept 1965. Initially the first presentation was outdoors. From that 13 of us went on for a second interview and 3 were accepted, I was the only one that actually went on to assignment. I spent four months at Ft. Gordon in switchboard training and a couple of months waiting for security clearance. Steve Weber and I left Ft. Gordon for WHCA about the same time in Feb 1966. John Tiffen said I was interviewed during Basic Training at Ft. Ord in August or September of 1966. Charlie Graffius was one of the interviewers (can't recall the other person). What Kerry said was what I was told also, except I don 't recall the part about waiving my AIT school (but then, it's been close to 60 years). I know of one other guy from my Basic Training company who was chosen and he wound up working the switchboard (can't recall his name right now, either). Didn't get the final word until well into my AIT at Ft. Gordon. Mark Edwards In 1966 there was no question about bestiality, but I was asked about any homosexual activities. Donald Cammel When I was recruited their were about 30K Signal Corp Trainees at Fort Gordon in March 67. They screened records and invited about 350 to attend the first hour. After two breaks the number was about 150, and after lunch faded to about 60. During interviews they invited 11 to fill out packets. There ended up being 3 of us coming out the other side of the funnel! The other two people did their tour and got out. William Sauder I was selected in 67 Ft Benning of the 6 that came for the interview only myself and Newt Shannon who went to work at the switchboard made it all the way through unbelievable odds. Harland Priddle I enjoyed reading the selection process of the WHCA enlisted staff. Congratulations as one of the very, very few who were selected to serve in WHCA. I participated on a couple of these recruitment trips. As I recall, we were always looking for a reason not to select based on some preset criteria, some of which made no sense. My selection to WHCA as Deputy Commander was a result of General, Director of Hdqtrs Air Force Communications at the Pentagon recommending me to current WHCA Commander, Col Al Redman, later BG Redman, who I served with at the Joint Chiefs 1965-1968. Al was only the 3rd Commander since WHCA established in 1942, Replacing MG Jack Albright. Needless to say, this was the best Air Force assignment with an outstanding group during historical times--Pres Nixon trips to China and USSR 1972. I took the Poly from CWO Corky Dever (I think--he worked for CWO Len Stephens). I loved my Angus show animal and we didn't own any sheep, so I was clean and passed the Poly. General Redman later ask my opinion about taking the Poly in about 73 and I said it was probably a good criteria for WHCA, just to show we were a cut above other assignments, but doubt if it had any value in identifying security threat people. WHCA did use infiltrated people in comm center as I recall and did have a few successes, but this was also discontinued later. AND NOW YOU KNOW THE REST OF THE STORY Kerry Pinkerton When I was in basic in 69, WHCA personnel came to Ft Benning and looked at 40,000 trainees AFQT scores looking for category 4s that had enlisted. Iirc, that was an IQ over 120. Then then looked at other stuff and decided who to invite for an interview. There were 80 of us at the interviews. 8 made it through the day after the windowing process. . The windowing process consisted of being told we'd 1. Have to waive our schools 2. Couldn’t have ever been arrested even if later released. 3. Couldn't have more than 3 tickets. 4. Couldn't have ever had sex with a family member or an animal. 5. Couldn't have ever smoked pot or taken drugs. 6. Had to pass a polygraph. 7. Failing the poly meant you were turned back to the army, which meant you were going to be dragging an M14 through the jungle. Jerry Nichols and I ( both went to AV), and Bruce Mills (radio) made it to the agency. Pretty small group out of 40k. I heard that not too many years later, they had to drop the pot requirement. And then at some point I heard that they dropped the poly and WHCA was on their way to becoming just another assignment. Mike Ebbing adds the recruiting team came to Ft. Campbell, KY, around February of 1970. As I recall, a group of close to 500 attended the first day. Only 75 were invited back on the 2nd day. Not sure how many packets were issued but I do know only 3 of us made final cut. All recruited for Signal, and we headed to Ft. Gordon for switchboard school. Terry Brewer and Dennis Munger both got their clearances and orders for WH Signal a couple months before me. When I reported to WHCA HQ in Georgetown, I was told I would also be at WH Signal. The next day, they changed their mind and assigned me to Camp David switchboard. I remained close friends with both Dennis & Terry. I spent my 2 weeks of Signal training (one week at Terry's apt in Arlington and another week at Dennis' apartment (also in Arlington). Karen and I stayed with them at the WHCA Xmas parties as well! Gary Paul My experience was similar at Ft Knox in '72. They went through about 10,000, 201 files, interviewed 75, and picked up 1. A very lucky day for me. Charles Easter In Apr or May of 1973, I was working in the Comm Center at Wright Patterson, AFB, when word came down that there was a recruiting team from Washington DC that was going to hold a briefing at the base theater, and I was asked if I wanted to go. I almost said no, as I had no desire to go to DC, so why bother, but I changed my mind and went, mostly just to get out of the comm center for a while. Anyway the base theater was pretty well filled up and we listened to what they had to say. I don't remember how the weeding went, but I ended up having a face to face interview with the recruiters. After the interview they asked if selected would I be interested in going to DC to work in the White House. I couldn't turn that offer down, so of course I said yes. So after all the paperwork was processed, I was told that I would have a hold put on my records and could not be reassigned until I was either accepted or denied. About 5-6 months later I got the call that I was accepted. As far as I can remember, only myself and Eugene Edgerson were the only ones selected from that group. Glad I was at work that day and glad that I decided to go to the briefing. John Harris My time in the service was 78-93 and of course long after the draft ended. The recruiting team scanned about a thousand records at Fort Polk and interviewed about 50. They picked up four of us. I never saw a poly. Chris Morgan recalls that Dave Lytle recruited him from Fort Gordon in early fall, 1980, the theater was packed and only 2 of us were selected. During the interview with Dave, he apologized for having to ask me if I ever had sex with an animal. I asked him if anyone ever said "yes". There was no response. Richard LePere In 1981 there was recruiting team in Germany. We were invited into the NATO HQ Theater in Heidelberg. The theater was filled with troops standing in the aisles, and along the back wall. Mark Schmidt was on that trip. We received the security briefing before breaking for lunch. When we returned, there were 13 people left in the theater. The 13 were whittled down to 5. Of the 5, that were selected to go to WHCA, only 3 went to WHCA and made it through training. Dave Meyers (AF) was my training NCO, and Ricky K. Harris and I went through training together at Signal 015, with the Western Electric 608D cord Swbd. I still have the color coded training paper mockup of the 608D cord switchboard. Each day we started with the switchboard mockup, practicing calls. Then we moved onto the crash position for movements and EA crash conferences, Echo/Fox, Crown Control Radio Console. Then after lunch we were put on one of the Controller positions, with Dave sitting next to us to monitor our call processing. After about a week, an SAO sat in between us, and we moved onto the paging system, the IBM database for name lookups. The EA procedures were hammered into our heads, along with the authentication codes for authorizing a non-secure EA conference call across non-dedicated 1FB circuits. I was told that I had to go through every level of training, including being trip Swbd Lead certified within 12 months, and that included stateside and overseas qualified. Best job ever! Barry Bracken I wish I would have paid more attention to events that happened early in my career. I was a "buck sergeant" stationed at the Cheyenne Mountain Complex in Colorado Springs in 1982. I got a call from my first shirt one afternoon telling me that he did not know what I had done, but I better be in my service dress when reporting the next day to the Pete Field Base Theater. Pat Bell is the only one I can remember being on the recruiting team - she was the one that did the interview. I got a call a couple of weeks later asking me if I would be willing to come to WHCA without my clearance being completed to work on a "special project". I said yes and PCS'd a week or so later on just a message, no orders...quite an experience. I think I only had to have one person call the "special" number on the message. I only heard one side of the conversation; it was pretty much "oh....yes sir....yes sir...thank you." I arranged for my buddy to ship my HHGs and the wife and I drove across the country; her in our car packed to the hilt and me on my motorcycle. I was assigned to the special projects office, affectionately known as Albertson's Animals, and started work building the REVCON coaches. I echo the sentiments of those that say they were lucky to have an opportunity to come to WHCA. Every job I have had since leaving the USAF has been because of a WHCA Alum vouching for me. Jill Beatty Andershonis Chris Woodard and I were the only 2 to complete the process at Pearl Harbor in 84(?). The Chapel at PH started out full and the questions were the same during the weeklong process that included a photo and fingerprints. Questions weren’t really much different than what I was used to for security updates. Marlene Chiatovich Mika I was a recruiter '95-'00 those questions were still asked during interview - crazy answers sometimes! The poly was gone, the pot question was back . Jeff Massa I was at HQ Air Force Personnel and got a call one day asking if I would be interested in working at WHCA (I didn't even know about the White House Communications Agency), I asked what it was and said sure. A couple of days later I was interviewed by several people over the next 2 days. During the interview I asked them how that got my name, I was told that if I got the assignment, they would let me know. # months later that offered me the assignment (which I accepted), once I got to WHCA I asked again how they got my name, and I was told that the person who would know was no longer at WHCA. I still don't know how they found me, but I was glad they did! Larry Bethea I was stationed at Andrews AFB communications center, when I was ordered to attend a briefing. I'd guess about 60 Airman attended the briefing, 5 of us stayed and 2 of us joined WHCA. I got the same questions, no Poly. In fact I held TS clearances for over 30 years and never had a Poly. As a DOD Contractor I considered working for the CIA and heard they required a poly. Then I heard they fail 80% without question and for no reason creating the illusion of the cream of the crop. I declined so I didn't have to answer for a failed poly. In today’s environment recruiting is done online by downloading an application to serve. WHCA is currently accepting applications from personnel on active duty in the grades of E4 with less than eight years in service (on a case-by-case basis) and grades of E5 to E6 with less than 15 years in service. for a 5 year tour, but must serve for a minimum of 3 years, for all branches. Currently there is a recruiter assigned to each branch of the service with a defined application process for each branch.
LBJ White House Country Fair Monday Sept. 9 1968 In 1968 LBJ had one of his famous BBQ's on the south lawn of the White House for the Staff and their Spouses. The 1968 election was about two months away and a new President would be elected, and the Johnsons were saying Thank You to the entire White House staff for the last four years of support. WHCA was in the middle of an election campaign that for the first time included support for all active candidates.
We arrived at The White House with Al and Sonia Jensen that evening and to our amazement there was a typical Country Fair on the South Lawn of the White House, complete with a Ferris Wheel and Merry-Go-round.
You could win little trinkets like a 6" ruler with White House Country Fair 1968 inscribed on it or a ballpoint pen with the same inscription. Joanne and I had our picture taken with the White House in the background, but we have unfortunately misplaced that photo. There was plenty of beer and food and we had a great time.
Joanne and I loaded up on the BBQ and sat down at a table that was across from Liz Carpenter who was the press secretary to the first lady, Lady Bird Johnson (1963–1969), for whom she also served as staff director. Suddenly the lights went out and we set there in the dark for only a few seconds, when they came back on Liz made the comment, “I wonder if Lyndon is trying to tell us it’s time to go home”! The entertainment that night was Buck Owens and his son. He was great and their music was perfect for this occasion.
That was one thing that LBJ was good at was including WHCA in these staff functions like the children's Christmas parties as well as the staff Christmas parties. In less than two months from this event we had a new President and the Johnson’s would then return to Texas and the ranch. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The election also featured a strong third party effort by former Alabama Governor George Wallace. Because Wallace's campaign promoted segregation, he proved to be a formidable candidate in the South; no third-party candidate has won an entire state's electoral votes since.
The U.S. Secret Service came into existence nearly 150 years ago, but the agency as its known today was essentially created June 5, 1968 — the night Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was shot at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles.
That policy changed after Kennedy's assassination. In 1968 with the assassination of a major presidential candidate, the Secret Service began to protect all of the major presidential candidates.
After Kennedy's death on June 6, the Secret Service was hurriedly called upon to protect the men who were still running for president in 1968. And then, of course the White House Communications Agency (WHCA) would be called upon to support the Secret Service details assigned to all of the candidates. The situation was exacerbated because there was no criterion for choosing who else would receive Secret Service protection. WHCA was then assigned to provide communications for the Secret Service Protection Details!
WHCA’s role in the support of the Secret Service
WHCA immediately assembled multiple equipment packages that could be immediately deployed anywhere in the US. Utilizing one or two men teams the candidates schedules were confirmed and teams of people were dispatched to meet up with the Secret Service advance agents.
Each equipment package contained an FM base station usually on Baker and Charlie frequencies for the Secret Service Command Post (CP) and hand held units to be used for the motorcade and speech site. Many times the CP was located in the same hotel that the candidate was staying. Telephone lines were ordered and installed in the CP for routine communication. There would also be an EOD (Bomb Squad) member assigned from a local military installation to sweep the hotel, motorcade route and speech sites for any explosive devices. There were many threats called in but nothing was ever found.
The communications teams would take down the FM radios when the event concluded, collected all of the equipment and would be assigned a new location and the next event. Nobody was assigned to a particular candidate but would work with all of them.
On August 5 1968 the Republican National Convention took place in Miami Beach FL, and even though there were demonstrators, there were no violent incidents. I was at Fort Bliss Texas on a WHCA recruiting trip when Richard Nixon surprised everyone by choosing Maryland Governor Spiro Agnew as his running mate.
WHCA would provide communications support to the USSS assigned to the various protection details working with the major candidates and their staff.We were all involved with the insanity of the 1968 Presidential election, the Vietnam War protests at the Democrat National Convention in Chicago which was by far the craziest time during the whole election. The convention opened on August 28th at the old Amphitheater which has since been demolished. All support people stayed at the Conrad Hilton on Michigan Ave. overlooking Grant Park, this is where all of the Chicago riots of 1968 took place, but what was it like setting up Communications for this event? I understand that the unions were on strike and employees of C&P Telephone accompanied WHCA to help install the POTUS board and interface with AT&T. We had to assume that President Johnson would make an appearance at the end of the convention, but he never attended. After several days of political turmoil, Hubert Humphrey and Edmond Muskie were nominated by the Democrats. The WHCA communications team then packed up everything and left Chicago without any incidents involving the demonstrators or police.
04 Oct 68 Newark NJ - George Wallace
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| Spiro Agnew speaks at a campaign rally in Raleigh NC. |
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| Spiro Agnew speaks at a campaign rally in Raleigh NC. |
In the meantime Richard Nixon was scheduled for a campaign stop in Long Beach CA for a rally on Oct. 30th. The Long Beach site was out of range for FM radio coverage so radio base stations were installed at the Long Beach airport and installed remote circuits back to the CP that was installed in the Century Plaza Hotel. After the speech Nixon would spend the night at the Century Plaza. The next day Nixon made a trip to the NBC Studios in Burbank to appear on Laugh In and utter those immortal words “Sock it to me!” Since Nixon resided in southern California he was coming home to vote.
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| Richard Nixon at a campaign rally in Long Beach CA |
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| Richard Nixon on Laugh In with Dan Rowan and Dick Martin |
I received a call from the USSS agent in charge of the protection detail assigned to Gen LeMay to let me know that there was a speech on Nov 3rd in Anaheim. I met with the advance agent at Gen Le May’s residence in Bel Air to discuss the details of the arrival, the subsequent speech and the motorcade to Bel Air. The CP would be set up in the Holiday Inn in Anaheim, just a short distance from the speech site and within walking distance to Disneyland.
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| Gov. Wallace and Gen. Le May in California |
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| Gen. Le May’s home in Bel Air |
On election eve both Democrat and Republican parties had rallies, Nixon’s was at the Century Plaza Hotel and Humphrey was, down the street at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. I had equipment scattered everywhere and it wasn’t until two days later before I had collected it and could head for home.
The election on November 5, 1968 proved to be extremely close, and it was not until the following morning that the television news networks were able to call Nixon the winner. The key states proved to be California, Ohio, and Illinois, all of which Nixon won by three percentage points or less. Had Humphrey carried all three of these states, he would have won the election. Had Humphrey carried any two of them (or just California), George Wallace would have succeeded in his aim of preventing an electoral college majority for any candidate, and the decision would have been given to the House of Representatives. Nixon won the popular vote with a plurality of 512,000 votes, or a victory margin of about one percentage point. In the Electoral College Nixon's victory was larger, as he carried 32 states with 301 electoral votes, to Humphrey's 13 states and 191 electoral votes and Wallace's five states and 46 electoral votes.
With Richard Nixon the new president, WHCA had new challenges at San Clemente and Key Biscayne where he purchased residences and permanent communications had to be installed for the security personnel assigned at these locations.
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| At home in LeMasters PA |
18 May 69 to Norfolk VA for technical training of an HF Radio System
I was sent to the Naval Training Center in Norfolk VA for training on the URT-23, which was a single sideband HF radio transceiver. WHCA was in the Process of adding this system to all overseas packages and needed qualified technicians. I was there for ten days and for the first time since I was assigned to WHCA I was required to wear uniforms. WHCA would widely use these whenever long range communications were required and would be included in the CCT’s standard equipment package!
Don, Bob with Kathie (1970) |
We were in the middle of several major construction projects at the Tower that kept us busy the remainder of the year. First Project was to resurface the access road on Cross Mountain leading to Cannonball. There were also plans to add guard rail in multiple locations along the access road. This was really appreciated by all of who had to plow snow in the winter time as there had been several close calls in the past.
We also completed construction on an 80 ft tubular tower with a new Log Periodic HF antenna to increase our capabilities as the Remote Transmitter site For Cactus. We also installed a 4 port Multi-coupler that would allow us to use several transmitters to simultaneously use this new antenna.
The final and largest project was the shock mounting of the entire tower! Several things took place, steel reinforced walls were added to the elevator shaft on all floors and the Air Handling (AC) units were all remounted on an angle iron platform and hung on springs from the ceiling on all floors. The final step we needed to do was to temporarily move all of our operational equipment so a platform could be built and suspended by very large springs on every floor. Once the new suspended floor was completed we then reinstalled all of the equipment on the platform. All this was completed while the traffic on our microwave routes was uninterrupted.
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| Agnew Fund raiser in Phoenix AZ |
When the projects were completed I started to travel again, this time supporting the Vice President. It was early 1970, when we found out that four of the microwave towers, including Cannonball were going to be closed. All of the people were to be assigned to Camp David, San Clemente CA., or Key Biscayne FL. I was assigned to San Clemente to establish the CCT..
U S Embassy in New Delhi India | |
Coordinates: 28°36′50″N 77°12′32″E | |
Country | India |
Settled | 1911 |
Elevation | 216 m (709 ft.) |
302,363 (New Delhi Only) | |
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| Rashtrapati Bhavan is the official residence of the President of India |
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| Rashtrapati Bhavan is the official residence of the President of India |
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| President Richard Nixon |
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| Prime Minister Indira Gandhi |
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| President Nixon with India’s Prime Minister Gandhi |
Destinations | Dates | Purpose |
Manila Philippines | July 26-27, 1969 | State visit; met with President Marcos. |
Jakarta Indonesia | July 27-28, 1969 | State visit; met with President Suharto. |
Bangkok Thailand | July 28-30, 1969 | State visit; met with King Bhumibol Adulyadej. |
Saigon, Di An Vietnam | July 30, 1969 | Met with President Thieu and visited U.S. military personnel. |
New Delhi India | July 31-Aug1, 1969 | State visit; met with Acting President Hidayatullah. |
Lahore Pakistan | August 1-2, 1969 | State visit; met with President Yahya Khan. |
Bucharest Romania | August 2-3, 1969 | Official visit; met with President Ceausescu. |
Mildenhall United Kingdom | August 3, 1969 | Informal meeting with Prime Minister Wilson. |
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| The Janpath Hotel |
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| Embassy assigned driver |
I can remember CWO Desautles threatening to throw off of the plane the entire load of souvenir's to make room for the equipment and luggage. We departed New Delhi on August 3, 1969 headed for Bangkok, Thailand. After a refueling stop we flew over Vietnam, where we could see artillery flashes from 29,000 feet in the air, I remember that because we flew over a war zone that we were tax exempt for one month. We really knew how to make money! We arrived in Tokyo Japan on August 4, from there we flew to an AF base outside Sacramento, and then on to Andrews, we ended up flying around the world. Everything made it back OK, but I remember several large horns that were vigorously HONKED whenever we took off and landed on our return trip.
We returned and I started several large projects an Cannonball, the largest being the closure of the Facility in early 1970. I really enjoyed the time I spent on the mountain, but i was also looking ahead to my next assignment in San Clemente CA.



























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