Dear
Readers,
As
November Veterans Day approaches I am reminded that on November
11, 1918, the Armistice agreement was signed and fighting on all battlefields
ceased at 11a.m. as the guns of World War I fell silent after 4 long
years. The “war to end all wars” was finally over and a
year later, in 1919, President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed November 11
as Armistice Day to remind Americans of the tragedies of war.
In
1938, the day by law became a Federal holiday and in 1954, Congress
changed the name to “Veterans Day” to honor all United States
Veterans, because WWI, “the war to end all war” didn’t
and World War II and others followed.
America’s
attitude of “nothing but the best” for our boys prevailed
during World War II and as a result one of America’s finest resort
estates, Greenbrier, nestled in 6,500 acres of Allegheny Mountain Woodlands
was purchased by the Army from the owners, Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company
and converted into Ashford Military Hospital at Sulpher Springs, West
Virginia, to treat our war casualties, the first from North Africa and
later the Pacific.
As
casualties resulting from our military action in Iraq continue to escalate,
I thought I would share a few Italian connections from “Shangri-La
for Wounded Soldiers” by Louis E. Keefer (Cotu Publishing, Box
2160, Reston, Virginia, 22090) with you, but first a little history
about Greenbriers, at White Sulpher Springs, West Virginia and the Greenbriers
resort reservations telephone number, 1 800 624 6070, in case your budget
allows.
Greenbrier,
has a celebrated past of over two centuries, that reads like the history
of our nation. Generals, presidents, commoners and kings have nestled
into this notch of 6,500 acres of West Virginia’s Allegheny Mountains
to experience the hospitality and the unique experience that is America’s
Greenbriers Resort.
The
Greenbrier served as a military headquarters and hospital for the Confederacy
during the Civil War, it became Robert E. Lee’s summer home following
the war and in the 1970’s and 1980’s housed a secret underground
bunker that was reserved for the U.S. Congress in case of a Cold War
attack.
Dating
back to the eve of the Civil War, Greenbrier’s reputation as the
most fashionable social resort in the southern states was well established.
This led to the 1858 addition of the first large hotel on the property,
officially named the Grand Central Hotel, but known to patrons as the
Old White Hotel. The hotel boasted three stories of porches to catch
summer breezes and ample space to promenade the latest in fashionable
attire.
In
1910, the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway purchased the historic resort
property and embarked upon a major expansion. By 1913, additions included
The Greenbrier Hotel (the central portion of today’s hotel), a
new mineral bath house and an 18-hole golf course designed by the most
prominent golf architect of the day, Charles Blair MacDonald. In 1914,
for the first time the resort was opened year round and President and
Mrs. Woodrow Wilson came to spend their Easter holiday at The Greenbrier,
and Joseph and Rose Kennedy traveled from Boston for their October honeymoon.
Through
the years guests came to Greenbrier Resort to be pleased, pampered and
well fed but in Europe several countries were at war and by 1940 German
troops had taken Paris, German Luftwaffe pilots were conducting nightly
bombing raids over London, Italy siding with Germany declared war on
Britain and France, and British troops were launching attacks in the
West Desert of North Africa on the Italians.
On
December 7, 1941, the Japanese bombed the American base at Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii. War was declared and a week later at Greenbrier, the hotel’s
general manager received an urgent telephone call from the U.S. State
Department that would shatter tranquility at Greenbrier for more than
six years.
The
manager was asked if the hotel would be willing to accommodate interned
diplomats and citizens from the Washington embassies of hostile countries.
The manager said it would, and within forty-eight hours, the Greenbrier
no longer had or would accept regular guests.
Within
a few days, by special trains, over eight hundred diplomatic guests
arrived in White Sulphur Springs, for a stay at the Greenbrier Resort.
Most were German, but the total included 170 Italians, 53 Hungarians,
and 11 Bulgarians. In addition to the diplomats their families and servants,
the internees included bankers, businessmen, journalists, military attaches,
and engineers.
At
first all Japanese diplomats were interned in the nearby Homestead Hotel
in Hot Springs, Virginia. Then, due to bickering between the Germans
and the Italians, the non-Germans were transferred to another luxury
hotel, the Grove Park Inn in Asheville, North Carolina, and the Japanese
were moved from the Homestead to the Greenbrier.
American
and enemy diplomats soon began to be exchanged, and The Greenbrier’s
unique guests gradually departed. Over a seven-month period, the hotel
had hosted 1,697 people from five different nations. Though some had
been arrogant and demanding, most had behaved responsibly, respecting
the hotel’s property and its staff.
The
Greenbrier reopened to the public in mid-July, but its 1942 “season”
lasted only six weeks. As the enemy diplomats departed, both the Army
and the Navy discussed with hotel management The Greenbrier’s
650 rooms and their further use, for wartime purposes.
The Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company and the Army failed to agree on
a rental arrangement, so the government condemned and bought the property
under the War Powers Act.
The
C&O received $3.3 million for the hotel and 7,000 acres of West
Virginia countryside, a package then thought to be worth at least $5.4
million.
Several other resorts were acquired because the Army believed new hospitals
could not be built quickly enough to accommodate future casualties.
Among other resorts the Army purchased, were the Don Cesar, St. Petersburg,
Florida, the Miami Biltmore, Coral Gables, Florida, the Eastman, Hot
Springs, Arkansas and the El Mirador, Palm Springs, California.
Once
plans for the creation of an Army Hospital were announced the Army rehired
many former Greenbrier employees.
This cadre of experienced hotel workers and managers, with their intimate
knowledge of buildings and grounds, helped to ease the transition from
hotel to hospital. The demanding task of converting a 650-room hotel
to a 2,000-bed hospital was accomplished surprisingly quickly. The first
step was to dispose of equipment and furnishings the Army didn't want
or need.
More
than half a million dollars was spent on various physical changes. These
included the creation on the fifth and sixth floors of a 600-bed surgical
unit, with necessary temperature and humidity controls and special lighting.
To move patients and equipment more speedily between floors, a massive
elevator shaft was added to the front of the former hotel. Suites and
rooms were reconfigured into thirty-nine wards, with thirty to sixty
beds each.
A
dispensary, laboratory, dental clinic, post office, commissary, and
post exchange (PX) replaced the shops in the lower lobby; the mineral
baths area was designated as a center for hydrotherapy; the North Parlor
was made into a chapel; the famous ballroom took on a new life as a
recreation center filled with Ping-Pong tables.
Other
projects included paving the ambulance driveway; upgrading sewage collection,
disposal systems, the water treatment plant; building an on-site fire
station; and converting the rows of summer cottages for year-round use.
One of the biggest projects was the construction, at the edge of the
hotel's airport, of Camp Ashford, a 165-acre stockade for enemy prisoners
of war (POWs). Work on the fifty-two building complex was begun during
November 1942 and completed in May 1943. The prisoners were to maintain
the hospital grounds, and perform the kinds of tasks that would free
Army personnel for more important assignments. The first POWs to arrive
were Italians captured in Tunisia.
Greenbrier,
as a World War II Army Hospital, became the Ashford General Hospital,
and was named in honor of Colonel Bailey K. Ashford. (1873 – 1934)
a graduate of Georgetown Medical School who as the Chief Surgeon for
the sixth Army Medical Corps in WWI and a member of General Pershing’s
staff achieved fame for his discovery of the intestinal hookworm that
caused a vicious type of anemia and at one time ravaged the people of
Puerto Rico.
A
Colonel Beck was the Chief Executive Officer at the Ashford Army Hospital
and all the Army doctors, dentists, and nurses that served at Ashford
during the course of the war were highly qualified and experienced in
their specialties. The early years saw more patients needing surgery,
while in later years more of them required treatment for skin and intestinal
problems.
It
was in November 1942 that Ashford Army Hospital began its official functions
when the first trainload of wounded men arrived after processing in
New Jersey. Many had come from Guadalcanal, the Aleutian Island, or
North Africa. Since the Army’s usual practice was to send men
to hospitals near their homes, many of the patients were from Virginia,
West Virginia, Ohio, and other nearby states. In the years that followed,
more than 24,000 patients were treated at Ashford, the hospital that
journalists soon began calling “a Shangri-La for sick and wounded
soldiers”.
Doing
their part for the war effort many celebrities like the Duke and Duchess
of Windsor, Esther Williams, Walter Pidgeon and others often came to
visit our wounded at Ashford.
General Eisenhower and his wife Mamie often came to visit. While, there
Ike liked to spend a little time fishing, but he said he didn’t
do so well, as all the big trout had been spoiled by Gis throwing popcorn
to them, and they weren’t hungry enough to rise to hand-tied flies
anymore.
During
the war, Corporal Giacomantonio, a gifted sculptor was assigned to Ashford
to help plastic surgeons in reconstructive surgery. There he met General
Eisenhower who agreed to pose for the popular sculptor. This was the
first sculpture he had ever posed for and Corporal Giacomantonio spent
seven days working on the clay model that in bronze is now displayed
in the U.S. Military Museum at West Point.
Japan
surrendered in 1945 and by Mid 1946 the last prisoners of war left Camp
Ashford, just as the hospital was closing.
They
had not only performed their assigned duties well but had contributed
to the hospital's mission in other ways: they farmed their own vegetable
garden, and sometimes shared some surplus with the hospital; fought
forest fires; and made contributions to Red Cross drives.
The
Germans also completed a fine wooden altar started by the Italians,
and gave it to the Andrew S. Rowan Memorial Home in Sweet Springs, West
Virginia.
In late July, the U.S. Senate, under mounting pressure from many previous
owners of commercial property acquired by the armed services, passed
an act to permit their repurchase of such properties. President Harry
S. Truman signed the act on August 7, 1946.
The
following week White Sulphur Springs waived its acquisition rights,
so long as the town obtained the airport, and the Chesapeake and Ohio
Railway agreed to repurchase the hotel paying just under the 1942 selling
price of $3.3 million, a difference mainly due to the transfer of the
airport to the town of White Sulphur Springs.
Soon
after the railroad's purchase of the abandoned resort, the noted New
York interior decorator, Dorothy Draper, was hired to redecorate the
C&O’s executive offices and suites in Cleveland's Terminal
Tower. Pleased with the results she was then asked to begin refurbishing
The Greenbrier.
In
what was then the largest redecorating program in the history of the
American hotel industry, the refurbishing took over a year to complete,
and cost more than $12.4 million. Another $65.000 was spent for a four-day
reopening party, which Life called "the most lavish on-the-house
party of the century."
Today,
after its patriotic contribution as the Army's most beautiful World
War II hospital, The Greenbrier is more magnificent than ever.
For
more information call (304) 536-1110 or write The Greenbrier, 300 West
Main Street, White Sulpher Springs, West Virginia, 24986.
Or take a virtual tour at www.greenbrier.com