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Camp Toccoa
Stephens County, near Toccoa, Georgia, U.S.
Camp toccoa sept 42 500.jpg
Camp Toccoa in 1942.
Coordinates 34°33′01″N 83°23′50″W / 34.5504°N 83.3973°W / 34.5504; -83.3973
Type Military training base
Site information
Controlled by United States of America
Site history
Built 1940
In use 1941 – ca. 1946

Camp Toccoa (formerly Camp Toombs) was a basic training camp for United States Army paratroopers during World War II five miles (eight kilometers) west of Toccoa, Georgia. Among the units to train at the camp was the 506th Infantry Regiment. The regiment's Company E ("Easy Company") were portrayed in the 2001 HBO miniseries Band of Brothers.

World War II

Blithetoccoa
Private Albert Blithe, of E Company of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, pictured here at Camp Toccoa, sometime in 1942.

The U.S. Army took over a site with few buildings or permanent structures: personnel were originally housed in tents. More permanent barracks were built as the first soldiers started to arrive.

Initially, Camp Toccoa used the Toccoa municipal airport for jump training, but following a transport accident, it was abandoned for having too short a runway for safe C-39 and C-47 operations. All further jump training occurred at Fort Benning, Georgia.

Camp Toccoa also lacked a rifle range, so airborne trainees would march 30 miles (48 km) to Clemson Agricultural College, a military school in South Carolina, to practice on the college's shooting range.

The most prominent local landmark is Currahee Mountain. Paratroopers in training ran from the camp up the mountain and back, memorialized in the HBO series, Band of Brothers, with the shout "three miles up, three miles down." Members of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment still refer to themselves as "Currahees", derived from the Cherokee word gurahiyi, which means "stand alone, together". The crest is surmounted by a group of 6 fully deployedparachutes.

Rod Serling, creator of the Twilight Zone, started his military career here in 1943.

After World War II

The camp closed at the end of the war. In the late 1940s, it served as a Georgia State Prison site, housing primarily youth offenders, but several escapes forced the state to close the site, moving the operation to a new facility at Alto, Georgia. The twisting trail up Currahee is now named for Colonel Sink. The only remaining building from the camp is the mess hall, which sits on a corner of a Milliken & Company textile plant. The Patterson Pump Company occupies another portion of the grounds.

In 2012 an organization, Camp Toccoa at Currahee, a not-for profit foundation, was formed to celebrate the lives and contributions of the Airborne paratroopers who trained at Camp Toccoa at Currahee Mountain during World War II. A plan was set forth to restore the facilities at the camp site.

Units trained at Toccoa

  • 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment: attached to the 101st Airborne Division
  • 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment: attached to the 101st Airborne Division
  • 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment: attached to the 82nd Airborne Division and the 17th Airborne Division
  • 511th Parachute Infantry Regiment: attached to the 11th Airborne Division
  • 517th Parachute Infantry Regiment: attached to the 17th Airborne Division and the 13th Airborne Division
  • 457th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion: attached to the 11th Airborne Division
  • 295th Ordnance Heavy Maintenance Company (FA): completed basic training at Camp Toccoa, from July 21, 1943 through November 24, 1943.

Name change

The facility was initially named Camp Toombs General after Confederate Civil War General Robert Toombs. In 1942, Colonel Robert Sink, commander of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, one of the first units to train there, thought that it would prompt superstitions to have young men arrive at Toccoa, travel Route 13 past the Toccoa Casket Company to learn to jump at Camp "Tombs", so he persuaded the Department of the Army to change the name to Camp Toccoa.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Campamento Toccoa para niños

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