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During the ensuing
four years, 30,000 infantrymen were in training in the camp at any one
time. On completion of a 13-week training cycle, they were filtered into
combat units overseas replacing casualties.
Tall and athletic with an above
proficiency in the use of infantry weapons. Amon's command presence was
noted by his superiors. He was quickly promoted to First Sergeant of the
60th Training Battalion, and remained stationed at the camp for the
duration, until 1946.
By a chance of fate, during his
stay at Wolters, Amon became immortalized in a statue that still has a
significant presence in the city.
Amon, 86, retired president of a
plastics molding company and now a Dallas resident, visited Mineral
Wells earlier this month, looking over his old haunts around the city
and out at the camp, with a former co-worker Brian Bagnall, also of
Dallas. Bagnall was stationed at Wolters during the Vietnam War era as a
helicopter pilot, and at his urging finally convinced Amon to take a
brief motor trip into his past.

Two of their early stops were at
the VFW Post No. 2399 and American Legion Post No. 75, both in Mineral
Wells, to look over a statue that Amon and another Wolters sergeant took
turns posing for in 1943.
The "Salute" is a life-size cast
iron statue of a uniformed soldier, sculpted from the waist up,
offering a formalized hand salute. It rests outside the VFW,
unfortunately now missing one hand. A plaster copy is at the American
Legion. "Sgt Eugene Fruhwirth and I took
turns sitting for hours and hours in the rec-building holding that
pose," said Amon with a chuckle, remembering the unheated building and
the cramps in his rigidly cocked saluting arm.
Fruhwirth, of Fort Worth, passed
away a few years ago. Amon thought it was sad the old statue was missing
a hand but was glad to see it was still around.
Inspiration for the statue may
have come from the post commanding officer, Maj. Gen. Bruce Magruder. He
learned that Tech Sgt. Simon G. Michael, of Cleveland and New
York, a nationally famous sculptor in civilian life, was attached to
Amon's battalion. As a morale booster, Magruder ordered the sculptor to
make a statue of a soldier to be dedicated to the sacrifices being made
by American youth in the war effort. In spare time from training duties,
Amon and Fruhwirth were ordered to pose as the model for the renowned
sculptor.
"I didn't know much about his
background, but Sgt. Michael was older than most other sergeants at the
time and well-educated," Amon said. "He was handsome and dressed well."
Though Michaels had quarters at
the camp, Magruder allowed him to live off base at the luxurious Baker
Hotel. Amon said with a laugh, "We all knew he had some pull from
somewhere higher up. he was attached to our training battalion, but he
never did any field work with us."
Two or three plaster molds of the
finished clay sculptor were made before it was cast in iron in 1943 at
the Bateman Foundry and Machine Company, 113 S.W. 7th St., owned by W.W.
Bateman.
It was placed at the main gates to
the camp, according to Amon. Retired Col Willie Casper said it was moved
to the front of the new post headquarters in 1958 and re-dedicated in a
ceremony presided over by post commander Col. John L. Inskeep.
After the base closed permanently,
the cast iron original was donated to the VFW, and the American Legion
got a plaster copy.
Another copy reportedly went to
Galveston with Col. Chester H. Meek, deputy post commander, on his
retirement from the service. Casper said the last he heard, it was in a
warehouse there and Meek did not want to give it up.
Amon met and married a camp dental
hygienist from Breckenridge, Nelle Downing, in 1943. They had one
daughter and a grandchild. Nelle past away in 1990.
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