GENERAL INFORMATION
Welcome to Wolters!
Camp Wolters, named for the late
Brigadier Jacob F. Wolters, is one of the nation's largest Infantry
Replacement Centers.
Men of Camp Wolters are
Infantry soldiers, members of the largest single branch of the Army.
During your training here, you will become familiar with many
weapons, the rifle, machine gun, mortar, bayonet, hand grenade, and
others.
Your stay at Wolters is short.
The training offered you here is like life insurance - the more you
take away with you the better off you will be.
The Soldier's
Uniform - One mark of a good
soldier is his appearance.
You should wear the correct
uniform properly at all times. Acquaint yourself with regulations on
wearing and caring for your uniform.
You should keep your shoes in
good condition. Without charge, your footwear is collected for
necessary repairs at your supply at designated times.
All equipment issued to you is
charged to you and you are responsible for it.
Passes, Leaves,
and Furloughs
- You must
remain in Camp during your first ten days at Wolters. In that time, your
officers and non-commissioned officers will acquaint you with the Camp's
many facilities for recreation. After that, unless on duty, you may go
to Mineral Wells or Weatherford after Retreat. Usually you are free on
Sundays.
Overnight trips to Fort Worth
and Dallas require a pass from your first sergeant. Only a limited
number of men from any one organization may be granted overnight
passes at one time.
Three-day passes may be
granted in exceptional cases. Furloughs will be given in actual
emergencies.
Before leaving camp, be sure
you fulfill all requirements.
Visitors
- All visitors must be
identified at the Main gate and tell the Military Police whom they wish
to visit. Hospital visitors should apply at the information desk in the
Station Hospital at Brooke Circle and Lee Road.
Information
- Information about camp personnel, location of units and other general
data, may be had by telephoning 29 or 30, camp telephone exchange, or
inquiring at the Internal Security office, just inside the Main gate.
Insurance
- You are eligible to buy National Service life Insurance. Policies may
be issued in amounts ranging from $1,000 to $10,000. A $10,000 policy
costs $6.40 a month if you are 18 years old, and up to $8.50 if you are
40 or older. Premiums will be deducted from your monthly pay.
The Army suggest that you make
arrangements for National Service life Insurance while at Camp
Wolters. Information may be had from your topkick or C.O.
Servicemen's
Dependents' Allowance - An act
of Congress passed in 1942 enables you to authorize a deduction from
your pay, to which is added a contribution by the government, to help
maintain the serviceman's dependents. The soldier's wife and children
need not be dependent upon him to be eligible for allowance. Other
relatives, parents, brothers, sisters, and grandchildren must be
dependent.
Your first sergeant or company
commander can furnish you with the necessary forms and additional
information.
War Savings Bonds
- When you buy War Savings Bonds you help to forge the weapons to win
the war, put aside a nest egg for the peace to come after the war, and
help maintain the country's financial equilibrium. The easiest way to
buy Bonds is through the Pay Reservation plan, under which deductions
are made from your monthly pay. Blanks are available at your company
orderly room.
Mail Service
- At Wolters there are two mail calls on weekends and one on Sundays.
Wolters has three post
offices; one at I.R.T.C. headquarters, which is open from 8:00
a.m. to 7:00 p.m. on weekdays; a branch at the east end of Area 3,
open from 1 to 9 p.m. on weekdays; and one in the Station Hospital,
open from 1 to 9:00 p.m. on weekdays. Money orders may be cashed at
all post offices.
Telegraph Service
- Telegraph messages are delivered rapidly at Camp Wolters. Upon receipt
of a telegram for you the telegraph office telephones the information to
you at your orderly room. A copy of the telegram is sent you through the
Message center. The telegraph office is at the Signal Office near
I.R.T.C. headquarters. Telegrams may be sent from there or any public
telephone.
Camp Libraries
- In addition to the Service Club Libraries, big selections of books are
kept in area libraries in battalion recreation halls and places easily
accessible to personnel of special units. Books on almost every subject
are available at these libraries.
Special Service
Branch - The Special Service
Branch maintains and operates camp theaters, service clubs, libraries,
guest houses, the sports arena, athletics, recreation, and adult
education programs. Office of the Special Service Officer is Building
T-791, Area 4.
Athletics
- Much time and money have gone into Camp Wolter's athletic program.
Each Battalion is equipped for
many sports, including basketball, horseshoe pitching, boxing,
volley ball, and others. There are tennis courts at the Main Service
Clubs. Equipment for these sports is available in your battalion.
Your company will form
competitive teams. Every soldier has an equal chance for a spot on
the team and every team has a place in a camp-wide league.
Cashing of Checks
- Checks of $50.00 or less, if drawn on a Mineral Wells bank and if
endorsed by your Company Commander, may be cashed at the Cashier's
Office, Main Camp Exchange, near I.R.T.C. headquarters. Checks for
smaller amounts may be cashed at the Hostess' Office, Main Service Club,
if endorsed by an officer or a Service Club Hostess.
A branch of the Mineral Wells
bank has been established in the area west of Theater No. 1 to cash
checks and sell bank money orders to personnel.
Service Clubs
- Fun houses and recreation roosts for Woltersmen are the Camp's Service
Clubs. Libraries, pianos, cafeterias, soda fountains, writing desks,
stationery, hostess, comfortable chairs, entertainments, dances, and
1001 other pleasurable attractions keep Service Clubs bustling with
things of interest for you.
Dances are held each Friday
night. Fort Worth's loveliest young ladies arrive by the busload to
dance with you to the music of one of the Camp's many top-flight
swing bands.
The Service Club libraries
have thousands of books.
Service Club Cafeterias are
open from 7:30 to 9 a.m., from 12: noon to 2 p.m.. and from 5 to 7
p.m. Soda fountain hours are from 3 to 10 p.m., except Friday
evenings, when the time is 3 to 11 p.m. Friday evenings all
facilities of the club are given over to the dance program.
Service Clubs are on the north
side of the loop, next to theater No. 1, and on the south side, next
to Theater No.3.
Sports Arena
- Field house and athletic center at Wolters is the modern Sports Arena
on the north side of the Loop. With a seating capacity of 3,500, the
arc-top building contains athletic equipment for almost every sport.
Scheduled inter-battalion,
regimental, and camp-wide competitions in dozens of sports are help
there. These are supervised by the Camp Athletic Officer with
assistance of unit officers. The arena is open every day.
Guest Houses
- Guest houses are provided on the reservation where a soldier's family
and friends may stay while visiting him. Rates are 50 cents per person
per night. Reservations must be made in advance. Because of the demand
for accommodations, no room may be occupied by one party for more than
three days.
Guest House is next to the
Main Service Club.
Theaters
- Top-flight Hollywood films are shown in Wolter's theatres. Theatre 1
presents twp shows nightly while theaters 2 and 3 present one show
nightly.
As they become available,
U.S.O.... shows and other featured entertainments are presented in
Theater No. 1.
Theater No. 1 is on the north
side of the Loop. No. 2 is on the west side of the Loop. Theater No.
3 is in Area 6 near the Saluting Soldier statue.
Recreation
Halls - Battalion
recreation halls have pool and ping pong tables, stationary, desks,
desks, soft drink machines, magazines, books, etc.
Also, each battalion has its
theatres, where free movies and stage shows are presented. Outdoor
entertainments are staged from time to time.
Public
Relations Branch -
Keeping the folks back home informed about you and your Army progress is
part of the business of the Public Relations Branch. For every soldier
arriving at Camp Wolters, a short story is sent to his hometown paper.
Stories also are released on promotions of officers and non-coms.
Radio programs are produced
and transcribed in Theatre 1 each week for broadcast over nearby
stations. Consult the Longhorn, camp weekly newspaper for times and
stations. The publication of the Longhorn, which is distributed each
Friday, is a function of the Public Relations Branch.
U.S.O...
Clubs - U.S.O...
provides entertainment and relaxation for you in Mineral Wells.
U.S.O... Clubs have lounges,
reading rooms with out-of-town newspapers and magazines, writing
rooms, free stationery, ping pong and pool rooms, game room, a music
room with piano and radio, free movies, a soda fountain, and regular
entertainments such as community singing, party nights,
refreshments, musicals, and dances.
Mineral Wells U.S.O... Clubs are
located at 607 North Oak Avenue, and at 200 West Hubbard Street, the
latter operated by National Catholic Community Service.
In addition, at 316 South east
Street, is the U.S.O... Woman's Center for wives, relatives, and
friends of soldiers. Convention Hall, on North Oak Avenue, has
facilities for basketball, volleyball, stage shows, and dancing. The
colored U.S.O... Club is on South Oak Avenue.
The
Longhorn - Camp
newspaper, written by and for Woltersmen, is the Longhorn, distributed
free every Friday. Filled with news, features, laughs, cartoons,
pictures of soldiers at work and play, the Longhorn is a word and
picture story of life at Fort Wolters.
The Longhorn editors want to
hear from you. Submit your articles, jokes, experiences at Wolters,
cartoons, etc. to the Public Relations Branch, Building T-791, Area
4. Telephone 25, camp telephone exchange,
Automobiles
- The Army recommends that you leave your car at home. Trainees are not
forbidden to have them, but cars brought to camp must pass mechanical
tests and owners must obtain Camp Wolters license plates from the
Internal Security Officer at the Main Gate.
Cars must be insured for
$5,000 property damage and $5,000-$10,000 public liability.
Traffic
Regulations - Traffic
rules are enforced strictly in Camp. Speed limits range from 20 to 25
miles per hour. When passing troops, maximum speed is 10 m.p.h. Park
only in designated parking areas which are clearly marked.
Military Police
- The M.P.'s perform the same function in the Army that police perform
in civilian life. They represent the camp Commander and carry out his
orders. They must be obeyed and treated with the same respect as a
soldier on guard.
M.P.'s are charged with seeing
that a soldier's appearance and conduct are a credit to the Army.
Their business is to help - not to hound.
Should you get in trouble away
from camp, call the nearest M.P. He will give you every possible
assistance. Remember, an M.P. wants to keep you out of trouble ...
not get you into it.
Transportation
- In the Rail Transportation Office T-205, there is an information booth
at which you can learn schedules, routes and fares of trains, buses and
planes. For the most convenient method of getting the information you
need, go to the Rail Transportation Office rather than to the bus
company or railroad station. The office is located directly across from
Fire Station No.1.
Twenty- four hour bus service
is maintained between Camp Wolters and Mineral Wells. From 5 p.m. to
midnight the buses run every five minutes.
There are six buses daily from
Mineral Wells to Dallas. Four stop at the Service Clubs. The other
two stop only at the Main Gate. There are six buses daily from
Dallas to Mineral Wells. Four of these stop at the Service Clubs,
and other designated points around camp.
Tickets are available at
special soldiers' rates at all P.X.'s.
Camp Exchanges
- Camp stores, commonly called the "PX", are located in every area. PX's
are open during most of your free hours. Most articles you need are
available at reasonable prices. Profits are spent for recreational
equipment in camp.
Barber and tailor shops are
located in or near each PX.
K.P., Guard,
Etc. - At Wolters, every
soldier shares kitchen police and interior guard duties. Occasionally,
extra duty is given as punishment fro minor violations.
Laundry and Dry
Cleaning - The
Quartermaster Laundry does all of your laundry for a flat charge of
$1.50 a month. The Army supplies and launders sheets and pillow cases.
Commercial dry cleaning establishments are located in each area.
Refreshment
Centers - Camp Wolters'
three Refreshment Centers serve popular brands of bottled beer, soft
drinks, tobacco, candy, and ice cream.
Refreshment Centers, open from
5:30 to 10:00 p.m. on weekdays and from 2 to 10:00 p.m. on Sundays,
are located west of Area 1, north of Area 4, and east of Area 6. The
latter Refreshment Center is open from 12:30 to 1:30 each day except
Sunday.
Religious
Services - There
are Catholic, Jewish, and Protestant chaplains and chapels at Camp
Wolters. Chaplains are glad to assist you in any way they can. If you
desire guidance, advice, or want to talk to some one who is interested
in your problems, don't hesitate to call on your chaplain.
A complete schedule of Camp
Wolters' religious service appears each week on the sixth page of
the Camp Newspaper.
Medical Service
- Extensive facilities have been established at Camp Wolters to see that
you are healthy and stay healthy.
Sick call is held in each
company every morning. If you need medical attention you should
report to your orderly room. You will be sent to a dispensary near
your unit. At other hours, illness or injury should be reported to
an officer or non-com in your unit.
The Red
Cross - The
American Red Cross stretches its helping hand to soldiers at home and
abroad. Headquarters at Camp Wolters are in a colonial style building
between the Sports Arena and Area 4. The red Cross field director and
his staff are ready to help you when you need assistance, counsel, a
loan, information, or advice. Dealings with the Red Cross are
confidential. The Red Cross also maintains a Recreation Room at the
Station Hospital, complete with auditorium for soldier entertainment.
Office hours are 8:30 a.m. to
11 p.m. on weekdays; 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Sundays.
Housing
- Housing facilities in the vicinity of Camp Wolters are scarce.
Soldiers are urged not to bring their families here until they
locate a place for them to live, and until they have sufficient funds to
meet their needs should living expenses be higher than they anticipate.
There is little likelihood of a soldier's wife finding a job in Mineral
Wells.
Should you desire to bring
your family to Mineral Wells to stay overnight or longer, it is
strongly urged that you first secure accommodations for them, as the
town is considerably overcrowded, and rooms and apartments are very
difficult to find. If you wish to bring them for more than a week,
the Housing Officer may be able to help you find a home. Rental
prices must be approved by the Housing Officer before occupancy. His
office is in the Mineral Wells Post Office, telephone 154. Office
hours are from 8:30 a.m. to 6: p.m. In Weatherford, the Chamber of
Commerce will be glad to help soldiers find rooms. Office hours are
from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Class "A" passes for living in
Mineral Wells must be approved by the Housing Officer.
Legal
Assistance - The
soldier in need of legal advice is referred to the Legal Assistance
Office, Building T-208, in the Camp Headquarters Area. Open from 8:30
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily, from 6:30 to 7:30 Thursday evenings, and any
other evening by appointment, the office furnishes legal assistance and
advice free of charge to any member of the Armed Forces. Information
divulged by a soldier seeking legal help is treated confidentially.
Phone numbers of the office is 92, 93, or 94, camp telephone exchange.
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