Fort Brooke, Puerto Rico

Fort Brooke was a United States Army post established on 3 March 1943 under General Order Number 10[1] during World War II after the German U-boat attacks of 1942 on the Caribbean Basin in conjunction to Operation Z.

Fort Brooke
Old San Juan, Puerto Rico
TypeU.S. Army Post 851
Site information
Controlled byUnited States
Garrison information
GarrisonDEML DETACHMENT

Early years

During the early years, Puerto Rico played a leading role as the operations center in the Antilles Screen against German U-boats, whose attacks reached an alarming peak in 1942 with the sinking of 336 ships in the Caribbean area. Ships sailing from South American ports carried such strategic products as gasoline, oil derivatives, and bauxite for aluminum production, and their losses were serious. Puerto Rico provided support for U.S. naval forces charged with controlling the Caribbean; it served as a base for air protection for ships, other outposts in the region, and the approaches to the Panama Canal; and it was an important link in the transport and ferrying route for aircraft, personnel, and cargo going to Africa and Middle East.[2]

On May 1942, U-boats sunk 56 ships totaling more than 248,000 tons of shipment in the space of 4 months all throughout the Caribbean Sea Frontier west of the shipping control line. By the middle of the month, 22% of the bauxite fleet had been destroyed, 20% of the ships in the Puerto Rican run had been lost, and of 74 vessels allocated to the Army for the month of 17 July had already been sunk.[3]

Formation

Anxious at the beginning of World War II to avoid raising fears of the U.S. expansion in the hemisphere through the creation of military bases in Latin America, President Roosevelt concentrated instead on strengthening defenses at both ends of the U.S. Canal Zone, and establishing an air base and other military installations on the island of Puerto Rico, the major U.S. territory in the Caribbean Basin.[4]

In the President's opinion, expressed in a bill that failed to pass in the U.S. Senate in 1943, the chain of islands running in a great arc from New Orleans to the shoulder of South America, enclosing the Caribbean Basin, formed a vast natural shield for the Panama Canal, suited in distance and conformation to the uses of the military plane. And of this island shield, Puerto Rico is the center.[5]

Order 10

General Order No. 10 read:

The Headland Castle at Old San Juan will be named Fort Brooke in memory of United States Army Major General John Rutter Brooke from Pennsylvania, better known as "John Ruller" during the American Civil War between 1861 and 1865 and the Spanish–American War of 1898.

Description

Fort Brooke was located in Fort San Felipe del Morro, a Spanish colonial fort. It consisted of offices for technicians, observers, military staff and police, music band members, motor pool workers and medical personnel. Officers' quarters were constructed along the road leading to the Castle surrounded by an Officers' Club, one swimming pool, the Bachelor Officers' Quarters (BOQ) and one outdoor cinema on top of a golf course. Observation posts, communications centers and underground installations were also added in the sector.[6]

Due to declining maritime losses in the Atlantic as the war progressed, the base saw little action in the later war years, and became home to a number of sporting and leisure activities.[7]

Transformation into a hospital

On 31 August 1944, the United States Department of War issued General Order No. 71 which transformed the Ballajá station into the Fort Brooke Hospital installation.

Armed Forces Examination and Induction Station

Puerto Ricans drafted to the United States Armed Forces during the Korean War and the Vietnam War reported to the Armed Forces Examination and Induction Station (AFEIS) at Fort Brooke for screens and processes before being sent to active duty. In 1970 Armed Forces Examination and Induction Station at Fort Brooke was redesignated as the Armed Forces Examining and Entrance Station. In 1978 the station moved to a new facility in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico near the Fort Buchanan Army base and became a Military Entrance Processing Station (MEPS). On January 1, 1982 the center was redesignated as MEPS San Juan. In 2013 the Military Entrance Processing Station moved to a new location at Millennium Park Plaza in Guaynabo.

See also

References

  1. General Order No. 10, War Department, 3 March 1943, Records in the Historical Resources Branch, the U.S. Army Center of Military History, Washington D.C. (USACMH)
  2. Craven, Wesley Frank; Cate, James Lea (1948). Plans and Early Operations: January 1939 to August 1942. Chicago: University of Chicago Press: The Army Air Forces in World War II series. pp. 349–57 & 514–19.
  3. B.d.U. War Logs, 1 Jan 42 – 30 Jun 42; Memo, Gen Marshall for Admiral King, 19 Jun 42, quoted in Ernest J. King and Walter M. Whitehill, Fleet Admiral King: A Naval Record (New York: W. W. Norton and Company, Inc., 1952) p. 455; CDC Monograph, Antisubmarine Activities in the Caribbean Defense Command 1941-46, pp. 37-43, 52
  4. Conn, Stetson; Engelman, Rose C.; Fairchild, Byron (1964). Guarding the United States and Its Outposts. United States Army in World War II. Washington: GPO. pp. 4–15.
  5. Wagenheim, Kal; Jiménez, Olga (1996). The Puerto Ricans: A Documentary History. Princeton, N.J.: Markus Wiener Publishers. p. 189.
  6. Puerto Rico Encyclopedia. "San Juan: San Felipe del Morro Fort". National Endowment for the Humanities. Retrieved 2 September 2010.
  7. Park, Roberta. "Forget About that Pile of Papers': Second World War Sport, Recreation and the Military on the Island of Puerto Rico". International Journal of the History of Sport, Volume 20, Issue 1, March 2003 , Pages 50-64. Missing or empty |url= (help)

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