Two nearly 90-year-old camps established to improve children’s health continue to operate, although their focus and ownership is not the same now as it was in the 1930s.
The camp at Pine Lake in Prairieville Township – now the Michigan Career and Technical Institute – has served as a training and education center for adults with disabilities from across the state, and has done so since the 1950s.
In between, in the 1940s, it saw rapid changes in its purpose: training and later rehabilitating U.S. Armed Services members.
Throughout World War II, newspapers across the country printed letters from service members, lists of wounded, dead or missing soldiers, promotions, and general service-related bulletins. The Pine Lake camp was mentioned occasionally, its geographic reference in the articles varying from near Plainwell, Hastings, Kalamazoo or Battle Creek.
The June 15, 1942, Detroit Evening Times announced that the camps would soon be used for training.
Kellogg Camps for Coast Guard
“Advance units of Coast Guard officers are to arrive this week to prepare the Kellogg Foundation camps at [Clear], Pine, and St. Mary’s lakes for the influx of approximately 600 men who soon will begin their service training here, it was announced this morning.
“The three camps recently were offered to the Coast Guard for use as training stations for the duration of the war, and only the signing of a $1 a year lease remains before the arrangement is official. Present equipment, including sleeping arrangements for 639 men, are to be turned over intact.
“According to officers of the Coast Guard, only basic training will be given in the three local camps unless there is a need for expanding the program here. Under the plan, recruits would be brought here for a month to undergo primary training and hardening.
“Ordnance and signal equipment, as well as large lifeboats, are being sent here for use by the men. After the initial group is trained, [the number of men may be bumped] up to 1,000 a month, since by using double-decked bunks, facilities could be doubled.
“The camps total 78 acres and have been in use annually by groups holding conferences, as well as by schoolchildren from all parts of the state.”
After several weeks of preparation, the July 28, 1942, Detroit Evening Times announced that the new three-site training station was nearly ready.
“Saturday will be dedication day for the Coast Guard’s first permanent training station at Battle Creek … special ceremonies to be announced in a few days.
“Officially known as the Battle Creek Training Station, the new facilities include three separate camps located at St. Mary’s, Pine and Clear lakes in Barry County, where basic training for Coast Guard recruits in seamanship, lifesaving, small arms drills, boat handling, military drills and formations will be given. Already, there are several hundred men from Midwestern points in training there.”
Little more was printed in Michigan newspapers for the next two years, but just two days after D-Day, officials were eyeing the Prairieville venue for a new purpose.
“Gov. Kelly announced today plans for the state to lease the Pine Lake Camp from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation for use as a veterans’ rehabilitation center,” the Ypsilanti Daily Press reported June 8, 1944.
“The camp, located 28 miles northwest of Battle Creek and 10 miles northwest [sic] of Plainwell, covers 31 acres of land and [access to] 500 acres of lake. Kelly said he would meet with the veterans’ advisory committee at the camp June 16 and that if it approves the project, he will ask state administrative board approval the following Tuesday.”
The Detroit Evening Times provided additional information on Kelly’s plan in its June 11, 1944, issue.
“Gov. Harry Kelly and his veteran affairs committee, consisting of Lt. Col. Phil C. Pack, Maj. Garnet Burlingame and Elmer J. Hanna, will go to the Pine Lake Camp of the W.K. Kellogg Foundation near Plainwell next Friday with an eye to using it for veterans whose disabilities do not entitle them to veteran administration help.
“According to H.B. Masters of the foundation, the $400,000 recreation plant has been offered to the state on a $1 per year basis for five years at which time, if the project has been proved a success, it will be deeded to the state.
“Masters said the foundation was interested in helping returned soldiers during the period of readjustment after they return to civil life and that Gov. Kelly’s project was the first of its kind anywhere in the United States.
“The plan, according to Masters, is to mix recreation and vocational training while the returned vets are shaking off the results of wounds, battle shock and other war-made ailments.
“Pine Camp was one of the principal Coast Guard boot training camps in Michigan during the early days of the war, and an estimated 1,500 guardsmen were trained there.
“The army had considered using the camp to house German war prisoners working on nearby farms, but a switch to an abandoned CCC camp in Allegan County makes Pine Camp available to the state.
“The camp consists of a large main building, 26 small dormitory cabins, a building the Coast Guard used as a hospital, and other units.
“Complete facilities for taking care of 400 men are available to go with the camp. Canoes, boats and other recreation equipment is also there in abundance.
“The main building, which is finished in knotty pine, is a year-round unit with oil heat and oil-burning ranges in the kitchen. The kitchen and mess hall take up one wing of the H-shaped building, while the balance of the ground floor is utilized as recreation rooms, a library and offices. The second floor has a number of single rooms used by the Coast Guard as officer quarters. Spacious rooms in the basement could be utilized as workshops and classrooms.
“The camp is one of the finest in Michigan and was built by the foundation 10 years ago as a camp and school for underprivileged children of Michigan.
“While its use for war veterans would be possible with the present plant, winter use would require installation of heating plants for the 26 sleeping cabins.”
“Veteran plan given backing,” the Ypsilanti Daily Press announced in a headline in its June 17, 1944, edition.
“With the enthusiastic backing of the State Veterans Advisory Board, Gov. Kelly will present to the State Administrative Board Tuesday a request for $60,000 to start a veterans’ rehabilitation and vocational education camp at Pine Lake near Hastings.
“Endorsement for the plan was voted by the board Thursday after an inspection of the camp ...
“George H. Fern, state director of vocational education, whose agency will operate the camp for the state, told Kelly he believed it could be in operation by Aug. 15. He said upwards of 100 discharged veterans are applying to the state board of control for vocational education monthly for training.
“The camp was described to the board as a ‘bridge between army hospitals and normal civilian life’ for veterans who have been wounded or psychologically affected and who need trained care as well as a trades education to fit them for civilian life.
“The $60,000 requested from the $1 million veterans reserve fund set up by the legislature will be used to build a $45,000 machine shop and for first year’s operating expenses charged to the state.
“Other operating expenses of about $118,500, covering salaries of teachers, nurses, psychiatrists and similar trained workers, as well as food, fuel and other services, will be paid by the vocational education board, Fern said, from federal/state funds provided for vocational training and rehabilitation. …
“Lt. Col. Philip C. Pack, acting director of the state office of veterans affairs, said training in machine, shop, welding, boat building, cabinet making, sheet metal work, drafting, watch and clock repairing, related technical subjects and office practices would be offered.”
The Detroit Evening Times July 25, 1944, mentioned the Pine Lake Camp in an article entitled “Veteran Setups Forming.” In that piece, Gov. Harry Kelly “warned that no work could be more important than rehabilitating returning veterans.
“The need for a comprehensive program of reorientation, re-employment, education and rehabilitation, both federal, state and local is clearly apparent,” the governor said through a spokesperson.
Five days later, that same paper published an article headlined:
Unique school awaits vets
GIs can fish, loaf, study at Pine Lake
“Discharged GIs who arrive at the state’s new Pine Lake vets vocational and technical school 30 miles west of Battle Creek Aug. 15 are in for a surprise.
“They are going to find their future ‘Alma Mater’ the most unusual school in Michigan, a place where a war-tired Joe can knock off his welding lessons and do a little fishing in one of Michigan’s best pike lakes.
“Or if he does not care for fishing, he can paddle around in a camp canoe, take a swim or play ping-pong. If he just wants to loaf, there are lounging rooms that many a Michigan big shot would pay heavy to loaf in, and around 55,000 books to read.
“… Joe is going to get a break, and Hugh Pierce, the camp director, is the authority for that promise.
“While this camp is an experiment, its purpose is to bridge the gap between war service and the return to civil life,” he explained. “Most men will make the change easily, but there will be some who find it difficult. We propose to help these men through that period and prepare them for useful civilian life.
“Many boys who went into the army right from school will find themselves unprepared to take a civilian job. Our vocational training program will meet the requirements of all but the exceptions.
“The army has done a great job of teaching skills to its soldiers, but in many cases, the skill is applicable only to military use. Our technical training will be for peace-time practices in shops and factories.”
The Nov. 2, 1944, Wyandotte News-Herald, in its recap of the recent city council meeting proceedings, even included a report on a mid-October conference at the Pine Lake camp for training of counselors and receptionists, who represented about 50 communities in the state.
The Dec. 15, 1944, Daily Monitor Leader in Mount Clemens reported: “Michigan, one of the first states to create machinery for aiding returning World War II veterans, has gained widespread attention by establishment of a rehabilitation camp which servicemen describe as ‘a million-dollar setup.’
“The camp, on Pine Lake near Kalamazoo, already houses 94 veterans who are being taught to overcome service-connected disabilities and learn new trades.
“Disabled veterans assigned to the camp obtain free use of elaborate recreation facilities and services of a trained psychiatrist while refitting themselves for civilian life.
“… Veterans attending the camp have all living expense and training fees paid by the state.
“Workmen are now putting the finishing touches on a new $100,000 workshop building that will complete the camp. …
“The Pine Lake camp for veterans is geared in closely with the state’s regular rehabilitation and counseling service for returning soldiers, sailors, marines and coast guardsmen.
The Oct. 15, 1945, Wyandotte News-Herald in its “Michigan Mirrors” section reported the presence of five times more veterans than after the conclusion of World War I.
“Michigan veterans are returning home at the rate now of 30,000 a month. The 1946 peak will come in June when 50,000 are due back. At least 350,000 veterans will be back home in Michigan by next summer.”
That same edition of the News-Herald listed several issues facing the state legislature and how it would appropriate the $51 million veterans’ relief fund. Recommendations were to be accepted by Gov. Kelly and the Office of Veteran Affairs between Thanksgiving and Christmas.
“At present, the OVA is a service agency, created by the legislature and a model for other state governments, which is likely to continue for some years if the $51 million fund is used for veterans service and not doled out immediately in dribbling sums.”
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The Battle Creek Outdoor Education Center, still referred to as “Clear Lake Camp” became the first public school camp in the nation when it was purchased by the Battle Creek schools system in 1940 and still operates as an education and conference center.
(An article on the original WKKF children’s camps was printed in the March 18, 2021, Banner)