Camp Evans

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Camp Evans, New Jersey is a former military base associated with Fort Monmouth. It is located in Wall Township, although it is often said to be located in Belmar. The property overlooks the Shark River.

Camp Evans is named after the late Lt. Col. Paul Wesley Evans of the Signal Corp., who worked in the development of wireless transmission and military radar at the Belmar Station in the early 20th century. After World War I, Evans was reassigned to the Panama Canal Zone as the presiding Signal Officer.

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[edit] Marconi's Belmar Station

The original Evans buildings were built by the Marconi Company between 1912 and 1914 as part of Guglielmo Marconi's 'wireless girdle' around the Earth. It was then known as the Belmar Station. The Belmar Station served as Marconi's receiving station, with a transmitting station in New Brunswick, New Jersey. In January 1914, Edwin Armstrong and David Sarnoff tested and perfected the regenerative circuit at the site.

[edit] The US Navy

Both stations were seized by the U.S. Navy when the United States entered World War I. Dr. A. Hoyt Taylor, the father of Naval radar, was in charge of the Marconi Belmar station during WWI. On January 8, 1918, President Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points speech was transmitted to Germany through these stations. In September Wilson's appeal for the abdication or overthrow of Kaiser Wilhelm II was sent through the stations.

[edit] RCA

At the end of the war, the property was returned to the Marconi Company, which had become the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in October 1919. RCA abandoned the Belmar site in 1924, when advances in wireless technology allowed the New Brunswick station to both transmit and receive.

[edit] Pleasure Seeker's Club

From 1925 to 1935, the property was owned by the Monmouth County Pleasure Seeker's Club. The Pleasure Seeker's Club had close ties to the Ku Klux Klan. Disputes over development of the property ended in a court battle that was reported in The New York Times.

[edit] The King's College

The Young People's Association for the Propagation of the Gospel purchased the Belmar station in 1936. The King's College opened in September, 1938 under the leadership of Percy B. Crawford. It aimed to combine the Arts and Sciences with a Christian education. They began with 67 students. When they were denied accreditation, they relocated. Presently, The King's College is located in the Empire State Building in New York City.

[edit] World War II

The U.S. Army purchased the land in November of 1941 to create a top-secret research facility. Radar was partly developed and vastly improved at Camp Evans. Other partners in radar development included Fort Hancock, the MIT RAD LAB, AT&T, Western Electric, General Electric, and Chrysler. A unit designed by Camp Evans engineers detected enemy planes 50 minutes before the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Camp Evans radar was a major factor in the U.S. victory during World War II.

[edit] Army Research

During and After WWII, Camp Evans was an important Black history site. Black engineers made major contributions to electronic research, development, product distribution and training. Prof. Robert Johnson, of Framingham State College is creating a video to document the work and struggles of black engineers. See Dr. Walter McAfee

After World War II, the Army kept Camp Evans as a research facility. The base was part of Project Paperclip, where German radar scientists were relocated and employed by the U.S. Army, including Wernher von Braun. Project Diana opened the space age, proving that radio waves could pierce the ionosphere. This proved that communication is possible between the Earth and space, opening the possibility of space exploration. Other contributions included work on light-emitting diodes, night vision goggles, and many other important developments.

Senator Joseph McCarthy, Roy Cohn, and others came to Camp Evans on October 20, 1953. McCarthy claimed that the Army's "house of magic" was really a "house of spies." Julius Rosenberg was executed for supposedly stealing radar and proximity fuze information from Fort Monmouth while working there as an electrical engineer in the 1940s. (Documents released by Russia after the Cold War showed that Mr. Rosenberg was indeed, a Soviet Spy.) McCarthy's visit destroyed careers and led to the creation of the "leper colony" - where those who could no longer be trusted with top secret information worked. None of the Camp Evans employees whom McCarthy investigated in 1953 and 1954 were ever prosecuted.

The U.S. Army Signal Corps scientists at Camp Evans and Deal Test Site in Ocean Township tracked Sputnik. The Institute for Exploratory Research was created and based out of Camp Evans. The army base played an important role in satellite development and space exploration. Dr. Hans Ziegler was responsible for the first application of solar cells as a power source for satellites.

Camp Evans played an important role in the development of the silicon transistor. It featured a nuclear dosimetry laboratory and a photo-optics lab. It tracked Pioneer V. Camp Evans worked with projects Joint STARS, REMBASS, Firefinder, Pulsed Power (part of Ronald Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative), and others.

[edit] Infoage

The former Camp Evans base is now being turned into the Infoage Science/History Learning Center. Quoting from their website: "Infoage is a group of cooperating non-profit organization dedicated to the preservation and education of information age technologies, as we honor the pioneers of communications." Infoage volunteers have succeeded in having Camp Evans listed on the National Register of Historic Places, in the creation of a Camp Evans historic district, and is a Save America's Treasures official project. Volunteers are also working to restore the buildings after years of Army neglect. The land and buildings have been given to the National Park Service for Infoage's use through the United States Department of Defense Base Realignment and Closure process.

[edit] Recent developments

Currently, parts of what was the Camp Evans base have been given to the Infoage Science/History Learning Center, Brookdale Community College and the North Wall Little League Foundation through the BRAC. Presently, this land is the site of the Brookdale Communiversity, Infoage, and a baseball complex run by the North Wall Little League.

[edit] Works cited

This information is based on articles on www.infoage.org.

[edit] External links