Camp Savage, WW II Asset for Victory in the Pacific

by Charles Pederson

Every day, thousands of cars pass through the Minnesota city of Savage on state Highway 13. Drivers and passengers are intent on the traffic or on making good time. Not one in a thousand glances at the south frontage road at Xenwood Avenue. Why would they? They’d see only some scrubland, neat commercial buildings, a modest park, a historical marker. They might never suspect that those few humdrum acres had been a vital cog in the Pacific Theater war effort during World War II.

Wanted: Speakers of Japanese

In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Japan had steadily expanded its empire in southeast Asia. It needed raw materials for its industry. As punishment, the United States began to refuse to export especially oil to Japan. As pressure mounted, Japan decided it had to attack the United States before it declared war.

Negotiations were attempted, but by 1941, they broke off. The U.S. military began a search for qualified speakers of Japanese who could clarify enemy intentions. Surprisingly, a survey of 3,700 second-generation Japanese Americans (known as Nisei) found that only 3% were fluent, 4% proficient, and 3% could be made proficient with enough training. A further barrier was military leadership’s deep distrust about where the loyalty of ethnic Japanese lay.

Despite these handicaps, far-sighted officers in early November 1941 established an intensive Japanese language school on the Presidio military base in San Francisco. It came to be known as the Military Intelligence Service Language School (MISLS). To fill the ranks, MISLS recruited Nisei, Issei (immigrants from Japan), and Kibei (American-born Japanese who had been educated in Japan).

A scant $2,000 budget for the school was used to gather 60 students (58 Nisei Americans and two European Americans), along with 18 instructors in an unused hangar. English was the first language for many, but they volunteered anyway. Clearly, these patriots loved their country.

Panic Leads to Internment

A month later, on December 7, 1941, airplanes of the empire of Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. The anticipated war had begun.

Panic swept the nation as worries mounted about the loyalty of ethnic Japanese in America. In February 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066. It initiated the evacuation of all Japanese Americans and resident aliens of Japanese descent from the West Coast. About 120,000 U.S. citizens or resident aliens were abruptly imprisoned in 10 concentration camps in seven Western states.

Clearly, the government had overreacted. A 1982 U.S. government report noted: “Not a single documented act of [Japanese] espionage, sabotage or fifth column activity was committed” on the West Coast. Despite their treatment, many MISLS volunteers came from the camps and Hawaii.

Because of the ethnic makeup of students and instructors at the MISLS camp, Roosevelt’s evacuation order applied to them. The school had to move from the so-called exclusion zone. A new school was needed.

Minnesota or Bust

Several Midwest states refused to host the new camp, because of anti-Japanese feelings. Minnesota Governor Harold Stassen, however, offered a plot of land in Savage to house the school. The school commandant, Colonel Kai Rasmussen, believed that Minnesota would be more accepting of this ethnic group than some of its neighbors. He agreed to the move. In June 1942, Camp Savage was established.

Built in the 1930s, several buildings stood on 132 acres just west of downtown Savage. It had originally been constructed during the Great Depression to house workers in Roosevelt’s Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). Later, the campus had been converted to use for men who were poor and elderly.

Now, the buildings were repurposed to train the men whom President Harry Truman later called “our human secret weapons.”

Camp and Coursework

The first class at Camp Savage had 200 students and 18 instructors. Students occupied about 15 to 20 barracks, each with cots and three coal-fired potbelly stoves for winter heating. Administration and other buildings also stood on the site. From the beginning, the wooden camp buildings seemed destined to be temporary. Larger buildings for social events were particularly scarce. In fact, an early camp dance took place in a dairy barn after the cows had been milked and sent out to pasture. Continually increasing numbers of students and instructors ratcheted the pressure on facilities.

Coursework was rigorous, with classes from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and again from 7:00 until 9:00 p.m. Students learned not only conversational Japanese but also Japanese military codes and terminology, army slang, and battle tactics and techniques. They learned to listen in on communications, interrogate prisoners, and understand several literary and handwriting styles. It was intensive work with only a few months to master it all.

Most students had to study hard not to wash out of the program. As diligent learners who wanted to serve the United States, they took sometimes extraordinary measures to pass the language course. Student Saburo Watanabe said that, after lights out, “you hardly saw anybody in their cots because they were all out in the toilet [where there was light]. They were seated in the toilet seats,” studying for Saturday exams. Those in their cots often studied by flashlight. This was such a common occurrence that officers had to keep an eye on students and make sure lights out meant lights out.

Still, there were simple pleasures. One student, Takejiro Higa, learning his brother’s military experiences in Mississippi, appreciated the fresh food, including milk and eggs. His brother got powdered eggs. In Minnesota, “summer months were nice and green,” added Higa. “You can roll around in the grass. Whereas Mississippi, hell, it’s sandy, it’s a dusty place.” On weekends, students might visit Fort Snelling, in Saint Paul, or downtown Minneapolis. One student remembered enjoying food at a Chinese restaurant near the Minneapolis bus station.

End of Camp Savage

Each new class of students was larger than the previous. For the final class, 100 instructors graduated 1,100 students. Finally, Camp Savage exceeded capacity. In August 1944, MISLS was moved to quarters on the military base at Fort Snelling. Two years after that, the school returned to California, with additional languages taught. A total of more than 6,000 students had graduated from MISLS.

MISLS linguists helped translate more than 20 million pages of documents and assisted at postwar war crimes trials. U.S. military officers stated that the students’ efforts shortened the Asian war by at least two years. The military’s tune had certainly changed from the mistrust and suspicion of the early years and Executive Order 9066.

The remains of Camp Savage are sparse—a small park with a historical marker commemorating the little-known history of WWII’s human secret weapons. A single camp building used by the Minnesota Department of Transportation (MNDOT). A city dog park, where visitors may have no idea of the history beneath their feet. But this unassuming landscape bore abundant fruit throughout WW II and beyond.

 

President Taft Visits Shakopee

Written by guest blogger, Charles Pederson

1911 was a quiet year, with low-key world and U.S. events. The Spanish-American War had been over for more than 10 years, and the storm clouds of World War I were likewise years in the future. The Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company (later known as IBM) was incorporated that year. Ground was broken for construction on Fenway Park, the modern baseball stadium for the Boston Red Sox.

A quiet year, but by October 1911, Scott County was abuzz with talk about a coming earth-shaking event. Or at least, there was mild interest. William Howard Taft, once Teddy Roosevelt’s vice president and now himself a candidate for reelection as U.S. president, planned to pass through Minnesota on a reelection campaign tour. One of his planned stops was the railway station in Shakopee, Minnesota.

President Taft speaks at the Shakopee Depot, October 24th, 1911. Photo from the SCHS Collections.

President Taft speaks at the Shakopee Depot, October 24th, 1911. Photo from the SCHS Collections.

In the spring of 1911, a bitter personal feud between Taft and Roosevelt had culminated in Roosevelt’s challenging Taft for the Republican nomination. Historian Peri Arnold noted that “the resulting campaign . . . was the first in which a sitting President campaigned in state primaries.” Taft won the nomination, though consequently, a resentful Roosevelt started his own new, competing party, the Bull Moose Party.

Because campaigning in individual states had worked well for the primaries, Taft continued the practice into October for the 1911 general election. He included a train journey through southern Minnesota, and on the schedule for October 24 were stops in Shakopee and other nearby towns.

Before the visit, the Scott County Argus reported on the preparations being made. These included, of course, local and state politicians, as well as dozens of sheriff’s deputies who would constitute a protective cordon around the train station and a town band that would serenade the president into and back out of town. An Argus reporter breathlessly explained that “the highest official in the world” would receive the respects of his fellow citizens. “It may well be said, ‘the president’s position is greater than a king’s,’ for he holds the place not by accident of birth but by the suffrage” of U.S. voters.

A few days after the event, on October 27, the Argus reported the results of the visit. A respectably sized crowd of about 2,000 people came from the county and neighboring municipalities to hear the president speak. The speaking platform had been prepared for the august visitor. It was decked out with U.S. flags and with local products, including locally grown corn, Shakopee bricks, and beverages from the Jacob Ries Bottling Works, which produced ginger ale and sparkling water right there in Shakopee.

In Mankato during the same campaign tour, Taft received a raucous welcome, according to the Blue Earth County Historical Society. “People arrived in every kind of vehicle from one-horse chaises to automobiles.” In contrast, the Argus reported that among the Shakopee citizens gathered at the local train station, “there was no show of enthusiasm,” though the crowd did listen carefully to what Taft had to say. After a brief 15-minute speech, according to the Argus, Taft boarded his train and left for other stops in Minnesota.

Crowd gathered to hear President Taft speak in Shakopee on October 24th, 1911. Photo from the SCHS Collections

Crowd gathered to hear President Taft speak in Shakopee on October 24th, 1911. Photo from the SCHS Collections

Taft no doubt had held out great hope for his strategy of barnstorming personal appearances. The effort, however, seems to have fizzled. The very popular Roosevelt and his Bull Moose Party clawed away most of Taft’s Republican support. At least partly because of the split, neither man carried the election. Instead the Democrat, Woodrow Wilson, won by a landslide. His 435 electoral votes crushed Taft’s third-place votes, four each from Vermont and Utah. Shakopee’s voters mirrored the national vote. Out of 450-some voters, almost 290 voted for Wilson and 89 for Roosevelt. Taft trailed third with about 75 votes.

Taft in some ways may have been fortunate not to regain the White House. World War I began only three short years later, and as the editor of the Scott County Argus presciently wrote in 1911, “To be President of the United States for the next four years will be no easy job for there is much to be done and it must be done in the right way.”

Union Hill Baseball

According to a 1996 New Prague Times article “When Union Hill comes up in conversation of area residents several things come to mind. There’s the church, a bar, a few houses and oh yes! The ballpark! Union Hill and baseball have become nearly synonymous” 

Don Giesen was 16 when that first team was formed. He said “It seems we’ve always had a big baseball tradition. The kids used to play ball in cow pastures and backyards”. Don’s uncle and father decided to build a baseball field the field was “tiled, well kept, and in immaculate shape” 

In 1956 Union Hill first fielded a team in the Dakota-Rice-Scott baseball league. That team, The Indians, played their home games in that brand new ballpark, West of County Road 7, across from the bar

As Don Giesen remembers, the original board of directors for the Union Hill ballclub were Frank Giesen, Jake Giesen, Cletus Witt, Bill Giesen and Edward Pint. 

Early star players of Union Hill baseball included Dennis and Pat Sharkey, Jin Walker, Pat Halloran, Tom Ruhland, Albert Ruhland Jr, Don and Bob Giesen, Bill Witt, and Ron and Jerry Pint.


Shakopee in Scott County History

by SCHS Volunteer, Charles Pederson

The name Shakopee has a fascinating place in Scott County history. The city known today by that name was originally incorporated in 1851 by Thomas Holmes, a trader at the site of the present-day city. Holmes named it for the local leader of the Dakota people living at the site. But the history of the name goes much deeper than that.

Dakota people have lived in the area of present-day Shakopee for millennia. By the 1800s, Europeans traveling through the area, including French mapmaker Joseph Nicollet, mentioned the Dakota and their leader, Shakopee. Nicollet referred to the “village of the Six” during his travels in the area during the late 1830s. The name Shakopee has appeared in numerous phonetic variations, among them Shakpe, Zhaagobe, and Jack-O-Pa. Although the spelling differs according to the chronicler, historians agree that the term was not a single person’s name but rather a title passed from father to son. 

The First and Second Shakopees

The original Shakopee acquired his title in the early 1800s when his wife gave birth to sextuplets. In the Dakota language, “Shakopee” means “the six.” The original Shakopee died at Fort Snelling around 1830. After the first Shakopee’s death, his son became the second Shakopee and led the people until 1860. 

Shakopee the Third

The best-known of the Shakopee leaders was the third of that title. Eotaka, at age 54, took leadership of his people in 1860, after his father died. Eotaka’s title was slightly altered: “Shakpedan,” which means “Little Six.”

Several years after the so-called U.S.–Dakota War, which had raged along the Minnesota River valley from August to December 1862, Shakopee and another Dakota leader, Medicine Bottle, were arrested near the Canadian border for their alleged role in the conflict. Transported to and held at Fort Snelling, the two men were tried and executed by hanging on November 11, 1865. Shortly before the hangings, the Saint Paul Pioneer Press, though not sorry about the men’s death, stated that “it would have been more creditable if some tangible evidence of their guilt had been obtained. . . . No white man, tried by a jury of his peers, would be executed upon the testimony thus produced.”

Eotaka was the last Dakota leader to be called Shakpe. His name, of course, is commemorated at the Little Six Casino in Prior Lake and in the name of the city of Shakopee.


A Few Early Settlers of Union Hill

The Hauer Family

The Hauer family included five brothers, four of them civil war veterans. They were Andrew, Jacob, Matthias, Nicholas (Klaus) and Nicholas (Nick). The family also had a daughter named Margaret. They moved to the area in 1867

Only Mathias and Nicholas (Klaus) remained in this area after long-term. Andrew moved to Fort Dodge, Iowa and Jacob left and settled near Montgomery. Nicholas (Nick) lived briefly in Iowa before settling in the town of Belle Plaine. In later years he returned to Union Hill and lived with his niece. 

The children belonged to Nicholas and Eva Schlinker Hauer who brought their family from Trier, Germany. They first settled in Michigan, but did not like it and moved to St Paul around 1850. Although they remained in Union Hill, the elder Nicholas Hauer is noted as saying for the rest of his life that he wished he had never left St Paul. 

In August of 1861, Matthias, Jacob and Andrew enlisted in the Union Army to fight in the Civil War The three boys served with the Minnesota Second Infantry Regiment, and all three were discharged at the end of the conflict in 1865. Nicholas (Klaus) joined them in the military in 1864 when he was drafted into the Minnesota Fourth Infantry Regiment. Amazingly, none of the four sons suffered injury during their time in the military. 

In 1865, Matthias  was married to Mary Peters of St. Benedict. They were the first couple to be married in St. John's, and although their marriage took place in Union Hill, they had known each other as children and even been neighbors in Germany. 

Nicholas (Klaus) Hauer lived to be 96. Before he left for the Civil War, he married Gertrude Renneberg at her home in Shakopee. The couple had ten children: eight sons and two daughters. 

The Schoenecker Family

Nicholas Schoenecker is believed to be the first European American settler in the Union Hill area. He arrived from Waxweiler, Germany in 1852 and purchased  section 25 of Belle Plaine Township. This land was still in the family over 100 years later. 

Six years after his arrival in Union Hill, Nicholas briefly returned to Germany after the death of his father. When he returned, he brought back his mother Katherine, his brother Matt Schoenecker, and Matt’s wife Anna Maria. Katherine passed away in 1868 and was the first adult buried in St John’s Cemetery at Union Hill. 

In 1867, Nicholas was elected as spokesman for the community in their attempt to convince the Bishop Grace in St. Paul to assign a permanent priest to the community. 

Matt and Anna Maria lived to celebrate their golden wedding anniversary. They had five sons and five daughters. Nicholas married Katherina Lochen and they raised a family of six boys

The Witt Family

Carl Witt and their four children came from Wangerin, Germany to LaCrosse, Wisconsin in 1857. In 1859 the family relocated to begin farming in the Birch Coulee area of the Minnesota River Valley in Renville County near Morton, Minnesota. Three years later, Mrs. Whitt was killed by a stray bullet during the US Dakota War of 1862. One of their children, Carl Witt Jr. was also wounded After her death, the family packed up their possessions and moved into Fort Ridgley, where a doctor was able to tend to Carl’s wounds. The family remained for a time at Fort Ridgely, before traveling with other families who had lost their homes in the conflict to New Ulm, and later Belle Plaine. 

After a brief stay in Belle Plaine, the Witt family went to stay with Franz Giesen in Union Hill. Carl Witt Sr. later married Mrs. John Giesen, a widow with two children.