An earlier post here regarding Neubrücke, Germany, where
Monique first saw the light, has turned out to be surprisingly popular on Ghulf Genes despite that little town’s
absolute obscurity. But the reason for that heavy traffic becomes clear once we
know that nearby Baumholder is, and has for many years also been, the largest
U.S. military installation outside of the United States. Many, many thousands
of people going all the way back to the times when I served there as a soldier know
the place. In my day, the late 1950s, Neubrücke was the nearest major army
hospital. Now it is part of the vast Baumholder complex and houses its own
barracks. Brigitte and I met in Baumholder, so this day may be appropriate to
do something I’ve meant to do for a long time: present some pictures of the
place.
This, the most lovely photograph of the place, is on Flicker, the work of Susana Alba-McCormick, reproduced here with permission. It shows part of the dependent quarters in moonlight, among them the building where we first made our home in a very spacious apartment; that’s where we brought Monique from Neubrücke as a baby; it is one of the buildings to the right, on Pear Street.
This one, panoramic enough to include the town, shows some of the same
buildings from another perspective, some of the barracks, and more, much more,
if you imagine moving on to the left of this image. This and the next two images I have courtesy of Bruce Richards (his site is
here).
Baumholder is a most curious place. It is home to some
12,000 Americans, of whom 4,400 are military, 6,550 are military family members,
600 are American civil servants, 360 are their family members, and 100
individuals are retired American military people. The post also employs 500 Germans—and
Brigitte was one of them in my day. The town itself—you can see one of its
church steeples and housing to the right—has 4,600 inhabitants. And since this
photograph was taken, massive additional American Military facilities, not
least a major hospital, have been built in the town itself.
Here is an old, old picture, taken from the other side
across the little lake that serves the town as a recreational facility, showing also the second church—but there are three others yet.
Now two more panoramic shots of which this one shows the
size of this facility more clearly, including strings of barracks—one of which
I lived in before Brigitte and I became a couple.
I owe this nice modern shot to a German industrial site which is
installing energy-conservation structures in all of the buildings reaching
from horizon to horizon, called Pumpen Intelligenz (
link).
Not shown is a vastly—and I do mean vastly—greater area, the
Baumholder firing range itself. Baumholder is one of two (and the biggest) artillery
training regions in Germany, serving now the German and the U.S. Armies—and in my
day, in addition, the French military. The insert shows the size of the range.
The dot shown on the upper right is the Baumholder airport.
Baumholder
had its origins in 1937 when the German military chose to create the facility.
The government appropriated 22,000 acres for the purpose and moved 842 families
from 14 small villages to create a zone where destruction could be practiced
without actually harming anyone. Strange, strange. Here two war-displaced
people met. Brigitte had migrated from Poland, by way of what was East Germany, to this place. And I had come from Hungary, but by way first of Germany and then America
to be here. We were both secretaries at the time; she was secretary to
Baumholder’s Post Commander. I was secretary to the highest ranking officer,
the general who commanded the 8th Infantry Division Artillery (DivArty, we
called it). Brigitte and I were both engaged in arranging all kinds of contacts
with the German communities all around, and naturally had lots of contacts. Nothing
propinqs like propinquity—even in the
midst of that other human perennial: destruction.