
Ft. Monmouth Garrison Shield

CECOM Crest
'Fort Monmouth' is a
United States Army installation in
Eatontown,
Tinton Falls and
Oceanport,
New Jersey, and about one mile from the
Atlantic Ocean. The base covers nearly 1,126 acres of land, from the
Shrewsbury River west to
Route 35, called Main Post. A separate area (Camp Charles Wood) to the west includes base housing and a golf course. A
Conrail line runs through its western portion and out to
Naval Weapons Station Earle. The base is like a small town, including a post exchange, health center and other amentities. Until the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the base was open to the public to drive through; since that time, the base is closed to all but authorized personnel.
The base is home to several units of the
U.S. Army Materiel Command that research and manage communications, computer and other technology, as well as an inter-service unit designed to coordinate communications, an academic preprepatory school, an ordinance disposal unit, a garrison services unit, an Army health clinic, and a Veterans Administation health clinic. Other agencies, including the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and the
National Security Agency, have presences on the base.
The base was selected for closure by the
Base Realignment and Closure Commission in 2005. Most Army functions and personnel are scheduled to be moved to Army facilities in
Maryland and
Ohio by 2011.

Signal Corps Time Capsule
History
★ For more information, see the official U.S. Army Communications-Electronics Life Cycle Management Command/ Fort Monmouth Historical Office website at
[1] or
| Fort Monmouth Timeline, (a Microsoft Word document)
The original name of the installation was Camp Little Silver. It was renamed Camp
Alfred Vail shortly after its establishment in 1917. The Chief Signal Officer authorized the purchase of Camp Vail in 1919. The
Signal Corps School relocated to Camp Vail from
Fort Leavenworth that year. The Signal Corps Board followed in 1924. In August 1925 the installation was granted permanent status and was renamed Fort Monmouth. It was named in honor of the soldiers of the
American Revolutionary War who died in the
Battle of Monmouth; aptly, it is also located in
Monmouth County. The first permanent building was built in 1928. Other structures were built to house units the Army consolidated into Fort Monmouth.
In 1928, the first radio-equipped meteorological balloon reached the upper atmosphere, a forerunner of weather sounding techniques universally used today. In 1938, the first U.S. aircraft detection radar was developed here; this is the same radar that detected the oncoming Japanese air attack on Pearl Harbor, but the warning it provided was discounted. In 1946, space communications was proved feasible when the Diana Radar was used to bounce electronic signals off the moon.
World War II
Additional property was purchased in 1941 for
Camp Coles near
Red Bank,
Camp Charles Wood in Tinton Falls, and
Camp Evans in
Wall Township. At its peak during
World War II, Fort Monmouth measured 1,713 acres (6.9 km²), and had billeting space for 1,559 officers and 19,786 enlisted personnel. More communications units, including the Pigeon Breeding and Training Center, were consolidated into Fort Monmouth after the war ended. The pigeon service was discontinued in 1957; the birds were either sold at auction or donated to zoos.
The Signal Corps officer candidate school at Fort Monmouth graduated 21,033 Signal Corps second lieutenants during the period 1941-1946.
Rosenbergs
Julius Rosenberg had worked as a radar inspector at Fort Monmouth in 1942 and 1943. It is from the fort that he was accused and convicted of stealing
proximity fuze plans and passing them on to the
Soviet Union. Documents released by Russia after the
Cold War showed that Julius Rosenberg was indeed a spy. In October of 1953,
Joseph McCarthy claimed that Julius Rosenberg had set up a wartime spy ring at Fort Monmouth and that the ring might still be in operation. Two Fort Monmouth scientists,
Joel Barr and
Alfred Sarant fled to the
Soviet Union.
[2]
Current Mission
Today, Fort Monmouth is home to the Communications and Electronics Life Cycle Management Command (CE-LCMC). There are parts of the Army’s information technologies and integrated systems center. Though no longer the home of the U.S. Army Signal Corps (after its move to Ft. Gordon, Georgia in the 1970s), Ft. Monmouth is sometimes referred to as the "Soul of the Signal Corps" and houses the official Time Capsule of the Army Signal Corps.
The base is home to the
Communications and Electronics Life Cycle Management Command (CE-LCMC), which consists of the following:
★
Communications Electronics Command (CECOM), which researches and manages the Army's communications needs. Sections of CECOM include the Software Engineering Center (SEC); Information Systems Engineering Command (ISEC); Logistics and Readiness Center (LRC); Tobyhanna Army Depot; and CECOM Acquisition Center (AC)
★
Communications and Electronics Research and Development Center (CERDEC) which helped develop Night Vision goggles, counter equipment for improvised explosive devices, shortstop electronic protection systems, and well sensor systems to provide soldiers with a safe method for rapidly inspecting wells and underground locations.
★ Three program executive offices for Command, Control, Communications Tactical; Intelligence, Electronic Warfare and Sensors; and Enterprise Information Systems.
Also located on the base is:
★ the
Defense Information Systems Agency which helps coordinate joint interoperability between the Army, Navy and Air Force;
★ the
United States Military Academy Preparatory School, which trains 250 cadet candidates each year for entrance as freshmen into the
United States Military Academy at
West Point, NY;
★ the 754th Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit, which provides emergency response to military and federal civilian agencies throughout New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine and Pennsylvania.
The
Patterson Army Health Clinic serves Army service members and their families, also those from Earl Naval Weapons Station and a Coast Guard station in Sandy Hook, NJ. It also serves more than 7,000 veterans and their families, as a VA clinic.
Most of the employees on the base are civilians employed by the Army or civilian contractors.
Fort Monmouth is also noted for its Sun Eagles
Golf Course, one of the better military golf courses in the nation.
School-aged children at the Fort in grades 9 through 12 attend
Monmouth Regional High School in
Tinton Falls, part of the
Monmouth Regional High School District.
Closure by BRAC
Fort Monmouth was recommended for closure by
the Pentagon in May 2005. BRAC voted in August 2005 to close the base; their decision was upheld by President George Bush and Congress. An appeal headed by U.S. Representatives
Frank Pallone and
Rush Holt to remove the base from the list was made to the BRAC commission, but was rejected.
In particular, BRAC recommended:
★ Relocate the US Army Military Academy Preparatory School to West Point, NY.
★ Relocate the Joint Network Management System Program Office to
Fort Meade, MD.
★ Relocate the Budget/Funding, Contracting, Cataloging, Requisition Processing, Customer Services, Item Management, Stock Control, Weapon System Secondary Item Support, Requirements Determination, Integrated Materiel Management Technical Support Inventory Control Point functions for Consumable Items to
Defense Supply Center Columbus, OH, and reestablish them as Defense Logistics Agency Inventory Control Point functions.
★ Relocate the procurement management and related support functions for depot level repairables to Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD, and designate them as Inventory Control Point functions, detachment of Defense Supply Center Columbus, OH, and
★ Relocate the remaining integrated materiel management, user, and related support functions to
Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD, along with Information Systems, Sensors, Electronic Warfare, and Electronics Research and Development & Acquisition (RDA).
★ Relocate the elements of the Program Executive Office for Enterprise Information Systems and consolidate into the Program Executive Office, Enterprise Information Systems at
Fort Belvoir, VA.
The Defense Department estimated the closure of Fort Monmouth would cause the loss of 9,737 jobs (5,272 direct and 4,465 indirect jobs) between 2006 and 2011, leading to a 0.8% increase in unemployment. However, DoD also calculated the closure and other changes would save it about $1 billion in the long run.
Redevelopment
On
April 28,
2006,
Governor of New Jersey Jon Corzine signed into law the Fort Monmouth Economic Revitalization Act, which established the
Fort Monmouth Revitalization Planning Authority, to plan and manage the redevelopment of Fort Monmouth once it closes.
The authority consists of four state appointees, the head of the state Commerce, Economic Growth and Tourism Commission, the mayors of Eatontown, Oceanport and Tinton Falls, and a representative of the Monmouth County
Board of Chosen Freeholders. The 10th, non-voting member was chosen by
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to represent Fort Monmouth. The legislation creating the commission, proposed by
State Senators
Joseph Kyrillos and
Ellen Karcher, received bipartisan support, but only after wrangling in the legislature over its composition and authority.
The authority holds meetings that rotate between the municipal buildings of the three towns whose mayors sit on the board. In July 2006, the authority met for the first time and selected its chairman,
Robert Lucky, a Corzine appointee, who was not supported by the three mayors. In September, the authority hired a real estate development company executive, Frank C. Cosentino, of
West Long Branch, to be its executive director.
As mandated by federal law, the authority must advertise for notices of interest from any state, county, municipal or private, non-profit agency which would provide homeless assistance to Monmouth County residents. Notices are due by
March 8,
2007.
In June 2007, an investigation by the ''
Asbury Park Press'' revealed that the projected cost of closing Fort Monmouth and moving its research functions to
Aberdeen, Maryland, had doubled from $780 million to $1.5 billion. Add to that the $3.3 billion loss to New Jersey’s economy coupled with the estimated $16 billion it will cost Maryland for needed infrastructure improvements to accommodate the largest job influx since World War II.
[1]
References
1. Brown, Keith and Bowman, Bill. "Closing Fort Monmouth: Costs double from 0 million to .5 billion", ''Asbury Park Press'', June 17, 2007. Accessed July 14, 2007.
External links
★
U.S. Army Communications-Electronics Life Cycle Management Command/ Fort Monmouth Historical Office website
★
Fort Monmouth website
★
Information BRAC
★
Battle for Fort Monmouth, a series of articles on the closing of Fort Monmouth by BRAC and the unsuccessful attempt to keep it open, published in the ''
Asbury Park Press'', accessed
October 15,
2006