“There are many things man cannot
buy and one of them is time. It takes time to
organize and prepare. Time will only be found
in periods of peace. Modern war gives no time
for preparation. Its approach is that of the
avalanche and not of the glacier.
“We must remember that this
training is not a training for war alone. It
really is a training for life, a training for citizenship
in time of peace.
“We must remember that it is
better to be prepared for war and not have it, then
to have war and not to be prepared for it.”
Such sentiments quoted from General
Wood’s many speeches and writings might be continued
until they alone made a volume a book of
the Creed of the Patriot. For in his crusade
up and down our land for the last six years he has
developed an unsuspected ability for epigrammatic
phraseology, for stating in concise, homely language
the principle that no one in any successful operation
has failed to get ready. This was unsuspected
in him, because up to 1913 he had had little to say
outside of his official reports. His motto of
doing the thing without talking about it had been
followed to the letter by himself.
When he finally arrived at a position
which was important and powerful enough to give him
an opportunity for putting his beliefs into effect,
when he furthermore arrived at a point where there
was not the immediate necessity for feeding a starving
people, or fighting a hostile military force, or reorganizing
a tumbled-down state, or doing any of the things demanding
immediate action with which he had been employed during
most of his life then with characteristic
energy he did begin. Time could not be bought
by him any more than it could be by others and his
work of preparedness had to await a period of peace
when the time was at hand. This period having
arrived in 1912 and 1918 he found that in order to
produce any impression, to get action upon this plan,
he must not only have a high and powerful position
but he must awaken the public to its importance
before he could expect legislative or departmental
action. Hence the volume of the Creed of the
Patriot.
With his accustomed energy therefore
he started upon a campaign of writing, speaking and
promoting in all ways open to him to bring this new
plan before the people of this country and in doing
so he developed the hitherto unsuspected qualities
of a speaker of the highest, because the simplest
and most homely order.
To him there was nothing new in the
plan of preparedness for the nation. He might
have said to himself in 1913: “I have found
that in order to be a doctor a young man must study
so many years; in order to fight Apache Indians successfully
a man must train for a physical condition that permits
him to walk and ride and live harder than his already
trained opponents, that he must train soldiers for
that particular job, must train and care for horses
to cover that particular country. I have found
by sad experience that to have a regiment of Rough
Riders in proper condition to fight Spaniards in Cuba
the men must be taught by long training to understand
military principles, subordination to military
rule of procedure, the use of guns and animals and
the laws and tactics of military action in the field;
that these men must be taught to take care of themselves
in the open, that ammunition and equipment must be
at hand and in use. I have found that in order
to produce order in a community where there is no
order, health in a land where there is only sickness,
happiness amongst a people where there is only misery
and fear and worry in order to do all this
laws must be made and respected, people must learn
that they owe something to their state and that they
are responsible for honest care, administration and
thoughtfulness of those who look to them as they look
to their state. I have found that where nothing
but force will do the trick, force must be prepared
and ready in advance. I have seen innocent persons
go under because they were not ready to offset depredations.
I have seen nations injured and destroyed because
they were not ready to resist force, whether that
force were used in a just or an unjust cause.
And now I have arrived at the place where I can prove
this to a nation instead of to a military platoon,
or a military staff, or a few Cuban or Philippine
officials.”
He might have said all this to himself doubtless
has done so many, many times with much more to the
same effect but the outcome is a witness
of the fact that he has from a long and active life
as fighter, soldier, organizer, administrator, diplomat
and statesman in the West, the South, in Europe, in
Asia, in Cuba, in the Philippines, in South America,
in Washington in most parts of the earth learned
again and again that nothing can be really done on
the spur of the moment, that everybody must prepare
from school days to death. And in 1913 he had
his first real opportunity to preach this nationally
to all the people of his own native land.
That within a year of that time prepared
Germany should have upset the world and found the
British Empire, the French Republic and the Italian
Kingdom unprepared to say nothing of the
United States may have been one of the
accidents strokes of fortune that
some people say have made General Wood. But it
would seem that the only thing this Great War did
in this connection was to prove by a terrific
example that Wood and those with him were right and
that those who were against him were wrong.
If the war had not come, it would
have taken longer to awaken this country to the facts
and it would have delayed perhaps the growth of General
Wood’s name as that of a national and international
character of highest importance. But it would
not have changed the truth of his Creed or
rather the creed of which he has become the great
protagonist. Nor does the fact that the war did
come when it did give any ground for making Wood one
of the greatest citizens of our country to-day because
he preaches preparedness. General Wood stands
at the forefront of the leaders in America at this
time because of his own personal make-up and character
and because of the amazing variety and extent of his
services to his country which are written upon every
page of its history during the last thirty years.
It is the variety of things done which puts him in
his present position, just as it is the variety of
high qualities that has made the great men of all times
great. King David was not only the greatest
general of his time. He was one of the greatest
administrators of all time and perhaps the greatest
poet that ever lived. Washington was not only
a fighter of the highest order. He was one of
the great generals of history; and a statesman and
ruler of a higher order still.
It might very aptly be said, therefore,
that General Wood’s campaign for national preparedness
was only the accomplishment of a task for which he
had all his life been preparing himself.
Upon his return trip from the Philippines
in 1908 he had come by the way of Europe studying
always military systems. There was a short stop
in Ceylon, in Singapore, in Egypt, in Malta and Gibraltar
and a summer spent in Switzerland, ostensibly for
health recuperation after the tropical life in Moroland
and Manila, At the same time this gave opportunity
for a closer study of the Swiss system which with an
admixture of the Australian system furnished the basis
for the training camps afterwards inaugurated by him
here.
At the same time he had the opportunity
by invitation of seeing the German and French
armies mobilized at the time of the Bosnia-Herzegovina
episode when all Europe was on the verge of war.
The German army of maneuver was at Saarbruecken ready.
Practically the whole of the French army of maneuver
was on the Loire ready. He saw one
immediately after the other less than two
days apart. Mr. White, then American Ambassador
to France, asked him what he thought of the French
army and his answer was that despite the fame of the
German military machine France in the next war would
surprise the world by the fitting effectiveness of
her forces. He based this conclusion on the relation
of officers and men and the discipline founded on respect
and confidence rather than fear of officers.
Then followed the centenary mission
to the Argentine and a couple of years as Chief of
Staff of the American army before he could effectively
begin his campaign.
The first gun was a letter sent out
by Wood under permission of the Secretary of War which
proposed to many presidents of colleges and universities
in the United States the establishment of several
experimental military training camps for students.
These camps were to be placed one on the historic
field of Gettysburg and the other at the Presidio
of Monterey, California. The former opened on
July 7th and closed on August 15th, and the latter
extended from July 1st to August 8th. In all
222 students took this training, 159 at Gettysburg
and 68 in Monterey.
It was the first trial, and it was
a very small and insignificant response. Indeed
it gives a good idea of the importance in which military
preparedness was held in this country at that moment
100,000,000 inhabitants; 222 volunteers.
Those were the days when the people
of this land and many others were hard at work upon
commercial pursuits and when for amusement the world
and his wife danced tango to ragtime music. So-called
alarmists cried “Look out for war!” Major
Du Maurier of the British army wrote a play called
“An Englishman’s Home,” which startled
and puzzled Englishmen for a while, but could not
carry an audience for one week in this country.
Nobody took any interest in what his neighbor was doing,
to say nothing of what Germany or any other countries
were planning.
Yet Wood was not discouraged.
He was started on a long campaign and he knew he had
to prepare to prepare. Furthermore the men in
the universities who could see ahead came forward
in his support and in support of the idea. Four
years later President Drinker of Lehigh University
wrote of the amazing success of the movement:
“We owe it largely to Major-General Wood’s
farsightedness as a man of affairs and to his great
qualities as a soldier and patriot, that our country
was awakened to the need of preparedness, and this
beginning of military training in our youth was due
wholly to his initiative.”
Small as the beginning was it was
a plant with the germ of strength in it, since at
this first camp in Gettysburg the members formed then
in 1913 the Society of the National Reserve Corps
of the United States. Wood at once cooperated
with this slender offshoot and gave it all the support
in his power. He sent letters as Chief of Staff
of the Regular Army to college presidents at the same
time that the president of the new Corps did so both
suggesting an advisory committee to assist the
government in the encouragement and practical advancement
of the training camp idea. This committee was
formed and Presidents Hibben of Princeton and Drinker
of Lehigh were elected president and secretary.
The committee with these officers in charge gave assistance
to Wood in his organizing work so that out of the small
beginnings in the two camps an enormous organization
arose which trained tens of thousands of young men
to be officers and made the immense expansion of the
little American army to 4,000,000 soldiers possible.
Pushing always quietly but unremittingly
ahead Wood helped these officers to increase the camps
from two to four in the summer of 1914 in
Vermont, Michigan, North Carolina and California with
a total attendance of 667 students.
Then came the Great War and the beginning
of the work on a large scale. From college students,
who reported on the interest and pleasure which they
got out of the summer camp, the life in the open and
the military instruction afforded by regular army men,
the movement extended to business men, lawyers, preachers
and so on. Wood opened the Plattsburg camp
on Lake Champlain to the latter and started the first
business man’s camp. Each man paid his own
railway fares, his own living expenses while in camp
and bought his uniform and equipment, except arms,
with his own money.
That year (1915) 3,406 men attended
the five camps. In 1916 six camps were opened
and 16,139 men attended them. At the close of
the first Plattsburg camp the business men formed
an organization for furthering and extending this
training just as the college men had done at Gettysburg
two years before. And in 1916 these two organizations
consolidated and organized the present Military Training
Camps Association of the United States.
All through this period, taking advantage
of the European war, drawing lessons from the tragic
happenings just across the Atlantic, Wood went about
the country, as little “Bobs” of Kandahar
had previously done in England, speaking in halls,
in camps, in churches, at clubs, at festivals, on
special and unspecial occasions of all kinds.
He drove home the subject which he knew so well and
others knew hardly at all. He met all comers
of every grade in arguments and debates those
who were constitutional objectors, pacifists, people
who thought arbitration much more effective, people
too proud to fight or too busy to get ready all
comers of all kinds. And the Great War day by
day helped him. He spent his summers going from
one camp to another, traveling all over the United
States.
At six in the morning he would appear
in one of them ready for inspection, and any day anywhere
where there was a camp one might see him in the early
morning sunshine, or the early morning rain striding
up one company street and down another followed by
new and old officers, peering into this dog tent and
that kitchen, examining this man’s rifle and
that man’s kit, praising, criticizing and jamming
enthusiasm in two hours into a group of a thousand
men in a manner they knew not how, nor clearly understood.
It was just what he had done in Cuba, just what he
had done in the Philippines where he had organized
drilling, athletic and condition-of-equipment competitions
in each company, each regiment, each brigade, each
division one pitted against another, all
at it hot and heavy; not because Wood came along
and looked them over, but because when he did look
them over he could spot any weakness in any part of
the work with unerring certainty not alone
because he could spot any weakness, but because he
knew a good point when he saw it and gave credit where
credit was due.
It is perhaps not out of place here
to look back in the light of events which occurred
afterwards and are now a part of history and secure
an estimate of what this work did for this country
in awakening the people to a sense of the critical
situation, to prepare an army which should do its
part in the world war, to bring that army into line
in France at what seems to have been a critical moment
and to help bring the war itself to a successful conclusion
in conjunction with the Allied armies which had held
on so long against such terrific odds.
The purpose of the camps and what
they will lead to in time of peace and did lead to
in time of war is perhaps best shown in one of General
Wood’s statements: “The ultimate object
sought is not in any way one of military aggrandizement,
but to provide in some degree a means of meeting
a vital need confronting us as a peaceful and unmilitary
people, in order to preserve the desired peace and
prosperity through the only safe precaution, viz.:
more thorough preparation and equipment to resist
any effort to break the peace.”
That at a time when there was no European War in sight.
Now consider General Pershing’s
report of No, 1918 after the close
of the war. The first American air force using
American aeroplanes went into action in France, that
is to say in the war, in August, 1918 16
months after the declaration of war by the United
States and four years after the beginning of the war
itself. During the entire time that the United
States was in the war, a little over 19 months, not
one single American field gun was fired at the enemy
and only 109 had been received in Europe at all.
No American tank was ever used against the enemy in
the whole war. Yet a month or six weeks after
the declaration of war troops began to go to Europe
and at its close in November, 1918, the army
consisted of 3,700,000 men, of whom more than 203,000
were newly made officers. Half of this force at
least got over to the other side of the Atlantic and
at least half of them took part in the fighting at
one time or another of the 19 months.
One would have said at the outset
that a commercial nation like the United States, filled
with factories, mechanics and mechanically inclined
brains, could and would have made guns and aeroplanes
and uniforms far quicker than it made soldiers and
officers. Yet such was not the case.
A French officer here in America at
that time studying American mobilization said:
“I knew you recruited over 3,500,000
men in 19 months. That is very good, but not
so difficult. But I am told also that although
you had no officers reserve to start with you somehow
found 200,000 new officers, most of them competent.
That is what is astonishing and what was impossible.
Tell me how that was done.”
There is only the one answer, that
the officers’ training camps started in 1918
by Leonard Wood and fostered by him and the people
of this nation who then and later agreed with
him made the impossible possible and made the new,
raw army effective and in time. It was what came
to be known as the “Plattsburg Idea;” which,
getting really going first in May 16, 1917, as a regular
part of the United States mobilization, did its work
before arms and ammunition were ready, before uniforms
could be had, before camps had been even laid out
and before the first draft had been taken. At
that time 40,000 selected men were in training for
officers’ positions in sixteen camps. That
is to say, in 40 days 150,000 applications had been
received, 100,000 men examined and 40,000 passed as
fit and ready for training.
It was the work in 1913, 1914, 1915
and 1916. It was the Plattsburg idea adapted
to war conditions. Without it the situation regarding
men might easily have been the same as the situation
regarding guns, aeroplanes and uniforms.
Plattsburg, being in New York State,
naturally became the type of camp, since in 1914 Wood,
having been relieved of his position as Chief of Staff,
was detailed to command the Department of the East
with his headquarters on Governor’s Island
in New York Harbor. He no sooner took up this
new work than the Department of the East, where fifty-six
per cent, of the National Guard of the whole country
was included, became a seething office of energy and
work. In so far as the training camp idea went
this energy was centered in Plattsburg.
At the same time General Wood inaugurated
the Massachusetts National Guard Maneuvers the
first of their kind held in this country and
added a water attack on Boston. He also assisted
Governor Whitman in putting through the New York State
Legislature the bills creating the State Military
Training Commission, under whose management all boys
between the ages of sixteen and eighteen undergo a
simple but effective training in the rudiments of
military tactics and receive the athletic training
of a short camp life each year all involving
the inculcation of the principles of discipline, of
order and of self care.
Thus the history of the way in which
the Government of the United States, when war was
eventually declared, secured its officers is told.
One might go into detail, but the main facts
are not altered by any amount of detail. They
stand out clearly the awakening of our
land in time by the energy and patriotic spirit of
one man, supplemented by the untold amount of work
accomplished at his suggestion by thousands of patriotic
American citizens.
And in the midst of this work before
war was declared General Wood, as a part of his plan
of preparedness, asked some ten or twelve men to come
to Plattsburg at different times to speak to the student
officers. Among these men he included the two
living ex-presidents of the United States Mr.
Taft and Colonel Roosevelt. He first submitted
the list of speakers to the War Department so that
the Department might eliminate any one of them who
for any reason should appear to be undesirable.
After two weeks, having had no reply,
he sent out the invitations and from time to time
these speakers came and addressed the members of the
different camps.
Roosevelt on his arrival at Plattsburg
handed to Wood the speech he proposed to deliver;
and in view of the known critical attitude which
the former took towards the administration Wood asked
two other army officers to go over the proposed speech
with him and help him to eliminate anything which
might be questioned upon such an occasion. The
address was delivered at about five o’clock in
the afternoon at the camp and when it was finished
Roosevelt was heartily congratulated personally by
many men of both political parties, among them two
distinguished Democrats John Mitchel, Mayor
of New York, and Dudley Field Malone, Collector of
the Port of New York.
After dinner Roosevelt left in the
evening to go into the city of Plattsburg, a mile
or two away from the camp, to take the midnight train
for New York. As he stood on the platform of the
railway station some time after eleven in the evening
he was interviewed by the newspaper reporters.
No military person was present. What he said was
given out on territory not under military jurisdiction
and it had nothing to do with the Plattsburg speech.
Roosevelt spoke to the newspaper men in his usual
forcible fashion:
“In the course of his speech
he remarked that for thirteen months the United
States had played an ignoble part among the nations,
had tamely submitted to seeing the weak, whom we had
covenanted to protect, wronged; had seen our men,
women and children murdered on the high seas ‘without
action on our part,’ and had used elocution as
a substitute for action. ’Reliance upon
high sounding words unbacked by deeds,’ said
he, ’is proof of a mind that dwells only in the
realm of shadow and of sham.’ Under the
Hague Convention it was our duty to prevent, and,
if not to prevent, then to undo, the hideous wrong
that was done in Belgium, but we had shirked this
duty. He denounced hyphenated Americans, professional
pacifists and those who would substitute arbitration
treaties for an army, or the platitudes of peace congresses
for military preparedness.”
The next day Wood received a telegraphic
reprimand from the Government in Washington.
“In this telegram of disapproval. Secretary
Garrison said it was difficult to conceive of anything
which could have a more detrimental effect than such
an incident. The camp, held under the Government
auspices, was conveying its own impressive lesson in
its practical and successful operation and results.
’No opportunity should have been furnished to
any one to present to the men any matter except that
which was essential to the necessary training they
were to receive. Anything else could only have
the effect of distracting attention from the real
nature of the experiment, diverting consideration
to issues which excite controversy, antagonism and
ill-feeling, and thereby impairing, if not destroying,
what otherwise would have been so effective.’
General Wood replied, as follows: ’Your
telegram received, and the policy laid down will be
rigidly adhered to.’”