Friday, May 15, 2015

May 12th Camp Murphy marker

Turns out that Jonathon Dickinson State park was once a bustling Military Army Signal Corps camp, with several thousand men and over a thousand buildings!  The camp was abandoned in 1946, and the land was turned over to the State of Florida. Neat story!



The inscription:


Inscription. In 1942 the federal government opened Camp Murphy. It was the home of the Southern Signal Corps School during World War II and served as a U.S. Army base for instruction in radar operation in the early course of the war. The post was named in honor of Lieutenant Colonel William Herbert Murphy, a pioneer in the development of radio beams and equipment for military aircraft. Camp Murphy consisted of 11,364 acres and accommodated 854 officers and 5,752 enlisted men. The camp had close to 1000 buildings that included a bank, movie theater, church, and bowling alley. Camp Murphy was officially decommissioned in 1944 and used for migrant housing during the fall and winter of 1945. Buildings not already dismantled after the camp's deactivation were sold and carted away beginning in 1946. On June 9, 1947, the property was transferred from the U.S. Government to the State of Florida for a State Park. In 1950 Jonathan Dickinson State Park opened to the public.

Turns out the marker had been moved from its original location, and an informational kiosk was added, which I was able to publish to the data base.  
Yay me!

Old location from Google Earth 

New location 

New kiosk  

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