Historical Marker

Michigan In World War I

2501 26th Street · Augusta · Calhoun

Michigan marker

Inscription

Michigan furnished more than 168,000 men and women to the armed services of the United States during the “Great War,” from 1917 to 1919. Some 5,000 died in service, and 15,000 were wounded. Members of the Michigan National Guard saw the most extensive service as part of the 32nd "Red Arrow" Division. At the end of the war, Michiganders were part of the American North Russia Expeditionary Force, the “Polar Bears,” sent to support the White Russians. Michigan raw materials and manufacturing were key to the war effort. Michiganders bought Liberty Bonds and Stamps to finance the war and increased food production. They endured shortages of fuel and food. Women used the war’s emphasis on democracy to gain the right to vote in Michigan in 1918.

[Back]: On April 6, 1917, the United States declared war on Germany. The federal government soon issued a call for sites for cantonments, training centers for recruits. The Battle Creek Chamber of Commerce assembled land here that had good railroad connections. It was selected for the Wisconsin/Michigan region. Construction began on July 1, 1917, and the site was officially named after General George A. Custer on July 18, 1917. The first inductees arrived that September. Nearly 100,000 troops mobilized and trained here during the war, including the African American 536th Engineer Services Battalion. After some 92,000 troops demobilized here, the camp was used for Citizens’ Military Training Camps and was a district headquarters for the Civilian Conservation Corps. It was reactivated in 1940 as a permanent Army training installation, becoming Fort Custer.

Location

Address2501 26th Street
CityAugusta
CountyCalhoun

Sources


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