In June of 1942 over 40,000 men joined the navy. Numbers like this made it a necessity for more training facilities and in March of 1942 the news that Lake Pend Oreille had been chosen was released. The Walter Butler Company of St. Paul, Minnesota was chosen to construct the station.
History of Sandpoint, Idaho
Home Real Estate Photo Tours Calendar Yellow Pages Wallpaper
The Idaho Club - Lake and Golf Retreat a Jack Nicklaus signature golf course
Farragut Naval Training Station in Bayview Idaho
Thousands of men and women trained at the United States Naval Training Station at Farragut, Idaho and each year many "old salts" return to renew friendships made long ago. Farragut is not the same as they knew it. Nearly all of the buildings are gone but as these men and women stand in what is now a state park they see what others cannot see. Through their memories they can see the Farragut of the war years and remember what it was like both good and bad.
Sandpoint, ID Recreation
Recreation in Sandpoint
Winter Activities
Summer Activities
Lake Pend Oreille
Lodging
What's going on today in Sandpoint Idaho
Today in Sandpoint
Real Estate
Classifieds
Events
Weather
Movies
Site Map
Entertainment and things to do in Sandpoint, Idaho
Area Entertainment
Restaurants
Theaters
Community Events
Kids
Community of Sandpoint
Sandpoint
Bonners Ferry
Clark Fork
Hope
LaClede
Ponderay
Priest River
Priest Lake
Sagle
 
Maps
Yellow Pages
Statistics
Economy
Government
Schools
History
Old Photos of Sandpoint
Library
Museum
General information on Sandpoint.com Sandpoint, Idaho's Official Web Site
General Info
Contact
Privacy
About Sandpoint.com
Advertise with Us
Site Map
Stats Maps Business Economy Government Schools  History
Farragut Naval Training Station

by Bob Gunter

The community Hall in Sandpoint, Idaho took on a national function in 1942. The YMCA leased the hall from the city for $1 a year to be used as a USO club for the sailors stationed at the Naval Training Station in Farragut, Idaho. With a population of about 42,000, Farragut was the largest town in Idaho, and its close proximity to Sandpoint impacted the city in many ways. The high wages offered, as high as a dollar an hour in some cases, drew people from Sandpoint to Farragut. The cute girls of Sandpoint drew many of the men of Farragut to Sandpoint.

The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7 1941 was the causal factor for the need for more training facilities in the United States. The great losses of the US fleet were known nation wide and men flocked to enlist in the navy.

USO Club in Sandpoint, Idaho
USO Club in Sandpoint, Idaho
Currently The Sandpoint Community Hall.

Click photo to enlarge

In June of 1942 over 40,000 men joined the navy. Numbers like this made it a necessity for more training facilities and in March of 1942 the news that Lake Pend Oreille had been chosen was released. The Walter Butler Company of St. Paul, Minnesota was chosen to construct the station.

In May of 1942 President Franklin D. Roosevelt named the new site in Idaho Farragut after the famous Union Admiral David G. Farragut. It was Admiral Farragut who said during the raid of Mobile Bay, "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead."

The training station was to have six training units designed for 5,000 men. After a unit was completed the training started while the next unit was under construction. The station also had a school area designed for 5,000 personnel. The hospital eventually had 2,000 beds dedicated to caring for the Farragut trainees and staff. A housing project for 300 Navy families was built; there were also five dormitories, officer's quarters, an auditorium, a recreational building, and two chapels on the base. Add to this the auxiliary buildings necessary to maintain a station of over 30,000 people and it is easy to see why Farragut was Idaho's largest town.

As each unit was completed it was named in honor of navy men who had been killed in action and who had received the Congressional Medal of Honor. They were, Captain Mervyn Bennion, Seaman 1st Class James Ward, Lt. Commander John C. Waldron, Rear Admiral Norman Scott, Chief Watertender Oscar Peterson, and Commander Howard Gilmore.

Thousands of men and women trained at the United States Naval Training Station at Farragut, Idaho and each year many "old salts" return to renew friendships made long ago. Farragut is not the same as they knew it. Nearly all of the buildings are gone but as these men and women stand in what is now a state park they see what others cannot see. Through their memories they can see the Farragut of the war years and remember what it was like both good and bad.

All photographs have been used with permission of the Bonner County Museum.

Farragut Naval Training Station, Bayview Idaho
:: History Articles ::

History main page | Old Sandpoint | Clark Fork Ferry | City Hall
Early Sandpoint "Hang Town" | Ferry Boat Accidents | Chinese in Hope
McFarland House | The Long Bridge | Remember the Indians | The Fish House
Teddy Roosevelt | Ice Man | Street Cars | Schweitzer Mountain | The Powerhouse
USO Club | Court House | Early Priest River | 1st Sandpoint Hospital
2nd Sandpoint Hospital | Bonner General Hospital History | Hope Hotel | First School
Glacial Lake | Above the Call of Duty| Along the Wild Horse Trail | Youth in the 30's
A Place of Remembering | Bonner County Poor Farm | Clark Fork Campus
Colburn, Idaho | Coming Home | Depression Days | Dover Church | Hope, Idaho
Early Sandpoint Remembered | Bonner County Ferries | The Campfield Ferry
Thama Ferry part1 | Thama Ferry part2 | Sandpoint had no Ferry | Fire Line
Here and There in Sandpoint 1 | Here and There in Sandpoint 2 | Indians
Kullyspell House | Library in the Early Years | Library Maturing | There she Comes
Logging in Bonner County | The Museum | Newspapers | The Sundance Fire
Northern Mercantile Company | Old P-51 Attacks Sandpoint | Pend Oreille Lodge
The Pioneer Citizens | Radio Stations | Sandpoint 1901-1902 | Sandpoint Tidbits
Schools of Glengary Peninsula | Smelting Companies | To Stop a Thief | Street Names
Technology |That's the Law| The Wagon Bridge |Train Technology| Old High School
The War Years | The War Years 2 | The War Years 3 | Timber Industry
Trestle from Sunnyside to trestle Creek | What's in a Name | The Whitaker House
Faragut Naval Training Station, Bayview Idaho
Sandpoint Contractors
The Panhandle State Bank Ad alone has been seen over 196,000 times and clicked on over 9,000 times since the start of the year!

Why isn't Your Ad Here?
Only $50 per month

Click here to inquire

 
 
 


316 N. Second Avenue, Suite A-1

(208)255-2244
(800)205-8771

 
 

11/20/2009 3:12:21 PM

Sandpoint.com
 

 

     
In May of 1942 President Franklin D. Roosevelt named the new site in Idaho Farragut after the famous Union Admiral David G. Farragut. It was Admiral Farragut who said during the raid of Mobile Bay, "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead."
Farragut Naval Training Station, Bayview Idaho