Colonel Jorg Stachel

21 July 1986 - 31 December 1992

During his tenure, the Post underwent a renaissance period in personnel, training and facility improvements.  World War II buildings were remodeled, new roads and bridges built, new troop and support facilities were erected and professional Post Management Systems were installed.

Post Chapel, WW11 - PW Chapel and the Veterans' Memorial were energized and dedicated during his command.

Colonel Jog Stachel (retired) now serves as 1st Vice President of the Camp Atterbury Veterans' Memorial Association, Inc.,  (CAVMA).  He was re-elected to that position for another 3-year term, in 12/2002.

Atterbury Museum Part of Dream
Planing for the new museum
(click on image for large view)


The Republic, Columbus, Ind., Thursday, February 27, 1997
by Harry McCawley

It's been a lot of years since members of the 83rd Infantry Division trooped through the streets of Camp Atterbury.

For some who will return there the morning of August 21, it will have been an absence of more than a half century.

The old Army base north of Columbus will look a lot different than it did when it was a Mud City back in the early 1940s, but if people like Jorg Stachel and Ames and Helen Miller have their way, there will always be reminders of the base when it was home to thousands of young men preparing for war.

Ames and Helen will be the official hosts for the visit by the old soldiers on August 21.  The Columbus residents and other volunteers will provide guided tours of the deactivated Army base when a group of the veterans leaves the national division reunion which will be held August 20-23 at the Adams Mark Hotel in Indianapolis.

It'll be the first time the 83rd has selected Indiana as a reunion site for several years, although an important chunk of the division's history in World War II originated at Camp Atterbury.  When the base was opened in 1942, it was the 83rd Division that provided he christening.

Ames Miller had been part of the permanent cadre that welcomed the new recruits o the basic training facility.  After several months of training young soldiers, Ames shipped out with one of the the units as part of the D-Day invasion.  He was wounded in France and returned to the United States where he decided to settle near the base where he had helped train so many.

Today, he and Helen still are part of Camp Atterbury, and those ties involve much more that serving as tour guides for a division reunion.

In fact, Camp Atterbury seems to have a strange hold over a lot of people.

It's been several years since Jorg Stachel was base commander, but he's still an active player in the development of the old base as a tourist attraction.

Stachel, who retired from active duty several years ago, is coordinating a drive to establish a museum on camp property to highlight the history of the base.

Earlier this week, he met with officials of the Columbus-based Custer Foundation which donated $10,000 to the establishment of an Atterbury museum.

"We look upon this as seed money," said Dick Willmore of Columbus, president of the local foundation established in the name of Clarence and Inez Custer.  "We hope that other foundations and groups will follow our lead in helping make this a reality."

Stachel estimates that the vision of an indoor museum, tracing the development of the base from Indiana farmland through its various lives as a government installation, will require an investment of $90,000.  The Custer gift and other contributions have left a goal of $40,000 still to be realized.

"We've already got a building selected for the facility," he said. "It's one of the old World War II wooden buildings that served as a warehouse.  We'll divide it into sections, which will include administrative offices, a visitor's center and a large display space for the various stages of the camp's development.

There'll even be a display dealing with the land and people as they were before the camp was developed.  In fact, many of the families who were displaced as a result of the base construction are actively involved in this project.

So are the present users of the property.  Stachel has maintained the "can-do" reputation by forging links with military units, Job Corps personnel, officials with the Indiana Department of Correction and other volunteers in planning the actual construction of the facility.

The museum is actually the third stage in a four-stage project which Stachel and other interested parties launched in the late 1980s.

The first step was in the restoration of the Chapel in the Meadows - the small church which was built by Italian prisoners of war when they were detained here during World War II.

Stage 2 was the construction of the Camp Atterbury Memorial to the south of Hospital Road near the entrance to the military reservation.  The memorial was dedicated several years ago to the various units which were quartered at the camp over the years and contains several major pieces of military armament.

While Stachel and his committee are looking to 1998 as a completion target for the museum, they also are laying the groundwork for the fourth and final stage in the process - a living history World War II barracks which hopefully will be completed in time for the 21st century.

"We have set aside a couple of the old barracks buildings for this project," Stachel said.  "We hope to restore them to just how they would have looked as far back as World War II."

The Project certainly will be evocative for anyone who ever lived in one of these wooden cream-colored barracks from World War II into the Vietnam conflict.

People who have had the experience will find themselves transported back in time through the open shower facilities, the double-decker cots, the foot lockers and the three-sided coal bin outside the building.

While all that is a pretty impressive resume-agenda combination, Stachel is especially delighted with a singular achievement.

"We managed to finally get Camp Atterbury put on the Indiana Tourism map," he said.

Perhaps some from the old brown boot army might shudder at the transformation of a part of their military upbringing into a tourist attraction, but it is a natural because of the market for this type of display.

A lot of men and women have lived the military experience that is being evoked in the restoration process and, when finally told about it, will want to relive it.

That's why Jorg Stachel wants to make his living history barracks as realistic as possible.

"We even plan to have butt cans nailed to the center posts," the Army veteran laughed.  He paused then and added, "I suppose though, we'll probably have to put No Smoking signs above them."

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