| |

An aerial view of Camp Tyson in 1942
shows the camp’s some-400 buildings arranged neatly over
1600 acres. Included in the construction of the camp were
ten miles of asphalt road, five miles of railroad, a post
office, hospital, guest house, service club, two chapels,
library and theatre at a cost of about $11,708,640.
|
"The homefront is what it really amounts to," declares
Elliot "Eddie" Moody of Paris, regarding his views of how
America could have been defended against the forces of
terrorism that struck on September 11th. He continues with
a look of consternation on his face, "and this whole
country is the homefront."
The patriotic gentleman is one of a multitude of military
and civilian veterans of the World War II era who recall
with sadness that the United States is not experiencing
her first invasion since becoming a world power, and that
fear of further invasion - rather than being a new
experience - was all-too-real in the years following
Japan's sneak attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.
Upon
the wall of Moody's den stands out a plaque on which the
words of Benjamin Franklin proclaim a conviction that has
long been a guiding light in America, and one that
continues to provide hope for the future:
"I have lived, Sir, a long time and the longer I live the
more convincing proofs I see of this truth - that God
governs the affairs of men - and if a sparrow cannot fall
to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an
empire can rise without his aid? We have been assured,
Sir, in the sacred writings that "except the Lord build
the house, they labor in vain that build it." I firmly
believe this."
"That's my philosophy for this here," says Moody
sincerely, "Me and you are responsible - we're just as
important as Bush or any congressman - we've got to help
them do it - the power lies in the people."
As the nation pulls together and comes to terms with the
insecurity wrought by, first, the demonic assault upon the
World Trade Center and Pentagon, and, now, with the
caution afforded the opening of a simple piece of mail as
more and more reports of anthrax-tainted letters are
reported, more serious questions come to mind: At what
cost, peace. At what price, freedom.
Moody believes an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of
cure, feeling that, had Camp Tyson remained viable during
World War II - had barrage balloons been in place above
New York to thwart the evil-doers of September 11 - the
World Trade Center may have been untouched by the strong
attack that brought the building crumbling to her knees,
in her lap, unprotected, the thousands who fell with her.
Moody is not alone in his plea to revive the balloons that
were deemed obsolete with the invention of the Norden bomb
sight, a device that allowed high altitude bombers to
avoid the balloons that were strung through the skies on
steel cables to deter low-flying planes from their deadly
missions.
For years, United States Air Force Major Franklin J.
Hillson has warned, "If the West is to improve its
defenses against low-level air attack, it needs another
element of the air defense team--something that can
enhance current antiaircraft weapons while providing an
extra measure of protection to crucial areas. That
something is the barrage balloon."
His views were echoed recently by Retired United States
Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Sam Dehné who declares,
"Barrage Balloons should be placed over and around the
critical 'targets'. Terrorists would thus know they could
not successfully attack any of these targets without
getting tangled up in the huge cables hanging from the
beautiful balloons. (Paint them red, white, and blue!)
Barrage balloons should also be placed (prominently)
around nuclear power plants, power supply systems, and
other critical installations. The deterrent aspect of this
very simple technique would be all that was needed!"
The
barrage balloon and Camp Tyson, where the balloons were
made and where the men who flew them were trained, are
intimate ingredients in the history of Henry County and
surrounding area. Eddie Moody was there to see it all.
Moody learned at the age of 17 that he was the descendant
of a traitor. His mother, Eula, told the story to her
three sons on the eve that two of them, Fred W. and D.L.,
would leave to join the Navy. Her great grandfather,
George Clymer, had abandoned England's cause in the new
world to become one of the signers of the Declaration of
Independence.
"It was peacetime when they went in," Eddie says of his
brothers' decisions to join the Navy. "They did it for the
idea that they couldn't get a job and the Navy needed
them; they didn't know President Roosevelt was building up
for an attack on the country. He stated there would never
be a war unless attacked by another country as long as he
was president."
Moody's father, Fred Richardson Moody, was descended from
I.N. Moody, who fought with the Confederacy during the
Civil War, volunteering from the Henry County Courthouse.
Eddie, himself, was born April 17, 1922 in Henry County,
his parents' fourth child. World War I had ended four
years before his birth, but he grew up hearing the stories
told by soldiers who had returned.
He went to Robert E. Lee School in Paris through the 6th
grade, a building that is currently being restored to
commemorate one of the oldest schools in the county. In
the seventh grade he attended the Atkins-Porter School.
| The Camp was named for
Brigadier General Lawrence David Tyson, Tennessean
and World War I hero who in his youth graduated with
honors from the United States Military Academy,
helped capture Geronimo and his followers in
Arizona, became professor of military tactics at the
University of Tennessee, served as a Colonel during
the Spanish-American War, was appointed a Brigadier
General (inspector general) in the Tennessee
National Guard, was elected to the Tennessee House
of Representatives and served as Speaker of the
House 1903-1905, who led the 59th Infantry Brigade,
30th Division and its 8000 for Tennessee and the
Carolinas to the breaking of the Hindenburg Line
during World War I, discovering at the height of the
battle that his son, a Navy aviator, had been killed
in battle over the North Sea. It was General Tyson’s
fervent hope and prayer that the United States would
never again be faced with battle as it was between
1917-18. Camp Tyson was named in his honor in hopes
that the work performed there might share in
bringing the "civilization and peace of the world"
that Tyson so yearned. |
Times were hard for all, and President Roosevelt was hard
at work developing programs to help. Moody was called into
the office by Superintendent W.O. Inman, who encouraged
him to join the National Youth Administration, a program
that gave youths work training and part-time employment
while also providing student aid.
"We was very poor, we hardly had food on the table, beans
and taters most of the time," confessed Moody. "They paid
my mother and daddy $4.00 per month - it looked like $4000
now. So I went to work for President Roosevelt's program."
It was a time of great national pride: "We thought
President Roosevelt was right next to God - right under
God," Eddie recalls, "He promised a chicken in everybody's
pot and he carried it out pretty good.
On August 15, 1941, it was learned that Routon, Tennessee,
located about 6 miles south of Paris, would be the new
location for the Barrage Balloon Training Center, a new
branch of defensive warfare for the purpose of training
personnel in the technique and use of the barrage balloon
as a weapon of modern warfare, an assignment commissioned
by the Secretary of War on April 14, 1941. The location of
the camp was chosen because it was located away from
regular air lanes so as not to endanger peacetime
aviation. It was a time of relative peace in the United
States, with the country still not committed in the
struggle that became the Second World War.
It was hoped the barrage balloons would deter invasion by
low-flying aircraft. The barrage balloon, filled with
lighter-than-air gas, was attached to a steel cable that
could be raised or lowered using a winch. In forcing enemy
planes to higher altitudes, surprise invasions became less
likely and bombing accuracy was hampered as well. The
balloons restricted the airspace available to rogue
aircraft, channeling their flights into zones protected by
ground-based artillery. The cables themselves presented a
hazard to pilots, capable of "shearing off a passing
planes wing and propellers." Moody says a charge was
placed beneath the balloon that would blow when the wing
of the plane slid to the top of the cable, with the
release of the helium setting the plane on fire.
Great Britain had used similar balloons during the last
years of World War I and in World War II, and it is said
that "thousands of balloons dotted the British skies.
The Barrage Balloon Training Center remained at Camp
Davis, NC until a new camp could be established at what
became known as Camp Tyson. Much was accomplished in the
North Carolina camp while waiting orders for the new camp
to be completed, but the balloons were deployed too late
to prevent the disaster at Pearl Harbor on December 7,
1941, a day of great consternation for the Moody family
when Eddie's two brothers, both stationed at Pearl Harbor,
were missing in action for about eight days while the
brothers helped pick up survivors.
As Camp Tyson took shape, "everyone who could drive a nail
became a carpenter," says Moody. According to Spinks Clay
Company literature (the company that bought Camp Tyson's
lands when the camp was closed) almost 8,000 persons were
employed in building the camp at the height of its
construction.
Moody drove a gravel truck at the camp, hauling four loads
a day to help build roads. When the brakes on the truck
failed, mechanics advised it would be days before they
could be repaired. He was told to keep driving and haul
two loads per day without brakes.
The rationale was obvious: "Do you know that a war is
going on?" he was asked.
"Yes sir," he replied, and kept driving. "I never will
forget that after they got the brakes fixed I didn't even
want to use them," he jokes.
He began playing pool on Saturdays, a practice that soon
evolved into helping out at the poolroom while playing for
free. Along about this time a contingency of 16 soldiers
arrived at the camp, setting up the medics station and
readying the camp for others to arrive. Eddie met some of
the men at the poolroom where they became friends. One of
the 16 was Cedrick Knott, who met a girl named Mildred in
Paris, married her and stayed in Henry County to later
found Knott's Bakery.
The BBTC began its move to the new camp on January 15,
1942. Sources put the actual size of the camp at around
1600 acres measuring approximately 1.5 miles wide, north
and south, and 2.5 miles long, east and west. The post
held 400 buildings, ten miles of asphalt road, five miles
of railroad, a post office, hospital, guest house, service
club, two chapels, a library and theatre and cost
approximately $11,708,640 to build.
On Friday, February 13, 1942, Company B of the 302nd
Battalion sent aloft the first balloon at Camp Tyson.
United States Army Brigadier General John B. Maynard,
arrived at Camp Tyson on February 16, 1942 and assumed
command of the installation.
In the meantime, overseas a horrifying war was taking
place while at home there was talk of another invasion,
this time on the mainland.
"The homefront was not a bed of roses. We were sitting
there sweating it out if we were going to be attacked or
invaded," recalls Moody, "We were anticipating German
attack from the east and Japanese invasion from the west
coast."
Stateside, balloons came into use in places like New York,
San Diego, Norfolk, Virginia and Pensacola, Florida,
according to Moody. Ships were outfitted with the balloons
to keep German aircraft from sweeping in low to strafe the
ships and "several US Army balloon units saw combat in
North Africa, providing effective protection against
low-level attack on captured ports."
Eddie married Betty Carr of Murray, Kentucky,a relative of
one of Murray State University's founders, on March 29,
1942. There was a sense of urgency to marriage during the
war that caused Eddie and Betty and other young couples to
escape the waiting laws of Tennessee and travel to
Mississippi or Caruthersville, Missouri where blood tests
were not required. "We left here one Sunday morning and
went out there and got married," he grins. "We didn't want
to wait. That was 59 years ago."
He recalled servicemen going to church, meeting girls and
taking them on dates then marrying them the following
week. "They married them girls, then people that had
houses - some had five or six soldiers wives in them, one
to a room - that's where they stayed."
Eddie quit the poolroom, where he had begun working
fulltime, and the couple headed for Detroit, Michigan
where work was plentiful. There, he took a job in a
defense plant, Aluminum Company of America, where he was
trained as a core maker. The plant's mission was building
engines for B29s and other aircraft.
A back injury took him out of work and sent him home to
Paris, where he found Camp Tyson operating at full
throttle, "training men to put balloons up by the hundreds
and sending men all over the country to prepare for an
invasion that was expected to be like Pearl Harbor or
worse."
He was working once more at Camp Tyson as a plaster helper
when he received his draft notice to be examined for
service. Saying nothing about his injury, he volunteered
for the U.S. Navy, making first seaman before becoming
re-injured, a condition that ended his Naval career.
Back at Camp Tyson once more, his prior service status
landed him a position as a camp guard. Moody and other
World War I and II veterans were sworn into the Army in a
limited service capacity as auxiliary military policemen.
The limited service aspect of their service meant they
could not be sent over 72 miles from the camp.
Moody was honored when he was assigned the duty of
chauffeur to Camp Commander, General John Maynard.
"'Course I was young and all, I never realized what a big
thing it was, I don't believe there's any higher job you
can do than haul a general," he says now.
"Captain Wall, the Provost Marshall at the post said,
'When you take that general out and carry him to town I
want him brought back in as good a condition as he left
here. Should anybody come at him, halt them three times
and kill them if they don't stop. If you think somebody is
coming right at him don't even halt them. If they throw a
grenade and you can't throw it away, cover it. We have
other people like you but we only have one general."
Concerning the man for whom Moody was willing to lay down
his life, he says, "I have to say he was one of the finest
men I have ever met before; he was a real general and he
was a real man."
Movie stars like Dorothy Lamore and Fred MacMurray visited
Camp Tyson to entertain the soldiers while the USO Club in
Paris and beer joints in McKenzie as well stayed busy
entertaining soldiers.
When the barrage balloons became obsolete, Camp Tyson
became a staging ground for soldiers who had been wounded
and placed on "rest and ready." The former front-line
troops bivouacked in the fields, setting up tents,
toilets, and mess halls.
Moody recalled the evening he was called upon by the
general to take orders to the colonel in the field. He
insisted upon delivering the missive directly to the
officer, who, upon reading the decree, wasted no time in
following its command. "Get ready to move out," he
instructed those around him.
Moody notified the general that the orders had been
delivered and obeyed, then assumed his post at the front
gate.
"I stood there and watched those kids going back to the
front lines again," he said with a heavy heart, "When one
company moved out another came to take their place."
Later, Camp Tyson served as a prisoner of war camp for
German soldiers taken prisoner and brought stateside. Once
again, Moody received harsh instructions, this time to
"take the prisoners out" in the event of an invasion.
"It sort of bothered me - I was so young - to think I had
to go in there and kill those prisoners, helpless people.
Could I do this?" he asked again. "I made up my mind I'd
be there taking them out long as I could if they ordered
me to do it."
When the Camp was disbanded, Moody was offered the option
to remain with the military at a different site. "That's
when I took my pay and decided to stay in Paris,
Tennessee," he says, "I never thought of asking for a
discharge; I'm basically still in the Army. That was 55
years ago and I'll be 80 in April."
He went to work for the Post Office, a job he retained
until the veteran who had left the post to serve his
country returned to claim his prior position.
Moody then became a farmer, milking seven cows and raising
crops to feed them.
"I sold the cream and fed the skim milk to the hogs," he
says. A disastrous crop of beans that rotted in the fields
from rain ended his farming venture and led him to Holley
Carburetor where he was employed for nine years.
While working at the carburetor plant, Moody obtained one
of the first GI housing loans in the area when he bought
"a little old house on Oliver Street for $5500." His
payments on the home were $36.10 per month and he was
bringing home $36 per week from the carburetor plant.
"That was in 1950," he recalls.
He began helping other veterans obtain GI loans, a
volunteer service he continued for about six years. Then,
the lawyer who closed the deals, Charles Montgomery,
suggested that Moody obtain a real estate license.
"He told me it cost $10 and two people to sign saying I
was honest, so I got me a real estate license in 1956. I
have that license now and I've come a long way," says
Moody, who established one of the most successful
small-town real estate businesses in the state.
Two years later, when he sold a motel while still working
at the carburetor plant, the $2250 commission gave him the
gumption to quit his job and pursue real estate full time.
"I told them I had all the money I'd ever need," Moody
laughs, "and I've been in it ever since."
From the latter part of 1959 until 1964, Moody spent
summers in Texas developing land while sending the money
home to Tennessee.
The business has continued growing over the years. "In the
last three years we've done $20 million per year with 14
to 15 licensed real estate brokers. I'm not active in it
now work," he continues, "I work out of my office at home,
but I still sort of want to keep my license."
He hasn't lost touch with the idea that started him on the
path to real estate, however. "You can live most
anywhere," he declares, "The wealth is what you can do for
people that can't help themselves; I've probably helped a
thousand people who couldn't have got in if I hadn't
helped them."
Moody is a member of the American Legion, Sons of
Confederate Veterans, Amvets, Masons, Tennessee 5th
Volunteers Infantry Regiment Association and the National
Rifle Association.
He has been actively involved in Camp Tyson reunions for
many years, serving as chairman for the reunion committee
from 1973-1992. Camp Tyson veterans hope to assemble in
April for another reunion, though Moody acknowledges many
are no longer able to make the trip.
A direct descendant of Jeremiah Moody, who in 1821 moved
to Henry County from Essex, Virginia, Eddie boasts that
eight generations of Moodys have lived in Henry County,
three of which are living today.
Eddie and Betty are the parents of sons William E. (Bill)
Moody, married to Linda Finch Moody; Harry T. (Tommy)
Moody, married to Paulette Rickman Moody; and Richard L.
(Rick) Moody, married to Missy Dunlap Moody, and the
grandparents of Candise Moody Farmer, Jon Paul Moody,
Ginger Moody, Carrye Moody, Madison Moody, MacKenzie Moody
and Gavin Moody.
|