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National Park Service Search Search. Exiting nps. Contact Us. The 65th anniversary of the opening of OSS training camps for spies, saboteurs, guerrilla leaders, and clandestine radio-operators in the National Parksβin particular Catoctin Mountain Park and Prince William Forest Parkβoccurred in William J.
Like the secret agency itself, much of its history was cloaked in silence and mystery. Most of the remaining OSS files, including personnel files, were not declassified until , more than half a century after the end of World War II. Before the cynicism of recent years, secret agents were seen as glamorous. Popular novels and films reflected that view. Aside from the three postwar films, O. While the most popular topics concerning the OSS for the public and scholars alike have been the cloak and dagger work of the spies and counterspies, and the behind enemy lines operations of OSS guerrilla leaders and saboteurs, the least explored area of the OSS has been its training schools.
Here as in many other matters, OSS initially drew upon the experience of the British secret services. The only deviation was Area F, which was established on the grounds of the former Congressional Country Club for the Operational Groups. This was particularly true in the teaching of rugged survival and close-combat techniques at the Special Operations training camps at the two National Parks, where men preparing to be spies or other operatives sometimes joined the military recruits who were being trained physically and psychologically for clandestine raids from forest or mountain hideouts upon enemy outposts, command centers, or vital communication or transportation facilities.
The appeal of Catoctin Mountain Park and Prince William Forest Park, then known as Catoctin and Chopawamsic Recreational Demonstration Areas respectively, was precisely because of their location not far from Washington, their comparative isolation in rural areas, their existing camp facilities, and the fact that they were already federal property.
That meant they could be obtained quickly and easily in the spring of With war declared, the War Department simply demanded that the Department of the Interior lease those lands of the National Park Service to it for military purposes for the duration of the war. The two parks had cabins for accommodation, woods in which to practice hit and run attacks on enemy targets, and open meadows for firing ranges, demolition work, and other field exercises.