NPR — along with seven public radio stations around the country — is chronicling the lives of America's troops where they live. We're calling the project "Back at Base." This is the first of four reports this week about the National Guard.

The Army spent billions of dollars getting the National Guard ready for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But now that the money has been spent and troops are coming home, there are questions about the Guard's mission.

One place the Guard is fighting to prove its worth is at Camp Atterbury — home to the Indiana National Guard.

Carved out of the cornfields and forests of southern Indiana, Camp Atterbury has been training troops since 1942. It became a quiet National Guard base and didn't see much action from the Army after the end of the Korean War.

"I wouldn't call it Sleepy Hollow, but was a kind of a regional training area," says Adjutant Gen. R. Martin Umbarger. When he's not in uniform, he runs the family feed business, but most days he oversees the Indiana National Guard, which he's led since 2004.

A couple of years after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the Army reactivated Camp Atterbury to mobilize soldiers deploying to Iraq and Afghanistan. Those troops required intense training in house-to-house fighting and urban warfare.

Umbarger says he realized there needed to be a more realistic training ground. He thought Muscatatuck, a recently closed state mental hospital that was just down the road, could become an urban training center.

"When I first heard of Muscatatuck, I really figured it would be a bunch of broken-down buildings and when I went down there and got out and said, 'Oh my God, these buildings are in great shape. This is a city,' " Umbarger says.

Over the next decade, the Army spent $300 million to upgrade Atterbury and Muscatatuck, including an $84 million barracks complex and a second set of railroad tracks. In 2013, it processed 119,000 troops, mainly from units heading back home.

But coming home has become an issue. By the time all that money was spent on the new barracks, the wars were basically over. Atterbury had finished mobilizing troops, so that mission was gone. The base lost 160 jobs. And there's been a ripple effect.

Outside the base, at Sherman's Barbershop in nearby Edinburgh, Ind., Richard Pile was cutting a soldier's hair "high and tight." Sherman's opened in 1942, the same year as the base. As recently as 2013, the shop would sometimes see busloads of troops.

"They lined up out the door, all the way down the street," says Pile, one of the shop's owners.

He says business dropped off last year, though the base is still important to the small town.

Those soldiers also filled hotels and restaurants. A 2012 report from Indiana University showed Atterbury brought in nearly $400 million a year to the state.

The challenge for Atterbury now is to stay relevant.

It's been marketing itself to new customers besides the Army, such as contractors who need a training ground.

The National Guard's argument is that after spending $300 million, Atterbury/Muscatatuck is a good location for anyone who needs to simulate an urban environment on a large scale. For a price, you can break down doors and smash windows.

All that marketing keeps Atterbury on the Army's radar, too. That's why the base just hosted a war-fighting exercise for 3,500 troops from the Guard, active-duty Army and the Canadian Army.

All those soldiers recently filled a 24-hour mess hall, staffed by a private contractor. Staff Sgt. Peter Murdock of Indianapolis, who was attending the event, says when he joined the Guard seven years ago, there was a lot less building.

But now, in the past couple of years, he says: "You can definitely tell it got quieter."

Still, Atterbury's found a niche. There was a time after World War II when cattle and sheep roamed a largely shuttered base. This time, the Guard is getting creative to make sure that doesn't happen again.

Copyright 2015 WLPR-FM. To see more, visit http://www.thelakeshorefm.com/.

Transcript

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

The U.S. Army spent billions of dollars to get reserve forces ready for war in Iraq and Afghanistan. With that money spent and the wars winding down, the question we focus on this week is what exactly the National Guard's mission is now. One place where the Guard is seeking an answer is Camp Atterbury. The base is home to the Indiana National Guard, and Steve Walsh of Lakeshore Public Media in Merrillville, Ind., paid a visit.

STEVE WALSH, BYLINE: Carved out of the cornfields and forests of southern Indiana, Camp Atterbury has been training troops since 1942.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: They're building a real tough fighting outfit here at Camp Atterbury. This war is going to be won with plenty of guts and plenty of sweat.

WALSH: It became a quiet National Guard base and didn't see much action from the Army after the end of the Korean War.

ADJUTANT GENERAL MARTIN UMBARGER: I wouldn't call it Sleepy Hollow, but it was just a local kind of regional training area.

WALSH: That's Adjutant Gen. Martin Umbarger. When he's not in uniform, he runs the family feed business. But most days he oversees the Indiana National Guard, which he's led since 2004. A couple of years after 9/11, the Army reactivated Camp Atterbury through mobilized soldiers deploying to Iraq and Afghanistan. Those troops required intensive training in urban warfare, house-to-house fighting. Gen. Umbarger realized he needed a more realistic training ground. Just down the road from Atterbury was a recently closed state mental hospital, Muscatatuck. Umbarger thought that could be the urban training center.

UMBARGER: When I first heard of Muscatatuck, I really figured it would be a bunch of broken-down buildings. And when I went down there and I got out, I looked at it and said, oh, my gosh. These buildings are in great shape. This is a city.

WALSH: Over the next decade, the Army spent $300 million to upgrade Muscatatuck and Atterbury, including an $84 million barracks complex and a second rail head. In 2013, it processed 119,000 troops, mainly from units headed back home. Coming home, that was the issue. By the time all that money was spent on the new barracks, the wars were basically over. Atterbury had finished mobilizing troops. That mission was gone. Atterbury lost 160 jobs, and there was a ripple effect.

How you doing?

RICHARD PILE: Doing well.

WALSH: Outside the base in nearby Edinburgh at Sherman's Barbershop, one of the owners, Richard Pile, was cutting a soldier's hair high and tight. Sherman's opened in 1942, the same year as the base. As recently as 2013, it would sometimes see busloads of troops.

PILE: They line up at the door all the way down the street.

WALSH: They also fill hotels and restaurants. A 2012 report from Indiana University showed Atterbury brought in nearly $400 million a year to the state. The challenge for Atterbury now is to stay relevant. It's been marketing itself to new customers besides the Army, contractors who need a training ground.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #2: Utilizing Atterbury/Muscatatuck as a training platform provides a complex and unique capability that provides the most realistic training venues in the nation.

WALSH: The Guard's argument is that after spending $300 million, Atterbury/Muscatatuck is a good location for anyone who needs to simulate an urban environment on a large scale. For a price, you can break down doors and smash windows. All that marketing keeps Atterbury on the Army's radar, too, which is why the base just hosted a war-fighting exercise for 3,500 troops from the Guard, active-duty Army and the Canadian army.

How you guys doing?

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #3: We're good, sir. How about you?

WALSH: All those soldiers filled the 24-hour mess hall staffed by a private contractor. Staff Sgt. Peter Murdock of Indianapolis joined the Guard seven years ago.

What did it look like seven years ago?

STAFF SERGEANT PETER MURDOCK: A lot less building and a lot less technology.

WALSH: How's it been over the last couple years?

MURDOCK: You can definitely tell it got quieter.

WALSH: Except when you have times like this.

MURDOCK: Right.

WALSH: Still they found a niche. There was a time after World War II when cattle and sheep roamed a largely shuttered base. This time, the Guard is getting creative to make sure something like that doesn't happen again. For NPR News, I'm Steve Walsh.

GREENE: And Steve's report is part of a collaboration with NPR member stations called Back at Base, a look at the U.S. military on the home front. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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