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Encyclopedia > Fort Douglas (Utah)

Fort Douglas is a fort in Utah, established in 1862 for the purpose of protecting the Overland Mail Route and telegraph lines from attacks from hostile Indians. The increasing threat of violence was caused by the withdrawal of Federal troops from the West for action against the Confederacy. Colonel Patrick Connor was selected to establish a military presence in Utah Territory and selected a site east of Salt Lake City, where Camp Douglas was officially established on October 26, 1862. Fortifications (Latin fortis, strong, and facere, to make) are military constructions designed for defensive warfare. ... Official language(s) English Capital Salt Lake City Largest city Salt Lake City Area  Ranked 13th  - Total 84,876 sq. ...


The Fort's importance grew exponentially when the Union Pacific and Central Pacific railroads joined rails at Promontory Summit, Utah, on May 10, 1869.


For well over a century troops trained at Fort Douglas, fighting in all major battles of the late 19th and 20th centuries. In 1922, Fort Douglas became the home of the 38th Infantry. The 38th remained at Fort Douglas until August 1940.


Fort Douglas then became an Army Air Field and was home to the 7th Bombardment Group (B-17s). Fort Douglas reverted to an Army base after Pearl Harbor, when fears of a Japanese attack of the U.S. mainland caused the 9th Service Command Hq. to be moved to Fort Douglas from the Presidio in San Francisco.


After WWII, the Army began a slow divestiture of its lands at Fort Douglas to the University of Utah, which is located directly adjacent to the Fort. However, the Fort maintained busy Reserve functions for several more decades, notably with the 96th ARCOM under the command of Maj. Gen. Michael B. Kauffman, who had spent much of his Army career at the Fort and was instrumental in keeping the Fort alive well past its announced closing in the 1970s. The Military Museum at Fort Douglas is housed in a building named after General Kauffman, who founded the Museum and built it into one of the United States' premier military museums featuring exhibits from all branches of the Armed Services.


In 1970, a majority of the fort was designated a National Historic Landmark. USS Constitution. ...


On October 26, 1991, Fort Douglas officially closed, though the Utah National Guard maintained control of the Military Museum and the 96th ARCOM received the parts of the Fort which were not deeded to the University of Utah.


During the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, much of Fort Douglas was used as part of the Olympic Village for the participating athletes.


References

  • Historic Fort Douglas, University of Utah.
  • Fort Douglas Military Museum Association
  • Fort Douglas, Utah, A Frontier Fort, by Charles G. Hibbard (Vestige Press, 1999)

  Results from FactBites:
 
History of Fort Douglas, Utah (587 words)
Camp Douglas (Fort Douglas) was established on 26 October 1862; it was named after the late Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois.
Fort Douglas units participated in the northern plains campaigns of the 1860s and 1870s and in the Sioux War of 1890.
The regiment departed in August 1940 and Fort Douglas temporarily became an air base in conjunction with the Salt Lake Municipal Airport.
Utah History Encyclopedia (960 words)
Utah's original quota of volunteers was 425, but by the end of the conflict Utah had sent 800 troops.
Most of the enlistment into the artillery batteries A and B, Utah Volunteers, came from the National Guard of Utah A and B batteries; and Troop A, Utah Cavalry, came mostly from the National Guard Cavalry Troop C. Torrey's Regiment was designated as special cavalry for the state and was recruited from throughout the state.
Utah A and B batteries left the Philippines on 24 June 1899, having fought in more than one hundred engagements and suffering casualties of fifteen men killed by fighting or disease and fourteen others wounded.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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