Fort William Henry Harrison (1): Difference between revisions
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1895-1913) - Authorized by Congressional act of 12 May 1892 and first named [[Fort Harrison (2)]] after then President [[Benjamin Harrison]] on 13 Dec 1892 but not actually established until 23 Sep 1895. The name was changed to [[Fort William Henry Harrison]] in 1906 to eliminate a name conflict with an Indiana [[Fort Harrison (1)]]. First garrisoned with troops from [[Fort Assinniboine (1)|Fort Assinniboine]] 23 Sep 1895. Troops withdrawn in 1913. | '''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1895-1913) - Authorized by Congressional act of 12 May 1892 and first named [[Fort Harrison (2)]] after then-President [[Benjamin Harrison]] on 13 Dec 1892 but not actually established until 23 Sep 1895. The name was changed to [[Fort William Henry Harrison]] in 1906 to eliminate a name conflict with an Indiana [[Fort Harrison (1)]]. First garrisoned with troops from [[Fort Assinniboine (1)|Fort Assinniboine]] on 23 Sep 1895. The Troops were withdrawn in 1913. | ||
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Established as a part of a consolidation program that concentrated troops in a few larger installations so that smaller installations could be abandoned. Located near a rail line, it was thought that troops could be rushed by rail to any trouble spot. The architecture of the fort buildings is almost identical to other western forts of that era, see [[Fort George Wright]]. | Established as a part of a consolidation program that concentrated troops in a few larger installations so that smaller installations could be abandoned. Located near a rail line, it was thought that troops could be rushed by rail to any trouble spot. The architecture of the fort buildings is almost identical to other western forts of that era, see [[Fort George Wright]]. | ||
The fort was placed in caretaker status 15 Jan 1913 and abandoned in April 1913. | The fort was placed in caretaker status on 15 Jan 1913 and abandoned in April 1913. | ||
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'''Location:''' About 3 miles northwest of Helena, Lewis and Clark County, Montana. | '''Location:''' About 3 miles northwest of Helena,<br>Lewis and Clark County, Montana. | ||
{{Mapit-US-cityscale|46.61829|-112.10378}} | {{Mapit-US-cityscale|46.61829|-112.10378}} | ||
* Elevation: 4,008' | * Elevation: 4,008' | ||
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'''GPS Locations:''' | '''GPS Locations:''' | ||
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=46.61829| | * {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=46.61829|Lon=-112.10378}} Fort William Henry Harrison Parade | ||
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=46.61439| | * {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=46.61439|Lon=-112.0994}} Montana State Veterans Cemetery | ||
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=46.61798| | * {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=46.61798|Lon=-112.09708}} Helena Armed Forces Reserve Center (HAFRC) | ||
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=46.618953| | * {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=46.618953|Lon=-112.103128}} VA Medical Center-Fort Harrison | ||
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* [http://www.northamericanforts.com/West/mt3.html#harrison North American Forts - Fort William Henry Harrison] | * [http://www.northamericanforts.com/West/mt3.html#harrison North American Forts - Fort William Henry Harrison] | ||
* [http://www.montanaguard.com/museum/index.cfm Montana's Military Museum] | * [http://www.montanaguard.com/museum/index.cfm Montana's Military Museum] | ||
{{FortID|ID=MT0211|Name={{PAGENAME}}}} | |||
* MT0211 - Fort Harrison (2) | |||
{{Visited|11-22 May 2021, 19 May 2010}} | {{Visited|11-22 May 2021, 19 May 2010}} | ||
Latest revision as of 19:31, 2 July 2022
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Fort William Henry Harrison (1) (1895-1913) - Authorized by Congressional act of 12 May 1892 and first named Fort Harrison (2) after then-President Benjamin Harrison on 13 Dec 1892 but not actually established until 23 Sep 1895. The name was changed to Fort William Henry Harrison in 1906 to eliminate a name conflict with an Indiana Fort Harrison (1). First garrisoned with troops from Fort Assinniboine on 23 Sep 1895. The Troops were withdrawn in 1913. HistoryEstablished as a part of a consolidation program that concentrated troops in a few larger installations so that smaller installations could be abandoned. Located near a rail line, it was thought that troops could be rushed by rail to any trouble spot. The architecture of the fort buildings is almost identical to other western forts of that era, see Fort George Wright. The fort was placed in caretaker status on 15 Jan 1913 and abandoned in April 1913.
Current StatusCurrently home to Montana National Guard units and the U.S. Veterans Administration facility.
See Also: Sources:
Links: Fortification ID:
Visited: 11-22 May 2021, 19 May 2010 Picture Gallery
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