Camp Claiborne (3): Difference between revisions
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'''See Also:''' | '''See Also:''' | ||
* [[Camp Beauregard]] | * [[Camp Beauregard (1)]] | ||
* [[Camp Livingston]] | * [[Camp Livingston]] | ||
* [[Esler Field]] | * [[Esler Field]] | ||
Revision as of 10:05, 25 December 2019
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HistoryFirst established as Camp Evangeline. Construction began in 1940 on the site about two and a half miles long and one and a half miles wide, encompassing some 3,100 acres. The camp name was changed from Camp Evangeline to Camp Claiborne and announced on 30 Oct 1940. At the peak of construction in November 1940, some 12,221 persons were employed in the construction of the camp with a weekly payroll of about $250,000. The camp was designed as a tent camp with 6.006 enlisted men's tents, 759 officers' tents, and 679 buildings for a total of 7,444 structures to accommodate some 35,000 officers and men. The enlisted men's tents were of the pyramid type with 16-foot square frame bases. Each tent housed 5 men. Separate toilet facilities were in frame buildings with showers, lavatories, and flush toilets. Officers' tents were on 9-foot square frames and housed two company-grade officers or one field grade officer. Individual frame houses were provided for division, brigade and regimental commanders. The first units to arrive for training in December 1940 were companies E, G, and H of the 22nd Infantry. Nearly a half-million troops trained at Camp Claiborne before it was closed. A portion of the camp was used to accommodate prisoners of war as the war drew to a close. The Camp was deactivated on 15 Dec 1945. More than 7,000 buildings on the post were sold at a public sale in March 1947. Current StatusThe site of the camp is located in the Evangeline Division of the Kisatchie National Forest, about 17 miles southwest of Alexandria, in Rapides Parish. Louisiana.
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