Camp Coppinger (2): Difference between revisions
John Stanton (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
John Stanton (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
| Line 41: | Line 41: | ||
'''Sources:''' | '''Sources:''' | ||
* Harlow, Major Rex F., If War Came Tomorrow, Oklahoma's 5,000 Guardsman Would Be Ready For It, Harlow's Weekly, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 22 Aug 1925, Pages 2-6. (available at newspapers.com by subscription) | * Harlow, Major Rex F., '''''If War Came Tomorrow, Oklahoma's 5,000 Guardsman Would Be Ready For It''''', Harlow's Weekly, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 22 Aug 1925, Pages 2-6. (available at newspapers.com by subscription) | ||
<!--* {{GNIS2|ID=.....}}--> | <!--* {{GNIS2|ID=.....}}--> | ||
Revision as of 08:02, 28 October 2022
|
HistoryA temporary Oklahoma National Guard training camp was established on the Fort Sill reservation on 2 Aug 1925 and abandoned on 17 Aug 1925. Major General Baird H. Markham was the Camp commander. The Guard assembled some 5,500 Oklahoma guardsmen ranging from WWI veterans to new recruits and managed to house, outfit, train, and pay the troops at the two-week camp. This same campground was used for annual encampments for several years but was renamed yearly for a different Oklahoma soldier killed in combat. The Camp was abandoned at the end of the two-week training period on 17 Aug 1925 as most troops departed by special trains. Current StatusThe camp area was located south of the present-day BX and Commissary across Macomb Road and across the railroad tracks. No visible remains.
See Also: Sources:
Links:
|