Fort Hancock (1): Difference between revisions

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'''{{PAGENAME}} (1881-1895)''' - Established 15 Apr 1881 as [[Camp Rice]] by 1st Lt. [[S.L. Woodward]], Co. K, [[10th U.S. Cavalry]] as a subpost of [[Fort Davis (1)]]. Name changed, 14 May 1886, to Fort Hancock for Maj. Gen [[Winfield Scott Hancock]]. Abandoned 5 Oct 1895.
'''{{PAGENAME}} (1881-1895)''' - Established 15 Apr 1881 as [[Camp Rice(1)|Camp Rice]] by 1st Lt. [[S.L. Woodward]], Co. K, [[10th U.S. Cavalry]] as a subpost of [[Fort Davis (1)]]. Name changed, 14 May 1886, to Fort Hancock for Maj. Gen [[Winfield Scott Hancock]]. Abandoned 5 Oct 1895.
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[[Image:Fort Hancock - 1.jpg|350px|thumb|left|Camp Rice Marker]]
[[Image:Fort Hancock - 1.jpg|350px|thumb|left|Camp Rice Marker]]
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[[Image:Fort Hancock Map.jpg|795px|thumb|left|Fort Hancock Map 1891]]
[[Image:Fort Hancock Map.jpg|795px|thumb|left|Fort Hancock Map 1891]]
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[[Camp Rice]] was first established 6 miles northwest of [[Fort Quitman (1)]], moved to a location on the Southern Pacific Railroad, and finally moved to higher ground still along the railroad. Four years later it was renamed Fort Hancock. Function was to protect the local area against hostile Indians and bandits coming across the Rio Grande.
[[Camp Rice]] was first established 6 miles northwest of [[Fort Quitman (1)]], moved to a location on the Southern Pacific Railroad, and finally moved to the higher ground still along the railroad. Four years later it was renamed Fort Hancock. The function was to protect the local area against hostile Indians and bandits coming across the Rio Grande.


==Current Status==
==Current Status==
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* {{Hart}}, page 160.
* {{Hart}}, page 160.
* {{Roberts}}, page 764.
* {{Roberts}}, page 764.
* [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/FF/qbf24.html The Texas Handbook OnLine.]
* [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/FF/qbf24.html The Texas Handbook Online.]
'''Links: '''
'''Links: '''



Latest revision as of 10:03, 12 January 2023

Fort Hancock (1) (1881-1895) - Established 15 Apr 1881 as Camp Rice by 1st Lt. S.L. Woodward, Co. K, 10th U.S. Cavalry as a subpost of Fort Davis (1). Name changed, 14 May 1886, to Fort Hancock for Maj. Gen Winfield Scott Hancock. Abandoned 5 Oct 1895.

Camp Rice Marker
Fort Hancock Bench Marker


History


Fort Hancock Map 1891


Camp Rice was first established 6 miles northwest of Fort Quitman (1), moved to a location on the Southern Pacific Railroad, and finally moved to the higher ground still along the railroad. Four years later it was renamed Fort Hancock. The function was to protect the local area against hostile Indians and bandits coming across the Rio Grande.

Current Status

Only markers remain and their location does not match the expected and old map locations of Camp Rice or Fort Hancock.

{"selectable":false,"height":"-500","width":"-500"}

Location: East of the town of Fort Hancock, Hudspeth County, Texas. Map pin locations approximate.

Maps & Images

Lat: 31.29986 Long: -105.84399

  • Multi Maps from ACME
  • Maps from Bing
  • Maps from Google
  • Elevation: 3,600'


GPS Locations:

Sources:

Links:

Visited: 5 Nov 2009

Picture Gallery