Camp Cody: Difference between revisions
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1917-1920) - A [[World War I]] National Guard Training Camp first established in 1917 near Deming, Luna County, New Mexico. Named Camp Cody in G.O. 95, 18 Jul 1917, after [[William F. Cody]] (Buffalo Bill), U.S. Army Scout and showman. Abandoned in 1920. | '''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1917-1920) - A [[World War I]] National Guard Training Camp first established in 1917 near Deming, Luna County, New Mexico. Named Camp Cody in G.O. 95, 18 Jul 1917, after [[William F. Cody]] (Buffalo Bill), U.S. Army Scout and showman. Abandoned in 1920. | ||
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== [[World War I]] == | == [[World War I]] == | ||
One of sixteen National Guard Training Camps established in 1917 to train [[World War I]] National Guard troops. Established in 1917 under the supervision of construction quartermaster Major [[Charles H. Miller]] on a site of about 2,000 acres. The camp was to have a capacity of 27,152 officers and enlisted men, work was started 20 Jul 1917, it was complete in November 1917 at a first year cost of $ 3,753,088.18. | One of sixteen National Guard Training Camps established in 1917 to train [[World War I]] National Guard troops. Established in 1917 under the supervision of construction quartermaster Major [[Charles H. Miller]] on a site of about 2,000 acres. The camp was to have a capacity of 27,152 officers and enlisted men, work was started 20 Jul 1917, it was complete in November 1917 at a first year cost of $ 3,753,088.18. |
Revision as of 17:35, 28 January 2014
Camp Cody (1917-1920) - A World War I National Guard Training Camp first established in 1917 near Deming, Luna County, New Mexico. Named Camp Cody in G.O. 95, 18 Jul 1917, after William F. Cody (Buffalo Bill), U.S. Army Scout and showman. Abandoned in 1920.
World War I
One of sixteen National Guard Training Camps established in 1917 to train World War I National Guard troops. Established in 1917 under the supervision of construction quartermaster Major Charles H. Miller on a site of about 2,000 acres. The camp was to have a capacity of 27,152 officers and enlisted men, work was started 20 Jul 1917, it was complete in November 1917 at a first year cost of $ 3,753,088.18.
The first commander of the Camp was Major General Augustus P. Blocksom who formed the 34th U.S. Infantry Division and oversaw the training the troops. The 34th began arriving at Camp Cody in August 1917 and departed for France in October 1918. The 34th returned from Europe and was demobilized starting in December 1918.
At the end of the war the camp became a demobilization center until it was abandoned in 1920 except for the hospital which became a Public Health Service Hospital for veterans until 1922. The Sisters of the Holy Cross of Notre Dame took over the hospital and reopened it as a Tuberculous sanitarium for the order and the public on 12 May 1923 and operated it until it burned down in 1938.
Current Status
No remains on vacant property outside Deming in Luna County, New Mexico.
USGS Geographic Names Information System (GNIS) Database Entry: 940204
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Location: Near Deming, Luna County, New Mexico. Maps & Images Lat: 32.275 Long: -107.8083333 |
Sources:
- Roberts, Robert B., Encyclopedia of Historic Forts: The Military, Pioneer, and Trading Posts of the United States, Macmillan, New York, 1988, 10th printing, ISBN 0-02-926880-X, page 523
Links:
- North American Forts - Camp Cody
- Wikipedia - Camp Cody
- Genealogy Village - Camp Cody
- World War I History - 34th Division
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Camp Cody Picture Gallery
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