Fort D.A. Russell (2): Difference between revisions

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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1867-1948) - Established 21 Jul 1867 by Col. [[John D. Stevenson]], [[30th U.S. Infantry]], and named for Brig. Gen. [[David A. Russell]]. The fort was renamed [[Fort Francis E. Warren]] in 1930. In 1948 the post was renamed Francis E. Warren Air Force Base and is still an active military installation.
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[[Image:FortDARussell.jpg|400px|thumb|left|Fort D.A. Russell Overview]]
[[Image:FortDARussell.jpg|400px|thumb|left|Fort D.A. Russell Overview]]
[[Image:Fort DA Russell Parade.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Fort D.A. Russell Parade Ground]]
[[Image:Fort DA Russell Parade.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Fort D.A. Russell Parade Ground]]
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1867-1948) - Established 21 Jul 1867 by Col. [[John D. Stevenson]], [[30th U.S. Infantry]], and named for Brig. Gen. [[David A. Russell]]. The fort was renamed [[Fort Francis E. Warren]] in 1930. In 1948 the post was renamed Francis E. Warren Air Force Base and is still an active military installation.
== {{PAGENAME}} History ==
== {{PAGENAME}} History ==
Fort D. A. Russell was established in 1867 as a frontier infantry and cavalry post serving as a supply depot and to protect transcontinental railroad construction crews.  The Fort, with its strategic location and railroad connection, was declared to be a permanent post by the War Department in 1885 and an extensive building program began.  Fort Russell was enlarged to a brigade-sized post in 1906.  In 1930 the post was renamed to Fort Francis E. Warren after a Cheyenne resident who served as United States Senator for 37 years.  With the beginning of World War II, Fort Warren became a Quartermaster Training Center with twenty thousand men in training here.  In 1947 Fort Warren was assigned to the Air Force and became Francis E. Warren Air Force Base. -- from [http://wyoshpo.state.wy.us/russell.htm State Site] --
Fort D. A. Russell was established in 1867 as a frontier infantry and cavalry post serving as a supply depot and to protect transcontinental railroad construction crews.  The Fort, with its strategic location and railroad connection, was declared to be a permanent post by the War Department in 1885 and an extensive building program began.  Fort Russell was enlarged to a brigade-sized post in 1906.  In 1930 the post was renamed to Fort Francis E. Warren after a Cheyenne resident who served as United States Senator for 37 years.  With the beginning of World War II, Fort Warren became a Quartermaster Training Center with twenty thousand men in training here.  In 1947 Fort Warren was assigned to the Air Force and became Francis E. Warren Air Force Base. -- from [http://wyoshpo.state.wy.us/russell.htm State Site] --

Revision as of 14:09, 8 November 2009

Fort D.A. Russell (2) (1867-1948) - Established 21 Jul 1867 by Col. John D. Stevenson, 30th U.S. Infantry, and named for Brig. Gen. David A. Russell. The fort was renamed Fort Francis E. Warren in 1930. In 1948 the post was renamed Francis E. Warren Air Force Base and is still an active military installation.

Fort D.A. Russell Overview
Fort D.A. Russell Parade Ground


Fort D.A. Russell (2) History

Fort D. A. Russell was established in 1867 as a frontier infantry and cavalry post serving as a supply depot and to protect transcontinental railroad construction crews. The Fort, with its strategic location and railroad connection, was declared to be a permanent post by the War Department in 1885 and an extensive building program began. Fort Russell was enlarged to a brigade-sized post in 1906. In 1930 the post was renamed to Fort Francis E. Warren after a Cheyenne resident who served as United States Senator for 37 years. With the beginning of World War II, Fort Warren became a Quartermaster Training Center with twenty thousand men in training here. In 1947 Fort Warren was assigned to the Air Force and became Francis E. Warren Air Force Base. -- from State Site --

Current Status

None of the original Fort D. A. Russell structures are extant, but most of the 1885 and later red brick barracks, officer's quarters, offices, and cavalry stables survive.


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Location: One mile west of Cheyenne, Wyoming.

Maps & Images

Lat: 41.133316 Long: -104.867195

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