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Carlisle Barracks

Carlisle Barracks is a United States Army facility located in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. The site of the U.S. Army War College, it is the nation's second-oldest active military base. The first structures were built in 1757, during the French and Indian War between Great Britain and France in the colonies.[2]

Carlisle Barracks
Carlisle, Pennsylvania
US Army War College
TypeSchool post
Site information
Controlled byHeadquarters, Department of the Army
Site history
BuiltMay 1757
In useCurrently
DesignatedN/A[1]

From 1879 to 1918, the property was transferred to the Department of Interior to operate the Carlisle Indian Industrial School. This was the first off-reservation boarding school established to educate and assimilate Native American children into European-American culture. In 1891 Congress passed legislation to expand this program. After the United States entered World War I, the school was closed and the property was transferred back to the War Department.

1756—1860 edit

Developed at the intersection of Indian trails along Letort Creek, in the eighteenth century the town of Carlisle became the jumping-off point for traders and settlers heading over the Alleghenies on their way west. A brief 1756 encampment at Carlisle preceded the more permanent settlement that started in May 1757, during the French and Indian War on the North American front between the colonies of Britain and France. Colonel John Stanwix marched upstream with British regulars and provincials against the backdrop of the international Seven Years' War. After the American Revolutionary War, from 1783 to 1837, the town of Carlisle was significant as the frontier gateway, as a greatly increased wave of land-hungry migrants moved west.

During the Revolutionary War, numerous substantial brick buildings were erected at Carlisle Barracks for military stores and to accommodate workmen of the revolutionary government's dedicated managing body for the Army, the Ordnance Department. While the facility might have been used to store ammunition and explosives, its lack of access to water transportation made it impractical because of the difficulty of overland travel at the time.[3] The Hessian Powder Magazine, now Hessian Guardhouse Museum, was built in 1777.[4]

In 1794, Carlisle Barracks became the center of intense federal military activity with the outbreak of the Whiskey Rebellion in the Pennsylvania backcountry. President George Washington journeyed to the barracks to review the troops—perhaps as many as 10,000 men. The crisis was posed by farmers in southwestern Pennsylvania, who refused to pay a tax on the commercial whiskey they distilled from their corn crops. They had found the alcohol more easily transported east over the Alleghenies and more profitable to sell than was corn as grain.

President Washington recommended the barracks as the site for a Federal military academy. But the state of New York won this prize, and West Point was developed on the west side of the Hudson River. The government decided to clear up ownership of the post; in 1801, the government paid $664.20 for the 27 acres (110,000 m2) which it had been renting from William Penn's heirs.

In 1838 the US School of Cavalry Practice was established at Carlisle Barracks. It was the army's small but elite mounted force of U.S. Dragoons, the forerunner of the Armor School at Fort Knox, Kentucky, and [5] now at Fort Benning, Georgia. Captain E. V. Sumner found most of the barracks buildings in disrepair, the maneuver area less than adequate, and horses in short supply. Overcoming these problems included drilling his recruits at the double time on foot to simulate the trotting of the missing horses. Another mounted organization, horse-drawn light artillery, also established its school at Carlisle Barracks. In 1839, Captain Samuel Ringgold arrived to begin training recruits and testing equipment for the "flying artillery," as it was sometimes called.

Civil War edit

From the early Civil War days, south-central Pennsylvania was rife with rumors of a Confederate invasion up the Shenandoah-Cumberland Valley from Virginia to Pennsylvania. Although many miles from the combat front, the garrison at Carlisle became a central supply center for ordnance stores, horses, and quartermaster supplies under Captain David H. Hastings.[6] Recruits once destined for Indian-fighting units on the western frontier were prepared to replace casualties in Regular Army units. Entire units were sent to the barracks to refit before specific deployment.

In June 1863, "the Rebels are coming!" was a cry with substance. In spite of a small defensive Pennsylvania militia and home guard force, Brigadier General Albert G. Jenkins' Confederate cavalry entered Carlisle on 27 June. Jenkins led his mounted brigade east along the Trindle Road, where they bivouacked while they took rations by wagon from the town. He had levied a demand for food for his 1,500 men and forage for their horses. Three North Carolina brigades occupied Carlisle Barracks; the troops camped on the parade grounds.

Major General J.E.B. Stuart's cavalry division approached Carlisle from the east on the afternoon of Wednesday, 1 July. Depleted by a sweeping march around the Union Army, Stuart hoped to find needed provisions; he did not know that other Confederate units had already sought the same Carlisle provisions. Stuart sent a demand for surrender of the Federal forces under the command of Brigadier General William Farrar Smith. When his demand was refused, Stuart initiated a short bombardment. When a second demand was refused, Stuart ordered his troops to shell the town and, later, to torch the barracks. See Battle of Carlisle.

After the Civil War ended, the barracks returned to its pre-war mission of receiving, training and forwarding cavalry recruits destined for the Indian wars on the western frontier. But, as army operations moved west, the War Department moved this function to the St. Louis Arsenal in Missouri. There it had access to transportation on the Mississippi and Missouri rivers. On 20 April 1871, Carlisle Barracks was officially "discontinued as a sub-Depot for the Mounted Recruit Service." The installation was available for new uses.

Carlisle Indian Industrial School edit

 
Carlisle Indian Industrial School logo

In 1879, the War Department transferred control of the post to the Department of the Interior. The US Congress had authorized the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) to found the first off-reservation Indian boarding school for the education of Native American children. During and at the end of the Indian Wars, the US government sought a way to assimilate and integrate the children into European-American culture: teaching them English, trades, and Christianity.

The Carlisle Indian Industrial School officially opened on 1 November 1879 and operated until 1918. Among the first batch of students were groups of children from Sioux (Lakota) bands that had rebelled against the US.[7] The Indian Bureau sent the children to the school to be educated and essentially kept as political hostages, to ensure compliant behavior on the part of the bands from which they had been taken.[7]

Commanding General of the Army William T. Sherman had acceded to the petitions of Richard Henry Pratt to use the barracks for a model Indian school. The goal was for children to learn English and European-American ways, to gain an education apart from the reservations, and live among European-American men and women. Pratt believed Native Americans needed such education to be able to protect their lands and societies. He became the school's founder and first superintendent. He based the school's program on his experience since 1875 in supervising and educating Indian prisoners-of-war at Fort Marion in St. Augustine, Florida. Twenty young Indian men gained further education at Hampton Institute, a historically black college, and private schools in New York.

1918—1950 edit

On 1 September 1918, with World War I underway, the U.S. Army took back Carlisle Barracks from the Department of Interior. It used the facility to respond to a wide set of changing army and security needs. At the end of World War I, the U.S. Army established General Hospital No. 31 as a pioneering rehabilitation center there. For two years, the hospital provided medical treatment, mental reconditioning and vocational training for more than 4,000 afflicted soldiers returned from service with the American Expeditionary Forces in France. Carlisle Barracks' equipment laboratory designed and tested new products, including improved lighting for field hospitals, a field dental dispensary, first aid kits for arctic rescue, and the "First-aid Packet, U.S. Government Carlisle Model" bandage field dressing[8]

In the fall of 1920, the Medical Field Service School was established under Colonel Percy M. Ashburn's command. Drawing on the lessons of World War I, the school developed medical equipment and doctrine suitable for the battlefield. More than 30,000 officers and NCOs passed through the school during its 26-year tenure at Carlisle Barracks. They applied classroom instruction and field exercises to train in care of casualties and disease prevention, the latter a major problem for the military until improvements in sanitation and antibiotics.

When the Medical Field Service School departed in 1946 for Fort Sam Houston at San Antonio, Texas after World War II, educational innovation continued. From 1946 until 1951, six U.S. Army schools were located at Carlisle Barracks. First was the Army Information School, followed shortly by the School for Government of Occupied Areas, and the Adjutant General's School for army personnel managers. The next year brought the Chaplain School and the Military Police School. Finally, the Army Security Agency School began highly classified operations in 1949 and stayed for two years before being displaced.

United States Army War College edit

 
USAWC Logo

In the spring of 1951, the United States Army War College, senior educational institution of the U.S. Army, relocated to Carlisle Barracks in central Pennsylvania. The college, established in 1903 and formerly located in Washington, D.C., had functioned as part of the General Staff during its early years. It chiefly prepared selected officers for high command. Distinguished graduates of that period included John J. Pershing (Class of 1905), Dwight D. Eisenhower (1927), and Omar N. Bradley (1934).

Classes were suspended in 1940 during the preparedness mobilization for World War II, and not resumed until a decade later at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, for the 1950–51 academic year. The new commandant, Lieutenant General Joseph M. Swing, relocated with the college to Pennsylvania in July 1951 and turned over command to his successor, Lieutenant General Edward M. Almond, in time for the arrival of the first Carlisle-based class.

At Carlisle, the Army War College expanded steadily, adding new programs and specialties. The college outgrew its main academic building (the current Upton Hall). In 1967 it transferred to Root Hall, newly constructed to accommodate current requirements. Two specialized agencies evolved into integral parts of the Army War College: the Strategic Studies Institute, first formed in 1954; and the Military History Institute, established in 1967. The Center for Strategic Leadership, a state-of-the-art war gaming complex, opened in 1994, incorporating increasingly sophisticated technology.

In 2005 the Carlisle Barracks was listed as a candidate for closure under the realignment process and hearings of the Base Realignment and Closure Commission, but was subsequently removed from the list. In 2006, ground was broken on a major project across the road from Carlisle Barracks: to construct new military housing, work that had been postponed pending BRAC review. It was part of the Residential Community Initiative, a public-private venture of the Army. In Carlisle, the development project included renovation of some historic housing, and construction of nearly 200 new units of housing with 3-4 bedrooms each, and more than 2000-2500 square feet of space.[9]

Demographics edit

Carlisle Barracks CDP
 
 
 
Carlisle Barracks CDP
 
 
Carlisle Barracks CDP
Coordinates: 40°12′37″N 77°10′23″W / 40.2102134°N 77.1729795°W / 40.2102134; -77.1729795
Country  United States
State  Pennsylvania
CountyCumberland
Area
 • Total0.34 sq mi (0.88 km2)
 • Land0.34 sq mi (0.87 km2)
 • Water0.01 sq mi (0.01 km2)
Elevation463 ft (141 m)
Population
 • Total938
 • Density2,783.38/sq mi (1,075.84/km2)
Time zoneUTC-5 (Eastern (EST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC-4 (EDT)
FIPS code42-42041[11]
GNIS feature ID2804361[11]

Carlisle Barracks CDP is a census-designated place (CDP) covering the residential population of the Carlisle Barracks in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, United States. It was first listed as a CDP in the 2020 census with a population of 938.[13]

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
2020938
U.S. Decennial Census[14]
2020[15][12]

2020 census edit

Carlisle Barracks CDP, Pennsylvania – Demographic Profile
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos may be of any race.
Race / Ethnicity Pop 2020[15] % 2020
White alone (NH) 709 75.59%
Black or African American alone (NH) 74 7.89%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) 3 0.32%
Asian alone (NH) 27 2.88%
Pacific Islander alone (NH) 4 0.43%
Some Other Race alone (NH) 1 0.11%
Mixed Race/Multi-Racial (NH) 68 7.25%
Hispanic or Latino (any race) 52 5.54%
Total 938 100.00%

References edit

  1. ^ . Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Archived from the original (Searchable database) on 21 March 2016. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  2. ^ . Cumberland County Economic Development Corporation. 2005. Archived from the original on 29 October 2006. Retrieved 28 January 2007.
  3. ^ Henry Knox, "#10 Return of Ordnance, Arms and Military Stores", A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774–1875, American State Papers, Senate, 3rd Congress, 1st Session, Library of Congress
  4. ^ . CRGIS: Cultural Resources Geographic Information System. Archived from the original (Searchable database) on 21 July 2007. Retrieved 21 January 2012. Note: This includes Capt. Phillip D. Goodwin (June 1973). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 21 January 2012.
  5. ^ Note-The U.S. Army Armor School was established in 1940 at Fort Knox, Kentucky, remaining there until transferring to Fort Benning, Georgia in 2010
  6. ^ Hastings/Canfield family history
  7. ^ a b Chapman, Daniel T. (December 1970). "The Great White Father's Little Red Indian School". American Heritage. 22 (1).
  8. ^ Cress, Joseph David : Hidden History of Cumberland County. History Press (2013)
  9. ^ . The Sentinel. 2006. Archived from the original on 25 January 2007. Retrieved 28 January 2007.
  10. ^ "ArcGIS REST Services Directory". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 12 October 2022.
  11. ^ a b c "Carlisle Barracks Census Designated Place". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.
  12. ^ a b "Census Population API". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 12 October 2022.
  13. ^ "Carlisle Barracks CDP, Pennsylvania". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 14 May 2022.
  14. ^ "Decennial Census of Population and Housing by Decades". US Census Bureau.
  15. ^ a b "P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO, AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE – 2020: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171) – Carlisle Barracks CDP, Pennsylvania". United States Census Bureau.

External links edit

  • Carlisle Barracks Garrison
  • Tenant Units
  • Carlisle Barracks Manuscript Collection US Army Heritage and Education Center, Carlisle, Pennsylvania
  • Carlisle Barracks Photograph Collection US Army Heritage and Education Center, Carlisle, Pennsylvania

40°12′37″N 77°10′25″W / 40.21028°N 77.17361°W / 40.21028; -77.17361

carlisle, barracks, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Carlisle Barracks news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Carlisle Barracks is a United States Army facility located in Carlisle Pennsylvania The site of the U S Army War College it is the nation s second oldest active military base The first structures were built in 1757 during the French and Indian War between Great Britain and France in the colonies 2 Carlisle BarracksCarlisle PennsylvaniaUS Army War CollegeTypeSchool postSite informationControlled byHeadquarters Department of the ArmySite historyBuiltMay 1757In useCurrentlyPennsylvania Historical MarkerDesignatedN A 1 From 1879 to 1918 the property was transferred to the Department of Interior to operate the Carlisle Indian Industrial School This was the first off reservation boarding school established to educate and assimilate Native American children into European American culture In 1891 Congress passed legislation to expand this program After the United States entered World War I the school was closed and the property was transferred back to the War Department Contents 1 1756 1860 2 Civil War 3 Carlisle Indian Industrial School 4 1918 1950 5 United States Army War College 6 Demographics 6 1 2020 census 7 References 8 External links1756 1860 editDeveloped at the intersection of Indian trails along Letort Creek in the eighteenth century the town of Carlisle became the jumping off point for traders and settlers heading over the Alleghenies on their way west A brief 1756 encampment at Carlisle preceded the more permanent settlement that started in May 1757 during the French and Indian War on the North American front between the colonies of Britain and France Colonel John Stanwix marched upstream with British regulars and provincials against the backdrop of the international Seven Years War After the American Revolutionary War from 1783 to 1837 the town of Carlisle was significant as the frontier gateway as a greatly increased wave of land hungry migrants moved west During the Revolutionary War numerous substantial brick buildings were erected at Carlisle Barracks for military stores and to accommodate workmen of the revolutionary government s dedicated managing body for the Army the Ordnance Department While the facility might have been used to store ammunition and explosives its lack of access to water transportation made it impractical because of the difficulty of overland travel at the time 3 The Hessian Powder Magazine now Hessian Guardhouse Museum was built in 1777 4 In 1794 Carlisle Barracks became the center of intense federal military activity with the outbreak of the Whiskey Rebellion in the Pennsylvania backcountry President George Washington journeyed to the barracks to review the troops perhaps as many as 10 000 men The crisis was posed by farmers in southwestern Pennsylvania who refused to pay a tax on the commercial whiskey they distilled from their corn crops They had found the alcohol more easily transported east over the Alleghenies and more profitable to sell than was corn as grain President Washington recommended the barracks as the site for a Federal military academy But the state of New York won this prize and West Point was developed on the west side of the Hudson River The government decided to clear up ownership of the post in 1801 the government paid 664 20 for the 27 acres 110 000 m2 which it had been renting from William Penn s heirs In 1838 the US School of Cavalry Practice was established at Carlisle Barracks It was the army s small but elite mounted force of U S Dragoons the forerunner of the Armor School at Fort Knox Kentucky and 5 now at Fort Benning Georgia Captain E V Sumner found most of the barracks buildings in disrepair the maneuver area less than adequate and horses in short supply Overcoming these problems included drilling his recruits at the double time on foot to simulate the trotting of the missing horses Another mounted organization horse drawn light artillery also established its school at Carlisle Barracks In 1839 Captain Samuel Ringgold arrived to begin training recruits and testing equipment for the flying artillery as it was sometimes called Civil War editFrom the early Civil War days south central Pennsylvania was rife with rumors of a Confederate invasion up the Shenandoah Cumberland Valley from Virginia to Pennsylvania Although many miles from the combat front the garrison at Carlisle became a central supply center for ordnance stores horses and quartermaster supplies under Captain David H Hastings 6 Recruits once destined for Indian fighting units on the western frontier were prepared to replace casualties in Regular Army units Entire units were sent to the barracks to refit before specific deployment In June 1863 the Rebels are coming was a cry with substance In spite of a small defensive Pennsylvania militia and home guard force Brigadier General Albert G Jenkins Confederate cavalry entered Carlisle on 27 June Jenkins led his mounted brigade east along the Trindle Road where they bivouacked while they took rations by wagon from the town He had levied a demand for food for his 1 500 men and forage for their horses Three North Carolina brigades occupied Carlisle Barracks the troops camped on the parade grounds Major General J E B Stuart s cavalry division approached Carlisle from the east on the afternoon of Wednesday 1 July Depleted by a sweeping march around the Union Army Stuart hoped to find needed provisions he did not know that other Confederate units had already sought the same Carlisle provisions Stuart sent a demand for surrender of the Federal forces under the command of Brigadier General William Farrar Smith When his demand was refused Stuart initiated a short bombardment When a second demand was refused Stuart ordered his troops to shell the town and later to torch the barracks See Battle of Carlisle After the Civil War ended the barracks returned to its pre war mission of receiving training and forwarding cavalry recruits destined for the Indian wars on the western frontier But as army operations moved west the War Department moved this function to the St Louis Arsenal in Missouri There it had access to transportation on the Mississippi and Missouri rivers On 20 April 1871 Carlisle Barracks was officially discontinued as a sub Depot for the Mounted Recruit Service The installation was available for new uses Carlisle Indian Industrial School edit nbsp Carlisle Indian Industrial School logoMain article Carlisle Indian Industrial School In 1879 the War Department transferred control of the post to the Department of the Interior The US Congress had authorized the Bureau of Indian Affairs BIA to found the first off reservation Indian boarding school for the education of Native American children During and at the end of the Indian Wars the US government sought a way to assimilate and integrate the children into European American culture teaching them English trades and Christianity The Carlisle Indian Industrial School officially opened on 1 November 1879 and operated until 1918 Among the first batch of students were groups of children from Sioux Lakota bands that had rebelled against the US 7 The Indian Bureau sent the children to the school to be educated and essentially kept as political hostages to ensure compliant behavior on the part of the bands from which they had been taken 7 Commanding General of the Army William T Sherman had acceded to the petitions of Richard Henry Pratt to use the barracks for a model Indian school The goal was for children to learn English and European American ways to gain an education apart from the reservations and live among European American men and women Pratt believed Native Americans needed such education to be able to protect their lands and societies He became the school s founder and first superintendent He based the school s program on his experience since 1875 in supervising and educating Indian prisoners of war at Fort Marion in St Augustine Florida Twenty young Indian men gained further education at Hampton Institute a historically black college and private schools in New York 1918 1950 editOn 1 September 1918 with World War I underway the U S Army took back Carlisle Barracks from the Department of Interior It used the facility to respond to a wide set of changing army and security needs At the end of World War I the U S Army established General Hospital No 31 as a pioneering rehabilitation center there For two years the hospital provided medical treatment mental reconditioning and vocational training for more than 4 000 afflicted soldiers returned from service with the American Expeditionary Forces in France Carlisle Barracks equipment laboratory designed and tested new products including improved lighting for field hospitals a field dental dispensary first aid kits for arctic rescue and the First aid Packet U S Government Carlisle Model bandage field dressing 8 In the fall of 1920 the Medical Field Service School was established under Colonel Percy M Ashburn s command Drawing on the lessons of World War I the school developed medical equipment and doctrine suitable for the battlefield More than 30 000 officers and NCOs passed through the school during its 26 year tenure at Carlisle Barracks They applied classroom instruction and field exercises to train in care of casualties and disease prevention the latter a major problem for the military until improvements in sanitation and antibiotics When the Medical Field Service School departed in 1946 for Fort Sam Houston at San Antonio Texas after World War II educational innovation continued From 1946 until 1951 six U S Army schools were located at Carlisle Barracks First was the Army Information School followed shortly by the School for Government of Occupied Areas and the Adjutant General s School for army personnel managers The next year brought the Chaplain School and the Military Police School Finally the Army Security Agency School began highly classified operations in 1949 and stayed for two years before being displaced United States Army War College edit nbsp USAWC LogoMain article United States Army War College In the spring of 1951 the United States Army War College senior educational institution of the U S Army relocated to Carlisle Barracks in central Pennsylvania The college established in 1903 and formerly located in Washington D C had functioned as part of the General Staff during its early years It chiefly prepared selected officers for high command Distinguished graduates of that period included John J Pershing Class of 1905 Dwight D Eisenhower 1927 and Omar N Bradley 1934 Classes were suspended in 1940 during the preparedness mobilization for World War II and not resumed until a decade later at Fort Leavenworth Kansas for the 1950 51 academic year The new commandant Lieutenant General Joseph M Swing relocated with the college to Pennsylvania in July 1951 and turned over command to his successor Lieutenant General Edward M Almond in time for the arrival of the first Carlisle based class At Carlisle the Army War College expanded steadily adding new programs and specialties The college outgrew its main academic building the current Upton Hall In 1967 it transferred to Root Hall newly constructed to accommodate current requirements Two specialized agencies evolved into integral parts of the Army War College the Strategic Studies Institute first formed in 1954 and the Military History Institute established in 1967 The Center for Strategic Leadership a state of the art war gaming complex opened in 1994 incorporating increasingly sophisticated technology In 2005 the Carlisle Barracks was listed as a candidate for closure under the realignment process and hearings of the Base Realignment and Closure Commission but was subsequently removed from the list In 2006 ground was broken on a major project across the road from Carlisle Barracks to construct new military housing work that had been postponed pending BRAC review It was part of the Residential Community Initiative a public private venture of the Army In Carlisle the development project included renovation of some historic housing and construction of nearly 200 new units of housing with 3 4 bedrooms each and more than 2000 2500 square feet of space 9 Demographics editCarlisle Barracks CDPCensus designated place nbsp nbsp nbsp Carlisle Barracks CDPShow map of Pennsylvania nbsp nbsp Carlisle Barracks CDPShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 40 12 37 N 77 10 23 W 40 2102134 N 77 1729795 W 40 2102134 77 1729795Country nbsp United StatesState nbsp PennsylvaniaCountyCumberlandArea 10 Total0 34 sq mi 0 88 km2 Land0 34 sq mi 0 87 km2 Water0 01 sq mi 0 01 km2 Elevation 11 463 ft 141 m Population 2020 12 Total938 Density2 783 38 sq mi 1 075 84 km2 Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT FIPS code42 42041 11 GNIS feature ID2804361 11 Carlisle Barracks CDP is a census designated place CDP covering the residential population of the Carlisle Barracks in Cumberland County Pennsylvania United States It was first listed as a CDP in the 2020 census with a population of 938 13 Historical population CensusPop Note 2020938 U S Decennial Census 14 2020 15 12 2020 census edit Carlisle Barracks CDP Pennsylvania Demographic Profile NH Non Hispanic Note the US Census treats Hispanic Latino as an ethnic category This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category Hispanics Latinos may be of any race Race Ethnicity Pop 2020 15 2020White alone NH 709 75 59 Black or African American alone NH 74 7 89 Native American or Alaska Native alone NH 3 0 32 Asian alone NH 27 2 88 Pacific Islander alone NH 4 0 43 Some Other Race alone NH 1 0 11 Mixed Race Multi Racial NH 68 7 25 Hispanic or Latino any race 52 5 54 Total 938 100 00 References edit PHMC Historical Markers Search Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Archived from the original Searchable database on 21 March 2016 Retrieved 25 January 2014 Military Installations in Cumberland County Cumberland County Economic Development Corporation 2005 Archived from the original on 29 October 2006 Retrieved 28 January 2007 Henry Knox 10 Return of Ordnance Arms and Military Stores A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation U S Congressional Documents and Debates 1774 1875 American State Papers Senate 3rd Congress 1st Session Library of Congress National Historic Landmarks amp National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania CRGIS Cultural Resources Geographic Information System Archived from the original Searchable database on 21 July 2007 Retrieved 21 January 2012 Note This includes Capt Phillip D Goodwin June 1973 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Hessian Powder Magazine PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 February 2014 Retrieved 21 January 2012 Note The U S Army Armor School was established in 1940 at Fort Knox Kentucky remaining there until transferring to Fort Benning Georgia in 2010 Hastings Canfield family history a b Chapman Daniel T December 1970 The Great White Father s Little Red Indian School American Heritage 22 1 Cress Joseph David Hidden History of Cumberland County History Press 2013 Ground breaks for new military housing The Sentinel 2006 Archived from the original on 25 January 2007 Retrieved 28 January 2007 ArcGIS REST Services Directory United States Census Bureau Retrieved 12 October 2022 a b c Carlisle Barracks Census Designated Place Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior a b Census Population API United States Census Bureau Retrieved 12 October 2022 Carlisle Barracks CDP Pennsylvania United States Census Bureau Retrieved 14 May 2022 Decennial Census of Population and Housing by Decades US Census Bureau a b P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2020 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Carlisle Barracks CDP Pennsylvania United States Census Bureau External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carlisle Barracks Carlisle Barracks Garrison Tenant Units Carlisle Barracks Manuscript Collection US Army Heritage and Education Center Carlisle Pennsylvania Carlisle Barracks Photograph Collection US Army Heritage and Education Center Carlisle Pennsylvania 40 12 37 N 77 10 25 W 40 21028 N 77 17361 W 40 21028 77 17361 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carlisle Barracks amp oldid 1185345075, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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