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Fort Moore

Fort Moore (formerly Fort Benning) is a United States Army post near Columbus, Georgia. Located on Georgia's border with Alabama, Fort Moore supports more than 120,000 active-duty military, family members, reserve component soldiers, retirees and civilian employees on a daily basis. As a power projection platform, the post can deploy combat-ready forces by air, rail, and highway for their designated mission. Fort Moore is the home of the United States Army Maneuver Center of Excellence, the United States Army Armor School, United States Army Infantry School, the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (formerly known as the School of the Americas), elements of the 75th Ranger Regiment, the 1st Security Force Assistance Brigade, and other tenant units.

Fort Moore
Part of Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC)
Forces Command (FORSCOM)
Special Operations Command (USSOCOM)
Columbus, Georgia Metropolitan Statistical Area
Chattahoochee County, Georgia (93%) and Russell County, Alabama (7%)
≈182,000 acres (74,000 ha, 284 sq mi, 740 km2)
Maneuver Center of Excellence
Fort Moore
Fort Moore
Coordinates32°21′58″N 84°58′09″W / 32.36611°N 84.96917°W / 32.36611; -84.96917
TypeArmy post
Site information
Controlled by United States Army
WebsiteOfficial Website
Site history
Built1909; 115 years ago (1909)
In use1918–present
Garrison information
GarrisonUnits and tenant units

Established in 1918 as Camp Benning, named after a Confederate general in the American Civil War, it was the Home of the Infantry.[a] In 1922 Camp Benning became Fort Benning. In 2005, it was transformed into the Maneuver Center of Excellence, as a result of the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) Commission's decision to consolidate a number of schools and installations to create various "centers of excellence". Included in this transformation was the move of the Armor School from Fort Knox to Fort Moore.[2]

In 2023 the name was changed to honor General Hal Moore and his wife Julia Compton Moore as part of the process of renaming military assets associated with the Confederacy.

Fort Benning and Lawson Field

History edit

 
Fort Moore was formerly named after Confederate General Henry L. Benning.

Camp Benning was established 19 October 1918,[3] initially providing basic training for World War I units, post-war. Dwight D. Eisenhower served at Benning from 24 December 1918,[4] until 15 March 1919,[5] with about 250 of his Camp Colt, Pennsylvania, tankers who had been transferred to Benning after the armistice.[6]: 72  In December 1918, a portion of the Camp Polk tank school near Raleigh, North Carolina was transferred to Camp Benning "to work in conjunction with the Infantry school".[7] Camp Benning tank troops were moved to Camp Meade in February 1919.[7]

In February 1920, Congress voted to declare Camp Benning a permanent military post and appropriated more than $1 million of additional building funds for the Infantry School of Arms, which later became the Infantry School.[8] By the fall of 1920, more than 350 officers, 7,000 troops and 650 student officers lived at Camp Benning.[8] The post was renamed to Fort Benning in 1922, after Henry L. Benning, a general in the army of the Confederate States of America.[9][10] Benning fought against U.S. Army troops in the Civil War as commander of Confederate States Army forces.[11][12]

In 1924, Brig. Gen. Briant H. Wells became the fourth commandant of the Infantry School and established the Wells Plan for permanent construction on the installation, emphasizing the importance of the outdoor environment and recreation opportunities for military personnel. During Wells' tenure, the post developed recreational facilities such as Doughboy Stadium, Gowdy Field, the post theater and Russ swimming pool. Doughboy Stadium was erected as a memorial by soldiers to their fallen comrades of World War I. One of the Doughboys' original coaches was a young captain named Dwight D. Eisenhower.[13][14][15]

Lt. Col George C. Marshall was appointed assistant commandant of the post in 1927 and initiated major changes. Marshall, who later became the Army Chief of Staff during World War II, was appalled by the high casualties of World War I caused, he thought, by insufficient training. He was determined to prevent a lack of preparation from costing more lives in future conflicts. He and his subordinates revamped the education system at Fort Benning. The changes he fostered are still known as the Benning Revolution. Later in his life, Marshall went on to author the Marshall Plan for reviving postwar Europe and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1953.[15]

In August 1940, two officers and 46 enlisted volunteers of what was known as the Parachute Test Platoon, made their first airborne jump over Lawson Field at Fort Benning after intensive training. Observers from several countries including Germany and the Soviet Union attended. These 48 were the seed that grew into the branches of America's Airborne Infantry.

 
The crew of a 37 mm gun M3 anti-tank gun, in training at Fort Benning, Georgia, April 1942

During World War II Fort Benning had 197,159 acres (79,787 ha) with billeting space for 3,970 officers and 94,873 enlisted persons. Among many other units, Fort Benning was the home of the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion, whose training began in December 1943. The unit's formation was an important milestone for black Americans, as was explored in the first narrative history of the installation, Home of the Infantry.[16][17] The battalion, later expanded to become the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion and nicknamed the Triple Nickels, was trained at Fort Benning but did not deploy overseas and never saw combat during World War II.[18][19][20][21]

During this period, the specialized duties of the Triple Nickels were primarily in a firefighting role, with over one thousand parachute jumps as smoke jumpers. The 555th was deployed to the Pacific Northwest of the United States in response to the concern that forest fires were being set by the Japanese military using long-range incendiary balloons. The 82nd Armored Reconnaissance Battalion was activated 15 July 1940, and trained at the Fort.[18][19][20][21] The 17th Armored Engineer Battalion became active and started training 15 July 1940.[22]

On 28 March 1941, the body of Private Felix "Poss" Hall was found hanged in a shallow ravine near what is now Logan Avenue.[23] Born 1 January 1922, in Millbrook, Alabama, he enlisted in the Army in August 1940. He was assigned to serve in the 24th Infantry Regiment at Fort Benning, an all-Black segregated unit formed after the Civil War. Two cousins and his best friend from Millbrook were also stationed at Fort Benning and bunked near him. Hall was known for being friendly and popular, and worked at the base sawmill. On 12 February he told his friends that he was headed to the post exchange for Black servicemen after his work shift. He was last seen alive around 4:00 p.m. in Block W, an all-white neighborhood between the mill and post exchange. He did not appear at bugle call the next morning, and was declared a deserter nearly a month after his disappearance.[24]

His body was found by soldiers on 28 March 1941, hanging against the edge of a ravine in a wooded area. His death was officially declared a homicide, although military officials speculated he had committed suicide.[25] A Fort Benning physician examined his body on 8 April and ruled it a homicide.[23] A 0.25-inch (6.4 mm) noose tied to a sapling was wrapped around his neck, his feet had been bound by baling wire and attached with a rope to other saplings, and his hands were tied behind him. The position of his feet indicated that he had attempted to pile dirt beneath his feet to help alleviate the pressure on his neck.[24]

His murder became widely reported in Black newspapers throughout the country, and the only known publicly available photograph of Felix was published in The Pittsburgh Courier.[25] The FBI conducted a 17-month long investigation, but ultimately no one was charged for the murder of Hall.[23] On 3 August 2021, the Army unveiled a marker in memory of Felix Hall at the site where he was last seen alive.[26] A memorial event was also held during the unveiling of his marker.[27] His name is inscribed at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice.[28]

On 23 March 1941, Private Albert King, a Black serviceman, was killed by Sergeant Robert Lummus, who was White, following an altercation on a bus. After a night of drinking, King, Pfc. Lawrence Hoover, and their girlfriends, were riding on a bus around 3:30 am, back to their barracks. King was shouting and "cussing", according to the driver and other Black passengers. The driver stopped the bus near the Fort's gates and Sergeant Lummus, a Military Police motorcycle officer, boarded the bus. When Lummus tried to take King and Hoover off the bus, King ran out the front door, and Lummus hit Hoover with a blackjack.[29]

After taking Hoover into custody, Lummus later found a Black soldier walking back toward the main post. Lummus approached King and threatened to arrest him. When King claimed that Lummus could not do so, Lummus shot King five times, killing him. During the trial, later that day, it was claimed that King had drawn a pocket knife when approached by Lummus, though Hoover denied that King had a pocket knife with him. Lummus was found not guilty of murder and transferred the next day to Fort Knox.[29]

At the start of the Korean War an Airborne Ranger Training Center was established by Colonel John G. Van Houten under the direction of General J. Lawton Collins.[30]

The 4th Infantry Division, first of four divisions committed by the United States to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, reorganized and completed its basic training at Fort Benning (Sand Hill and Harmony Church areas) from October 1950 to May 1951, when it deployed to Germany for five years.

The Airborne School on Main Post has three 249-foot (76 m) drop towers called "Free Towers." They are used to train paratroopers. The towers were modeled after the parachute towers at the 1939 World's Fair in New York. Only three towers stand today; the fourth tower was toppled by a tornado on 14 March 1954.

During the spring of 1962 General Herbert B. Powell, Commanding General, U.S. Continental Army Command, directed that all instruction at the Infantry School after 1 July reflect Reorganization Objective Army Division structures.[31] Therefore, the Infantry School asked for permission to reorganize the 1st Infantry Brigade under a ROAD structure. Instead, the Army Staff decided to inactivate the Pentomic-structured brigade and replace it with a new ROAD unit, the 197th Infantry Brigade, which resolved a unit designation issue.

With the designation 1st Infantry Brigade slated to return to the 1st Infantry Division when it converted to ROAD, the existing unit at Fort Benning required a new title. The staff selected an infantry brigade number that had been associated with an Organized Reserve division that was no longer in the force. For the new ROAD brigade at Fort Benning, Georgia, the adjutant general on 1 August 1962, restored elements of the 99th Reconnaissance Troop, which thirty years earlier had been organized by consolidating infantry brigade headquarters and headquarters companies of the 99th Infantry Division, as Headquarters and Headquarters Companies, 197th and 198th Infantry Brigades.

 
Chief of Staff of the United States Army George W. Casey Jr. at Fort Benning in 2009.

Fort Benning was the site of the Scout dog school of the United States during the Vietnam War, where the dogs trained to detect ambushes in enemy terrain got their initial training, before being transferred to Vietnam for further advanced courses.[32]

Fort Benning also had an urban village, McKenna Military Operations in Urban Terrain, built by Army engineers for urban training of soldiers. It was used for live, virtual and constructive experimentation on soldier systems, weapons, and equipment. The site was approximately 200 meters square, and included 15 buildings resembling a European village. There was a church, small houses, domestic residences and office-style buildings.[33]

In 1984, following the signing of the Panama Canal Treaty, the School of the Americas relocated from Fort Gulick (Panama) to Fort Benning.[34] After criticism concerning human rights violations committed by a number of graduates in Latin America, the school was renamed Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation.[35]

As a result of national protests following the 25 May 2020, murder of George Floyd, an African American man, by Minneapolis police, Congress began to evaluate Democratic proposals to strip the names of Confederate leaders from military bases, including Fort Benning.[36]

Designation edit

The installation was originally named for Henry L. Benning, a brigadier general in the Confederate States Army during the Civil War.[9][37] Fort Benning was one of the ten U.S. Army installations named for former Confederate generals that were renamed on 11 May 2023,[38][39][40][41] following a recommendation from the congressionally mandated Naming Commission that Fort Benning be renamed Fort Moore after Lieutenant General Hal Moore and his wife Julia Compton Moore, both of whom are buried on post.[42] On 6 October 2022, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin accepted the recommendation and directed the name change occur no later than 1 January 2024.[43][44][45][46] The redesignation ceremony officially renaming Fort Benning as Fort Moore was held on 11 May 2023, the day the renaming took effect.[47]

Commanding Generals edit

  • Major General Curtis A. Buzzard July 2022 - present
  • Major General Patrick J. Donahoe July 2020 - July 2022
  • Major General Gary M. Brito March 2018 – July 2020
  • Major General Eric J. Wesley March 2016 - March 2018
  • Major General Austin S. Miller July 2014 – March 2016
  • Major General H.R. McMaster Jun 2012 – July 2014
  • Major General Robert B. Brown Nov 2010 – Jun 2012
  • Major General Michael Ferriter Jun 2009 – Nov 2010
  • Major General Michael D. Barbero Nov 2008 – Jun 2009
  • Major General Walter Wojdakowski Aug 2005 – Nov 2008
  • Major General Benjamin C. Freakley Jul 2003 – Aug 2005
  • Major General Paul D. Eaton Oct 2001 – Jun 2003
  • Major General John M. Le Moyne Sep 1999 – Oct 2001
  • Major General Carl F. Ernst Jul 1996 – Sep 1999
  • Major General John W. Hendrik Sep 1994 – Jul 1996
  • Major General Jerry A. White Oct 1991 – Sept 1994
  • Major General Carmen J. Cavezza Jun 1990 – Oct 1991
  • Major General Michael F. Spigelmire Sep 1988 – Jun 1990
  • Major General Kenneth C. Leuer Jun 1987 – Sep 1988
  • Major General Edwin H. Burba Jr. Jan 1986 – Jun 1987
  • Major General John W. Foss Mar 1984 – Jan 1986
  • Major General James J. Lindsay Jul 1983 – Mar 1984
  • Major General RL "Sam" Wetzel Aug 1981 – Jul 1983
  • Major General David E. Grange Jr. Jun 1979 – Aug 1981
  • Major General William J. Livsey Jul 1977 – Apr 1979
  • Major General Willard Latham Aug 1975 – Jul 1977
  • Major General Thomas M. Tarpley Feb 1973 – Aug 1975
  • Major General Orwin C. Talbott Sep 1969 – Feb 1973
  • Major General George I. Forsythe May 1969 – Aug 1969
  • Major General John M. Wright Jr. Jul 1967 – May 1969
  • Major General Robert H. York Jul 1965 – Jul 1967
  • Major General John A. Heintges Aug 1964 – Jul 1965
  • Major General Charles W. G. Rich Feb 1963 – Aug 1964
  • Major General Ben Harrell Aug 1961 – Feb 1963
  • Major General Hugh P. Harris Apr 1960 – Jul 1961
  • Major General Paul L. Freeman May 1958 – Apr 1960
  • Major General Herbert B. Powell Aug 1956 – Apr 1958
  • Major General George E. Lynch May 1956 – Aug 1956
  • Major General Joseph H. Harper Jun 1954 – May 1956
  • Major General Guy S. Meloy Jr. Jan 1953 – June 1954
  • Major General Robert Nicholas Young Jun 1952 – Jan 1953
  • Major General John H. Church Mar 1951 – May 1952
  • Major General Withers A. Burress Jul 1948 – Jan 1951
  • Major General John W. O'Daniel Jul 1945 – June 1948
  • Major General Fred L. Walker Jul 1944 – Jul 1945
  • Major General Charles Hartwell Bonesteel Jr. Sep 1943 – Jun 1944
  • Major General Leven C. Allen Feb 1942 – Sep 1943
  • Brigade General Omar N. Bradley Mar 1941 – Feb 1942
  • Brigade General Courtney H. Hodges Oct 1940 – Mar 1941
  • Brigade General Asa L. Singleton Oct 1936 – Aug 1940
  • Brigade General George H. Estes Sep 1933 – Sep 1936
  • Major General Campbell King May 1929 – May 1933
  • Brigade General G Edgar T. Collins Mar 1926 – May 1929
  • Brigade General Briant H. Wells Nov 1923 – Mar 1926
  • Major General Walter H. Gordon Sep 1920 – Nov 1923
  • Major General Charles S. Farnsworth Apr 1919 – Jul 1920
  • Colonel Henry E. Eames Oct 1918 – Apr 1919[48]


 
Fort Benning, Georgia Home of the Infantry

Post information edit

There are four main cantonment areas on Fort Moore: Main Post, Kelley Hill, Sand Hill, and Harmony Church.

Main Post edit

Main Post houses various garrison and smaller FORSCOM units of Fort Moore such as 14th Combat Support Hospital and 11th Engineer Battalion FORSCOM as well as a number of TRADOC-related tenants, e.g. the Officer Candidate School, the Non-Commissioned Officers Academy, and the Airborne School. McGinnis-Wickham Hall (formerly known as Infantry Hall) is the post headquarters and Maneuver Center of Excellence. Adjacent is the Ranger Memorial and the National Infantry Museum. The Army Infantry School conducts its graduations on Inouye Field, sprinkled with soil from the battlegrounds of Yorktown, Antietam, Soissons, Normandy, Corregidor, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan.[49]

Kelley Hill edit

The 197th Infantry Brigade was located on Kelley Hill in the 1970s and early 1980s

Kelley Hill formerly housed the 3rd Brigade Combat Team of the 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized), the parent unit of two combined armed battalions; 1st Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Battalion, 69th Armor Regiment, as well as 3rd Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment, 1st Battalion, 10th Field Artillery Regiment, and two support battalions; the 203rd Brigade Support Battalion and the Special Troops Battalion, 3rd BCT. Included in the roster was the 179th Military Intelligence Detachment.

Between 11 December 2015, and 15 December 2015, the 3rd BCT's six subordinate battalions performed inactivation ceremonies on Sledgehammer Field. On 16 December 2015, 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment Task Force (or Task Force 1-28) was activated in its place. Task Force 1-28 is a 1053-member unit "made up of selected soldiers from the six inactivated battalions that formed the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division".[50]

 
Folder of souvenir postcards of Columbus and Fort Benning, Georgia

Sand Hill edit

Sand Hill is the primary location of the 198th Infantry Brigade and 197th Infantry Brigade responsible for training Infantry One Station Unit Training (OSUT). Its units include the following:

  • 1st Battalion, 19th Infantry Regiment
  • 2d Battalion, 19th Infantry Regiment
  • 2d Battalion, 29th Infantry Regiment
  • 1st Battalion, 46th Infantry Regiment
  • 2d Battalion, 47th Infantry Regiment
  • 3d Battalion, 47th Infantry Regiment
  • 3d Battalion, 54th Infantry Regiment
  • 1st Battalion, 50th Infantry Regiment
  • 2d Battalion, 54th Infantry Regiment
  • 2d Battalion, 58th Infantry Regiment
  • 30th AG Battalion (Reception)
 
Fort Moore "Home of the Infantry"

Harmony Church edit

Harmony Church area houses the 194th Armored Brigade, 316th Cavalry Brigade Armor School and the first phase of Ranger School, 4th Ranger Training Battalion (ARTB). After the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) Commission's decision to create the Maneuver Center of Excellence (MCoE), Harmony Church is now the new home of the Armor School.

Command group edit

 

Current[as of?] command[51]

  • Commanding general, U.S. Army MCoE: Major General Curtis A. Buzzard[52]
  • Command sergeant major, U.S. Army MCoE: Command Sergeant Major Jerry L. Dodson[53]
  • Deputy to the commanding general, U.S. Army MCoE: Mr. Donald M. Sando[54]
  • Commandant, U.S. Army Infantry School: Major General Monte L. Rone
  • Command sergeant major, U.S. Army Infantry School: Command Sergeant Major Jason P. Dein
  • Commandant, U.S. Army Armor School: Brigadier General Michael J.Simmering
  • Command sergeant major, U.S. Army Armor School: Command Sergeant Major Waylon D. Petty
  • Deputy commanding general, U.S. Army MCoE: Brigadier General Eric J. Riley
  • Chief of staff, U.S. Army MCoE: Colonel Ryan Wylie[55]
  • Garrison commander, U.S. Army Fort Moore: Colonel Colin P. Mahle
  • Garrison command sergeant major, U.S. Army Fort Moore: Command Sergeant Major Michael D. Sanchez

Units and tenant units edit


 

Armor School move edit

Fort Moore was selected by the Base Realignment and Closing Commission to be the home of the new Maneuver Center of Excellence (MCoE). This realignment co-located the United States Army Armor Center and School,[57] formerly located at Fort Knox, Kentucky, with the Infantry Center and School.[58] This transformation was completed September 2011.[59]

Education edit

The Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) operates on-base schools for Fort Moore children:[60]

  • Faith Middle School
  • McBride Elementary School
  • Stowers Elementary School
  • White Elementary School

High school students attend local public high schools operated by county governments.[60] The portion in Muscogee County is zoned to high schools of Muscogee County Schools.[61] The portion in Chattahoochee County is zoned to Chattahoochee County Schools.[62]

Any Fort Moore pupil, however, may attend Muscogee County schools if their parents wish, as per House Bill 224.[63]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Fort Sill encompassed the Infantry School in 1913; the Infantry school moved to Camp Benning in 1918.[1]
  1. ^ Lance Janda, Oklahoma History Center The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture —Fort Sill
  2. ^ "Maneuver Center of Excellence". Retrieved 5 September 2023.
  3. ^ "The Founding of Camp Benning" (PDF). U.S. Army Fort Benning and The Fort Benning Maneuver Center of Excellence. US Army. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 June 2011. Retrieved 21 September 2012.
  5. ^ "Eisenhower General Information". ibiblio.org.
  6. ^ Perret, Geoffrey (June 2000). Eisenhower (Google Books). Adams Media Corporation. ISBN 9781580624312. Retrieved 21 January 2011.
  7. ^ a b Rockenbach, Samuel D (13 October 1919). Report of the Director of the Tank Corps for the year ending June 30, 1919. Congressional serial set, Issue 7688 (Report). Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  8. ^ a b Kane, Sharyn (May 2003). Fort Benning: The Land and the People. p. 172.
  9. ^ a b Rhea, Gordon (25 January 2011). . Civil War Trust. Archived from the original on 21 March 2011. Retrieved 21 March 2011.
  10. ^ Benning, Henry L. (1 July 1849). "Letter from Henry Benning to Howell Cobb". Civil War Causes. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  11. ^ Petraeus, David (9 June 2020). "Take the Confederate Names Off Our Army Bases". The Atlantic.
  12. ^ "Historian explores how Civil War Northerners reconciled treason with leniency | Penn State University". news.psu.edu.
  13. ^ Ninke, Joshua. "Doughboys to honor veterans at Doughboy Stadium". Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  14. ^ . Doughboy Stadium. Archived from the original on 20 March 2013. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  15. ^ a b Kane, Sharyn (May 2003). Fort Benning: The Land and the People. pp. 173–174.
  16. ^ Bunn, Michael J. (Summer 2008). "Home of the Infantry: The History of Fort Benning". Georgia Historical Quarterly. 92 (2): 268–270. ISSN 0016-8297.
  17. ^ Stelpflug, Peggy A.; Richard Hyatt (2007). Home of the Infantry: The History of Fort Benning. Macon: Mercer University Press. pp. 300–67. ISBN 978-0-88146-087-2.
  18. ^ a b "82nd Recon History". www.2ndarmoredhellonwheels.com. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  19. ^ a b "After action report 82nd Armored Recon Battalion, 2nd Armored Division, June 44 thru May 45". cdmhost.com.
  20. ^ a b "World War II unit histories & officers". unithistories.com.
  21. ^ a b "History of the 2nd Armored Division - Hell On Wheels". www.militaryvetshop.com.
  22. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 July 2014. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
  23. ^ a b c Digital Repository Service, Civil Rights and Restorative Justice. "Felix Hall Case Summary". Northeastern University Library. hdl:2047/D20263273.
  24. ^ a b Mills, Alexa (2 September 2016). "A Lynching Kept Out of Sight". The Washington Post.
  25. ^ a b Fortin, Jacey; Mills, Alexa (20 August 2021). "Felix Hall, a Soldier Lynched at Fort Benning, Is Remembered After 80 Years". The New York Times.
  26. ^ Dickstein, Corey (3 August 2021). "Fort Benning memorializes soldier lynched 80 years earlier at the post as Army acknowledges an injustice". The Stars and Stripes.
  27. ^ Winkie, Davis (3 August 2021). "Fort Benning memorializes Black soldier lynched in 1941, as post awaits renaming effort". Army Times.
  28. ^ "National Memorial for Peace and Justice". 31 October 2017.
  29. ^ a b Mills, Alexa (28 May 2021). "Albert King Is Not Forgotten". The Wall Street Journal.
  30. ^ "Major General John G. Van Houten". www.soc.mil. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
  31. ^ Maneuver and Firepower, Chapter 11
  32. ^ Rubinstein, Wain (June 1969). Danger Forward. Archived from the original on August 3, 2009. Retrieved June 17, 2009.
  33. ^ MVRsimulation. "MVRsimulation Virtual Fort Benning, McKenna Urban Operations Training Site". www.MVRsimulation.com. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  34. ^ McCoy, Katherine E. (2005). "Trained to Torture? The Human Rights Effects of Military Training at the School of the Americas". Latin American Perspectives. 32 (6): 47–64. doi:10.1177/0094582x05281113. S2CID 144445783.
  35. ^ Bill Wallace; Jim Houston (13 July 2002). "Bay Area protesters sentenced in Georgia". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 12 August 2012.
  36. ^ O’Brien, Connor (11 June 2020). "Scrubbing Confederate names from Army bases gains steam in Congress, but fight with Trump looms". POLITICO. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  37. ^ Benning, Henry L. (18 February 1861). "Speech of Henry Benning to the Virginia Convention". Proceedings of the Virginia State Convention of 1861. pp. 62–75. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  38. ^ Levenson, Michael (11 June 2020). "These Are the 10 U.S. Army Installations Named for Confederates". New York Times. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  39. ^ "S. 4049 – National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021". 116th Congress (2019–2020). 23 July 2020.
  40. ^ Edmondson, Catie (January 2021). "Senate Overrides Trump's Veto of Defense Bill, Dealing a Legislative Blow". The New York Times.
  41. ^ Neuman, Scott (24 July 2020). "Despite Trump's Veto Threat, Senate Approves Provision To Rename Military Bases". NPR.
  42. ^ "Naming_Commission_Final_Report_Part_I.PDF".
  43. ^ "Implementation of the Naming Commission's Recommendations" (PDF). defense .gov. 6 October 2022. Retrieved 5 September 2023.
  44. ^ "Pentagon Press Secretary Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder Holds an On-Camera Press Briefing". U.S. Department of Defense.
  45. ^ BEN WATSON and JENNIFER HLAD (10 Mar 2023) ..Bye-bye Benning..
  46. ^ Herb Scribner (25 Mar 2023) 6 Army bases named after Confederate leaders get dates for new names
  47. ^ Agee, Eugene R.; Betts, Kevin M.; Xiong, Chinhfou (1 January 1992), Data Base Documentation for the Enhanced Computer Administered Tests at Keesler AFB, Fort Sill, Fort Knox, and Fort Benning., Fort Belvoir, VA, doi:10.21236/ada326302{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  48. ^ Maneuver Center Of Excellence Hall of Portraits, Fort Benning, GA
  49. ^ Milzarski, Eric (27 December 2017). "The soil new infantrymen walk on is bloodied from every American war". We Are The Mighty.
  50. ^ Wright, Ben (15 December 2015). "1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment Task Force activated". Columbus Ledger-Enquirer. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  51. ^ "Leaders". www.benning.army.mil.
  52. ^ "Major General Curtis A. Buzzard". www.benning.army.mil.
  53. ^ "Command Sergeant Major Jerry L. Dodson". www.benning.army.mil.
  54. ^ "Mr. Donald M. Sando". www.benning.army.mil.
  55. ^ "Colonel Ryan Wylie". www.benning.army.mil.
  56. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 October 2012.
  57. ^ Maureen Rose (13 June 2011). "Final units depart Fort Knox Armor School". army.mil.
  58. ^ Vince Little, The Bayonet (22 October 2009). "Activation ceremony formally links Infantry, Armor under new command at Fort Benning". army.mil.
  59. ^ "Fort Benning and the Valley – Home – Welcome to the Chattahoochee Valley" (PDF). fortbenningandthevalley.com.
  60. ^ a b "Fort Benning Schools". Department of Defense Education Activity. Retrieved 4 July 2022. - The document states that the county schools have high school zoning.
  61. ^ "2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Muscogee County, GA" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 4 July 2022. - Text list - "Fort Benning Schools" refers to the DoDEA schools on Fort Moore. The document states that the county schools have high school zoning.
  62. ^ "2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Chattahoochee County, GA" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 4 July 2022. - Text list - "Fort Benning Schools" refers to the DoDEA schools on Fort Moore. The document states that the county schools have high school zoning.
  63. ^ "Fort Benning Transfer (FBT) Applications Available July 1". Muscogee County School District. Retrieved 4 July 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Fort Moore at www.georgiaencyclopedia.org
  • official site
  • Post Headquarters - JAG historical marker
  • The Infantry Board historical marker

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This article is about the current U S Army fort in Georgia It is not to be confused with Fort Moore 1846 1853 in California or Moore s Fort in Texas Fort Moore formerly Fort Benning is a United States Army post near Columbus Georgia Located on Georgia s border with Alabama Fort Moore supports more than 120 000 active duty military family members reserve component soldiers retirees and civilian employees on a daily basis As a power projection platform the post can deploy combat ready forces by air rail and highway for their designated mission Fort Moore is the home of the United States Army Maneuver Center of Excellence the United States Army Armor School United States Army Infantry School the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation formerly known as the School of the Americas elements of the 75th Ranger Regiment the 1st Security Force Assistance Brigade and other tenant units Fort Mooreeponyms LTG Hal Moore USA and Julia Compton MoorePart of Training and Doctrine Command TRADOC Forces Command FORSCOM Special Operations Command USSOCOM Columbus Georgia Metropolitan Statistical AreaChattahoochee County Georgia 93 and Russell County Alabama 7 182 000 acres 74 000 ha 284 sq mi 740 km2 Maneuver Center of ExcellenceFort MooreShow map of GeorgiaFort MooreShow map of the United StatesCoordinates32 21 58 N 84 58 09 W 32 36611 N 84 96917 W 32 36611 84 96917TypeArmy postSite informationControlled by United States ArmyWebsiteOfficial WebsiteSite historyBuilt1909 115 years ago 1909 In use1918 presentGarrison informationGarrisonUnits and tenant units 198th Infantry Brigade 197th Infantry Brigade 199th Infantry Brigade 194th Armored Brigade 316th Cavalry Brigade Airborne and Ranger Training Brigade Henry Caro Noncommissioned Officer Academy 14th Combat Support Hospital 44th Medical Brigade Task Force 1 28 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team 75th Ranger Regiment 1st Security Force Assistance Brigade Army Marksmanship Unit 283d MCOE Band 17th Special Tactics Squadron USAF Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation WHINSEC United States Army Armor School United States Army Infantry School Martin Army Community Hospital Established in 1918 as Camp Benning named after a Confederate general in the American Civil War it was the Home of the Infantry a In 1922 Camp Benning became Fort Benning In 2005 it was transformed into the Maneuver Center of Excellence as a result of the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure BRAC Commission s decision to consolidate a number of schools and installations to create various centers of excellence Included in this transformation was the move of the Armor School from Fort Knox to Fort Moore 2 In 2023 the name was changed to honor General Hal Moore and his wife Julia Compton Moore as part of the process of renaming military assets associated with the Confederacy Fort Benning and Lawson Field Contents 1 History 1 1 Designation 1 2 Commanding Generals 2 Post information 2 1 Main Post 2 2 Kelley Hill 2 3 Sand Hill 2 4 Harmony Church 3 Command group 3 1 Units and tenant units 4 Armor School move 5 Education 6 See also 7 Notes and references 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Fort Moore was formerly named after Confederate General Henry L Benning Camp Benning was established 19 October 1918 3 initially providing basic training for World War I units post war Dwight D Eisenhower served at Benning from 24 December 1918 4 until 15 March 1919 5 with about 250 of his Camp Colt Pennsylvania tankers who had been transferred to Benning after the armistice 6 72 In December 1918 a portion of the Camp Polk tank school near Raleigh North Carolina was transferred to Camp Benning to work in conjunction with the Infantry school 7 Camp Benning tank troops were moved to Camp Meade in February 1919 7 In February 1920 Congress voted to declare Camp Benning a permanent military post and appropriated more than 1 million of additional building funds for the Infantry School of Arms which later became the Infantry School 8 By the fall of 1920 more than 350 officers 7 000 troops and 650 student officers lived at Camp Benning 8 The post was renamed to Fort Benning in 1922 after Henry L Benning a general in the army of the Confederate States of America 9 10 Benning fought against U S Army troops in the Civil War as commander of Confederate States Army forces 11 12 In 1924 Brig Gen Briant H Wells became the fourth commandant of the Infantry School and established the Wells Plan for permanent construction on the installation emphasizing the importance of the outdoor environment and recreation opportunities for military personnel During Wells tenure the post developed recreational facilities such as Doughboy Stadium Gowdy Field the post theater and Russ swimming pool Doughboy Stadium was erected as a memorial by soldiers to their fallen comrades of World War I One of the Doughboys original coaches was a young captain named Dwight D Eisenhower 13 14 15 Lt Col George C Marshall was appointed assistant commandant of the post in 1927 and initiated major changes Marshall who later became the Army Chief of Staff during World War II was appalled by the high casualties of World War I caused he thought by insufficient training He was determined to prevent a lack of preparation from costing more lives in future conflicts He and his subordinates revamped the education system at Fort Benning The changes he fostered are still known as the Benning Revolution Later in his life Marshall went on to author the Marshall Plan for reviving postwar Europe and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1953 15 In August 1940 two officers and 46 enlisted volunteers of what was known as the Parachute Test Platoon made their first airborne jump over Lawson Field at Fort Benning after intensive training Observers from several countries including Germany and the Soviet Union attended These 48 were the seed that grew into the branches of America s Airborne Infantry nbsp The crew of a 37 mm gun M3 anti tank gun in training at Fort Benning Georgia April 1942 During World War II Fort Benning had 197 159 acres 79 787 ha with billeting space for 3 970 officers and 94 873 enlisted persons Among many other units Fort Benning was the home of the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion whose training began in December 1943 The unit s formation was an important milestone for black Americans as was explored in the first narrative history of the installation Home of the Infantry 16 17 The battalion later expanded to become the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion and nicknamed the Triple Nickels was trained at Fort Benning but did not deploy overseas and never saw combat during World War II 18 19 20 21 During this period the specialized duties of the Triple Nickels were primarily in a firefighting role with over one thousand parachute jumps as smoke jumpers The 555th was deployed to the Pacific Northwest of the United States in response to the concern that forest fires were being set by the Japanese military using long range incendiary balloons The 82nd Armored Reconnaissance Battalion was activated 15 July 1940 and trained at the Fort 18 19 20 21 The 17th Armored Engineer Battalion became active and started training 15 July 1940 22 On 28 March 1941 the body of Private Felix Poss Hall was found hanged in a shallow ravine near what is now Logan Avenue 23 Born 1 January 1922 in Millbrook Alabama he enlisted in the Army in August 1940 He was assigned to serve in the 24th Infantry Regiment at Fort Benning an all Black segregated unit formed after the Civil War Two cousins and his best friend from Millbrook were also stationed at Fort Benning and bunked near him Hall was known for being friendly and popular and worked at the base sawmill On 12 February he told his friends that he was headed to the post exchange for Black servicemen after his work shift He was last seen alive around 4 00 p m in Block W an all white neighborhood between the mill and post exchange He did not appear at bugle call the next morning and was declared a deserter nearly a month after his disappearance 24 His body was found by soldiers on 28 March 1941 hanging against the edge of a ravine in a wooded area His death was officially declared a homicide although military officials speculated he had committed suicide 25 A Fort Benning physician examined his body on 8 April and ruled it a homicide 23 A 0 25 inch 6 4 mm noose tied to a sapling was wrapped around his neck his feet had been bound by baling wire and attached with a rope to other saplings and his hands were tied behind him The position of his feet indicated that he had attempted to pile dirt beneath his feet to help alleviate the pressure on his neck 24 His murder became widely reported in Black newspapers throughout the country and the only known publicly available photograph of Felix was published in The Pittsburgh Courier 25 The FBI conducted a 17 month long investigation but ultimately no one was charged for the murder of Hall 23 On 3 August 2021 the Army unveiled a marker in memory of Felix Hall at the site where he was last seen alive 26 A memorial event was also held during the unveiling of his marker 27 His name is inscribed at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice 28 On 23 March 1941 Private Albert King a Black serviceman was killed by Sergeant Robert Lummus who was White following an altercation on a bus After a night of drinking King Pfc Lawrence Hoover and their girlfriends were riding on a bus around 3 30 am back to their barracks King was shouting and cussing according to the driver and other Black passengers The driver stopped the bus near the Fort s gates and Sergeant Lummus a Military Police motorcycle officer boarded the bus When Lummus tried to take King and Hoover off the bus King ran out the front door and Lummus hit Hoover with a blackjack 29 After taking Hoover into custody Lummus later found a Black soldier walking back toward the main post Lummus approached King and threatened to arrest him When King claimed that Lummus could not do so Lummus shot King five times killing him During the trial later that day it was claimed that King had drawn a pocket knife when approached by Lummus though Hoover denied that King had a pocket knife with him Lummus was found not guilty of murder and transferred the next day to Fort Knox 29 At the start of the Korean War an Airborne Ranger Training Center was established by Colonel John G Van Houten under the direction of General J Lawton Collins 30 The 4th Infantry Division first of four divisions committed by the United States to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization reorganized and completed its basic training at Fort Benning Sand Hill and Harmony Church areas from October 1950 to May 1951 when it deployed to Germany for five years The Airborne School on Main Post has three 249 foot 76 m drop towers called Free Towers They are used to train paratroopers The towers were modeled after the parachute towers at the 1939 World s Fair in New York Only three towers stand today the fourth tower was toppled by a tornado on 14 March 1954 During the spring of 1962 General Herbert B Powell Commanding General U S Continental Army Command directed that all instruction at the Infantry School after 1 July reflect Reorganization Objective Army Division structures 31 Therefore the Infantry School asked for permission to reorganize the 1st Infantry Brigade under a ROAD structure Instead the Army Staff decided to inactivate the Pentomic structured brigade and replace it with a new ROAD unit the 197th Infantry Brigade which resolved a unit designation issue With the designation 1st Infantry Brigade slated to return to the 1st Infantry Division when it converted to ROAD the existing unit at Fort Benning required a new title The staff selected an infantry brigade number that had been associated with an Organized Reserve division that was no longer in the force For the new ROAD brigade at Fort Benning Georgia the adjutant general on 1 August 1962 restored elements of the 99th Reconnaissance Troop which thirty years earlier had been organized by consolidating infantry brigade headquarters and headquarters companies of the 99th Infantry Division as Headquarters and Headquarters Companies 197th and 198th Infantry Brigades nbsp Chief of Staff of the United States Army George W Casey Jr at Fort Benning in 2009 Fort Benning was the site of the Scout dog school of the United States during the Vietnam War where the dogs trained to detect ambushes in enemy terrain got their initial training before being transferred to Vietnam for further advanced courses 32 Fort Benning also had an urban village McKenna Military Operations in Urban Terrain built by Army engineers for urban training of soldiers It was used for live virtual and constructive experimentation on soldier systems weapons and equipment The site was approximately 200 meters square and included 15 buildings resembling a European village There was a church small houses domestic residences and office style buildings 33 In 1984 following the signing of the Panama Canal Treaty the School of the Americas relocated from Fort Gulick Panama to Fort Benning 34 After criticism concerning human rights violations committed by a number of graduates in Latin America the school was renamed Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation 35 As a result of national protests following the 25 May 2020 murder of George Floyd an African American man by Minneapolis police Congress began to evaluate Democratic proposals to strip the names of Confederate leaders from military bases including Fort Benning 36 Designation edit The installation was originally named for Henry L Benning a brigadier general in the Confederate States Army during the Civil War 9 37 Fort Benning was one of the ten U S Army installations named for former Confederate generals that were renamed on 11 May 2023 38 39 40 41 following a recommendation from the congressionally mandated Naming Commission that Fort Benning be renamed Fort Moore after Lieutenant General Hal Moore and his wife Julia Compton Moore both of whom are buried on post 42 On 6 October 2022 Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin accepted the recommendation and directed the name change occur no later than 1 January 2024 43 44 45 46 The redesignation ceremony officially renaming Fort Benning as Fort Moore was held on 11 May 2023 the day the renaming took effect 47 Commanding Generals edit Major General Curtis A Buzzard July 2022 present Major General Patrick J Donahoe July 2020 July 2022 Major General Gary M Brito March 2018 July 2020 Major General Eric J Wesley March 2016 March 2018 Major General Austin S Miller July 2014 March 2016 Major General H R McMaster Jun 2012 July 2014 Major General Robert B Brown Nov 2010 Jun 2012 Major General Michael Ferriter Jun 2009 Nov 2010 Major General Michael D Barbero Nov 2008 Jun 2009 Major General Walter Wojdakowski Aug 2005 Nov 2008 Major General Benjamin C Freakley Jul 2003 Aug 2005 Major General Paul D Eaton Oct 2001 Jun 2003 Major General John M Le Moyne Sep 1999 Oct 2001 Major General Carl F Ernst Jul 1996 Sep 1999 Major General John W Hendrik Sep 1994 Jul 1996 Major General Jerry A White Oct 1991 Sept 1994 Major General Carmen J Cavezza Jun 1990 Oct 1991 Major General Michael F Spigelmire Sep 1988 Jun 1990 Major General Kenneth C Leuer Jun 1987 Sep 1988 Major General Edwin H Burba Jr Jan 1986 Jun 1987 Major General John W Foss Mar 1984 Jan 1986 Major General James J Lindsay Jul 1983 Mar 1984 Major General RL Sam Wetzel Aug 1981 Jul 1983 Major General David E Grange Jr Jun 1979 Aug 1981 Major General William J Livsey Jul 1977 Apr 1979 Major General Willard Latham Aug 1975 Jul 1977 Major General Thomas M Tarpley Feb 1973 Aug 1975 Major General Orwin C Talbott Sep 1969 Feb 1973 Major General George I Forsythe May 1969 Aug 1969 Major General John M Wright Jr Jul 1967 May 1969 Major General Robert H York Jul 1965 Jul 1967 Major General John A Heintges Aug 1964 Jul 1965 Major General Charles W G Rich Feb 1963 Aug 1964 Major General Ben Harrell Aug 1961 Feb 1963 Major General Hugh P Harris Apr 1960 Jul 1961 Major General Paul L Freeman May 1958 Apr 1960 Major General Herbert B Powell Aug 1956 Apr 1958 Major General George E Lynch May 1956 Aug 1956 Major General Joseph H Harper Jun 1954 May 1956 Major General Guy S Meloy Jr Jan 1953 June 1954 Major General Robert Nicholas Young Jun 1952 Jan 1953 Major General John H Church Mar 1951 May 1952 Major General Withers A Burress Jul 1948 Jan 1951 Major General John W O Daniel Jul 1945 June 1948 Major General Fred L Walker Jul 1944 Jul 1945 Major General Charles Hartwell Bonesteel Jr Sep 1943 Jun 1944 Major General Leven C Allen Feb 1942 Sep 1943 Brigade General Omar N Bradley Mar 1941 Feb 1942 Brigade General Courtney H Hodges Oct 1940 Mar 1941 Brigade General Asa L Singleton Oct 1936 Aug 1940 Brigade General George H Estes Sep 1933 Sep 1936 Major General Campbell King May 1929 May 1933 Brigade General G Edgar T Collins Mar 1926 May 1929 Brigade General Briant H Wells Nov 1923 Mar 1926 Major General Walter H Gordon Sep 1920 Nov 1923 Major General Charles S Farnsworth Apr 1919 Jul 1920 Colonel Henry E Eames Oct 1918 Apr 1919 48 nbsp Fort Benning Georgia Home of the InfantryPost information editThere are four main cantonment areas on Fort Moore Main Post Kelley Hill Sand Hill and Harmony Church Main Post edit Main Post houses various garrison and smaller FORSCOM units of Fort Moore such as 14th Combat Support Hospital and 11th Engineer Battalion FORSCOM as well as a number of TRADOC related tenants e g the Officer Candidate School the Non Commissioned Officers Academy and the Airborne School McGinnis Wickham Hall formerly known as Infantry Hall is the post headquarters and Maneuver Center of Excellence Adjacent is the Ranger Memorial and the National Infantry Museum The Army Infantry School conducts its graduations on Inouye Field sprinkled with soil from the battlegrounds of Yorktown Antietam Soissons Normandy Corregidor Korea Vietnam Iraq and Afghanistan 49 Kelley Hill edit The 197th Infantry Brigade was located on Kelley Hill in the 1970s and early 1980sKelley Hill formerly housed the 3rd Brigade Combat Team of the 3rd Infantry Division Mechanized the parent unit of two combined armed battalions 1st Battalion 15th Infantry Regiment 2nd Battalion 69th Armor Regiment as well as 3rd Squadron 1st Cavalry Regiment 1st Battalion 10th Field Artillery Regiment and two support battalions the 203rd Brigade Support Battalion and the Special Troops Battalion 3rd BCT Included in the roster was the 179th Military Intelligence Detachment Between 11 December 2015 and 15 December 2015 the 3rd BCT s six subordinate battalions performed inactivation ceremonies on Sledgehammer Field On 16 December 2015 1st Battalion 28th Infantry Regiment Task Force or Task Force 1 28 was activated in its place Task Force 1 28 is a 1053 member unit made up of selected soldiers from the six inactivated battalions that formed the 3rd Brigade Combat Team 3rd Infantry Division 50 nbsp Folder of souvenir postcards of Columbus and Fort Benning Georgia Sand Hill edit Sand Hill is the primary location of the 198th Infantry Brigade and 197th Infantry Brigade responsible for training Infantry One Station Unit Training OSUT Its units include the following 1st Battalion 19th Infantry Regiment 2d Battalion 19th Infantry Regiment 2d Battalion 29th Infantry Regiment 1st Battalion 46th Infantry Regiment 2d Battalion 47th Infantry Regiment 3d Battalion 47th Infantry Regiment 3d Battalion 54th Infantry Regiment 1st Battalion 50th Infantry Regiment 2d Battalion 54th Infantry Regiment 2d Battalion 58th Infantry Regiment 30th AG Battalion Reception nbsp Fort Moore Home of the Infantry Harmony Church edit Harmony Church area houses the 194th Armored Brigade 316th Cavalry Brigade Armor School and the first phase of Ranger School 4th Ranger Training Battalion ARTB After the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure BRAC Commission s decision to create the Maneuver Center of Excellence MCoE Harmony Church is now the new home of the Armor School Command group edit nbsp Current as of command 51 Commanding general U S Army MCoE Major General Curtis A Buzzard 52 Command sergeant major U S Army MCoE Command Sergeant Major Jerry L Dodson 53 Deputy to the commanding general U S Army MCoE Mr Donald M Sando 54 Commandant U S Army Infantry School Major General Monte L Rone Command sergeant major U S Army Infantry School Command Sergeant Major Jason P Dein Commandant U S Army Armor School Brigadier General Michael J Simmering Command sergeant major U S Army Armor School Command Sergeant Major Waylon D Petty Deputy commanding general U S Army MCoE Brigadier General Eric J Riley Chief of staff U S Army MCoE Colonel Ryan Wylie 55 Garrison commander U S Army Fort Moore Colonel Colin P Mahle Garrison command sergeant major U S Army Fort Moore Command Sergeant Major Michael D Sanchez Units and tenant units edit 194th Armored Brigade TRADOC 1st Battalion 81st Armor Regiment 2nd Squadron 15th Cavalry Regiment 5th Squadron 15th Cavalry Regiment 30th AG Reception Battalion TRADOC 316th Cavalry Brigade TRADOC 1st Squadron 16th Cavalry Regiment 3rd Squadron 16th Cavalry Regiment Reconnaissance and Surveillance Leaders Course RSLC 1st Battalion 29th Infantry Regiment 197th Infantry Brigade TRADOC 1st Battalion 46th Infantry Regiment 2nd Battalion 29th Infantry Regiment 2nd Battalion 47th Infantry Regiment 3rd Battalion 47th Infantry Regiment 3rd Battalion 54th Infantry Regiment 198th Infantry Brigade TRADOC 1st Battalion 19th Infantry Regiment 2nd Battalion 19th Infantry Regiment 1st Battalion 50th Infantry Regiment 2nd Battalion 54th Infantry Regiment 2nd Battalion 58th Infantry Regiment 199th Infantry Brigade TRADOC 2nd Battalion 11th Infantry Regiment Infantry Basic Officer Leadership Course IBOLC 3rd Battalion 11th Infantry Regiment Officer Candidate School 2nd Squadron 16th Cavalry Regiment Armor Basic Officer Leadership Course ABOLC 3rd Battalion 81st Infantry Regiment Provost Battalion IMSO and MCoE Band Henry Caro Noncommissioned Officer Academy NCOA Maneuver Senior Leaders Course M SLC Advanced Leaders Course Infantry IN ALC Advanced Leaders Course Armor AR ALC Warrior Leader Course WLC Command and Tactics Directorate CATD Airborne and Ranger Training Brigade ARTB TRADOC 4th Ranger Training Battalion Headquarters and Headquarters Company HHC 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment Jumpmaster School Headquarters and Headquarters Company HHC 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment Pathfinder School 56 1st Battalion 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment Airborne School Silver Wings Command Exhibition Parachute Demonstration Team Task Force 1st Battalion 28th Infantry Regiment FORSCOM 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team associate unit 14th Combat Support Hospital 44th MEDCOM 11th Engineer Battalion HHC Engineer Company FSC Engineer Company 60th Engineer Company 63rd Engineer Company 362nd Engineer Company Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation TRADOC 75th Ranger Regiment USASOC 3rd Ranger Battalion Regimental Special Troops Battalion RSTB Martin Army Community Hospital AMEDD Love Dental Clinic DENTAC United States Army Dental Command U S Army Marksmanship Unit USAAC 17th Air Support Operations Squadron 18th ASOG USAF nbsp Armor School move editFort Moore was selected by the Base Realignment and Closing Commission to be the home of the new Maneuver Center of Excellence MCoE This realignment co located the United States Army Armor Center and School 57 formerly located at Fort Knox Kentucky with the Infantry Center and School 58 This transformation was completed September 2011 59 Education editThe Department of Defense Education Activity DoDEA operates on base schools for Fort Moore children 60 Faith Middle School McBride Elementary School Stowers Elementary School White Elementary School High school students attend local public high schools operated by county governments 60 The portion in Muscogee County is zoned to high schools of Muscogee County Schools 61 The portion in Chattahoochee County is zoned to Chattahoochee County Schools 62 Any Fort Moore pupil however may attend Muscogee County schools if their parents wish as per House Bill 224 63 See also edit17th Armored Engineer Battalion Fort Moore 1846 1853 Notes and references edit Fort Sill encompassed the Infantry School in 1913 the Infantry school moved to Camp Benning in 1918 1 Lance Janda Oklahoma History Center The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Fort Sill Maneuver Center of Excellence Retrieved 5 September 2023 The Founding of Camp Benning PDF U S Army Fort Benning and The Fort Benning Maneuver Center of Excellence US Army Retrieved 5 June 2020 Dwight D Eisenhower Early Life and Career 14 October 1890 20 January 1953 Archived from the original on 1 June 2011 Retrieved 21 September 2012 Eisenhower General Information ibiblio org Perret Geoffrey June 2000 Eisenhower Google Books Adams Media Corporation ISBN 9781580624312 Retrieved 21 January 2011 a b Rockenbach Samuel D 13 October 1919 Report of the Director of the Tank Corps for the year ending June 30 1919 Congressional serial set Issue 7688 Report Retrieved 17 January 2011 a b Kane Sharyn May 2003 Fort Benning The Land and the People p 172 a b Rhea Gordon 25 January 2011 Why Non Slaveholding Southerners Fought Civil War Trust Archived from the original on 21 March 2011 Retrieved 21 March 2011 Benning Henry L 1 July 1849 Letter from Henry Benning to Howell Cobb Civil War Causes Retrieved 17 March 2015 Petraeus David 9 June 2020 Take the Confederate Names Off Our Army Bases The Atlantic Historian explores how Civil War Northerners reconciled treason with leniency Penn State University news psu edu Ninke Joshua Doughboys to honor veterans at Doughboy Stadium Retrieved 3 September 2013 Fort Benning Historic Trail Doughboy Stadium Archived from the original on 20 March 2013 Retrieved 3 September 2013 a b Kane Sharyn May 2003 Fort Benning The Land and the People pp 173 174 Bunn Michael J Summer 2008 Home of the Infantry The History of Fort Benning Georgia Historical Quarterly 92 2 268 270 ISSN 0016 8297 Stelpflug Peggy A Richard Hyatt 2007 Home of the Infantry The History of Fort Benning Macon Mercer University Press pp 300 67 ISBN 978 0 88146 087 2 a b 82nd Recon History www 2ndarmoredhellonwheels com Retrieved 13 June 2020 a b After action report 82nd Armored Recon Battalion 2nd Armored Division June 44 thru May 45 cdmhost com a b World War II unit histories amp officers unithistories com a b History of the 2nd Armored Division Hell On Wheels www militaryvetshop com cgsc edu American Armored Divisions 1941 1945 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 July 2014 Retrieved 22 July 2014 a b c Digital Repository Service Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Felix Hall Case Summary Northeastern University Library hdl 2047 D20263273 a b Mills Alexa 2 September 2016 A Lynching Kept Out of Sight The Washington Post a b Fortin Jacey Mills Alexa 20 August 2021 Felix Hall a Soldier Lynched at Fort Benning Is Remembered After 80 Years The New York Times Dickstein Corey 3 August 2021 Fort Benning memorializes soldier lynched 80 years earlier at the post as Army acknowledges an injustice The Stars and Stripes Winkie Davis 3 August 2021 Fort Benning memorializes Black soldier lynched in 1941 as post awaits renaming effort Army Times National Memorial for Peace and Justice 31 October 2017 a b Mills Alexa 28 May 2021 Albert King Is Not Forgotten The Wall Street Journal Major General John G Van Houten www soc mil Retrieved 3 February 2020 Maneuver and Firepower Chapter 11 Rubinstein Wain June 1969 Enemy s Worst Enemy Danger Forward Archived from the original on August 3 2009 Retrieved June 17 2009 MVRsimulation MVRsimulation Virtual Fort Benning McKenna Urban Operations Training Site www MVRsimulation com Retrieved 19 November 2021 McCoy Katherine E 2005 Trained to Torture The Human Rights Effects of Military Training at the School of the Americas Latin American Perspectives 32 6 47 64 doi 10 1177 0094582x05281113 S2CID 144445783 Bill Wallace Jim Houston 13 July 2002 Bay Area protesters sentenced in Georgia San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 12 August 2012 O Brien Connor 11 June 2020 Scrubbing Confederate names from Army bases gains steam in Congress but fight with Trump looms POLITICO Retrieved 13 June 2020 Benning Henry L 18 February 1861 Speech of Henry Benning to the Virginia Convention Proceedings of the Virginia State Convention of 1861 pp 62 75 Retrieved 17 March 2015 Levenson Michael 11 June 2020 These Are the 10 U S Army Installations Named for Confederates New York Times Retrieved 14 June 2020 S 4049 National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 116th Congress 2019 2020 23 July 2020 Edmondson Catie January 2021 Senate Overrides Trump s Veto of Defense Bill Dealing a Legislative Blow The New York Times Neuman Scott 24 July 2020 Despite Trump s Veto Threat Senate Approves Provision To Rename Military Bases NPR Naming Commission Final Report Part I PDF Implementation of the Naming Commission s Recommendations PDF defense gov 6 October 2022 Retrieved 5 September 2023 Pentagon Press Secretary Air Force Brig Gen Pat Ryder Holds an On Camera Press Briefing U S Department of Defense BEN WATSON and JENNIFER HLAD 10 Mar 2023 Bye bye Benning Herb Scribner 25 Mar 2023 6 Army bases named after Confederate leaders get dates for new names Agee Eugene R Betts Kevin M Xiong Chinhfou 1 January 1992 Data Base Documentation for the Enhanced Computer Administered Tests at Keesler AFB Fort Sill Fort Knox and Fort Benning Fort Belvoir VA doi 10 21236 ada326302 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Maneuver Center Of Excellence Hall of Portraits Fort Benning GA Milzarski Eric 27 December 2017 The soil new infantrymen walk on is bloodied from every American war We Are The Mighty Wright Ben 15 December 2015 1st Battalion 28th Infantry Regiment Task Force activated Columbus Ledger Enquirer Retrieved 3 February 2017 Leaders www benning army mil Major General Curtis A Buzzard www benning army mil Command Sergeant Major Jerry L Dodson www benning army mil Mr Donald M Sando www benning army mil Colonel Ryan Wylie www benning army mil Pathfinder Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Maureen Rose 13 June 2011 Final units depart Fort Knox Armor School army mil Vince Little The Bayonet 22 October 2009 Activation ceremony formally links Infantry Armor under new command at Fort Benning army mil Fort Benning and the Valley Home Welcome to the Chattahoochee Valley PDF fortbenningandthevalley com a b Fort Benning Schools Department of Defense Education Activity Retrieved 4 July 2022 The document states that the county schools have high school zoning 2020 CENSUS SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP Muscogee County GA PDF U S Census Bureau Retrieved 4 July 2022 Text list Fort Benning Schools refers to the DoDEA schools on Fort Moore The document states that the county schools have high school zoning 2020 CENSUS SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP Chattahoochee County GA PDF U S Census Bureau Retrieved 4 July 2022 Text list Fort Benning Schools refers to the DoDEA schools on Fort Moore The document states that the county schools have high school zoning Fort Benning Transfer FBT Applications Available July 1 Muscogee County School District Retrieved 4 July 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fort Moore Official website Fort Moore at www georgiaencyclopedia org FORSCOM homepage official site Post Headquarters JAG historical marker The Infantry Board historical marker Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fort Moore amp oldid 1220663665, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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