INSTALLATIONS U.S. ARMY POSTS

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Dennis Steele/ARMY MagazineU.S. ARMY POSTS&INSTALLATIONSOctober 2010 ARMY293

This section includes posts and installations primarily supporting the active Army in the continental UnitedStates, Hawaii, Alaska and Puerto Rico.Army ammunition plants and Armyinstalla tions in caretaker or inactivestatus have been excluded.Acreages reflect real estate underDepartment of the Army control in 2010.The DSN and commercial telephonenumbers listed are for operator assistance.Data are current as of August 7 andare based on information supplied byeach post or installation.Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 21005 and21010. Opened 1917, home to more than 70organizations, including Army Research, Development and Engineering Cmd.; Army Communications-Electronics Life Cycle Management Cmd.; 20th Support Cmd.(CBRNE);Army Public Health Cmd.; Army Developmental Test Cmd.; 22nd Chemical Battalion;CBRNE Analytical and Remediation Activity;Army Communications-Electronics Research,Development and Engineering Cmd.; ArmyResearch Laboratory (Aberdeen site); MedicalResearch Institute of Chemical Defense; Aberdeen Test Center; Program Executive Officefor Command, Control and Communications(Tactical); Chemical Material Agency; ArmyMateriel Systems Analysis Activity; CivilianHuman Resources Agency-Northeast; CivilianPersonnel Advisory Center; Army EvaluationCenter; 3,764 mil., 9,439 civ. (including nonappropriated-fund employees), 4,146 contractors; 72,229 acres, 35 miles northeast of Balti-more. DSN: 298-5201; (410) 278-5201.Anniston Army Depot, AL 36201-4199.Opened 1941; repairs and retrofits combattracked vehicles, artillery and small arms; receives and stores general supplies, ammunition, missiles, small arms and strategic materiel; 59 mil., 6,825 civ. (including tenantsand contractors); 15,000 acres adjacent toPelham Range, 10 miles west of Anniston.DSN: 571-1110; (256) 235-7501.Fort A.P. Hill, VA 22427. Opened 1941;named for LTG Ambrose Powell Hill, CSA; winner 2008 Army Communities of ExcellenceAward; 76,000-acre regional training centerused for active and reserve component training of all service branches and federal agencies; 27,000-acre live-fire range complex;1,661 mil. and civ., 227 reserve components.DSN: 578-8760; (804) 633-8760.Fort Belvoir, VA 22060. An Army propertysince 1912; named for the manor house of Col.William Fairfax, 1736–1741, the ruins of whichremain on the installation; provides logistical,intelligence and administrative support to morethan 120 tenant and satellite organizations; major tenants are Defense Logistics Agency; Defense Contract Audit Agency; Defense ThreatReduction Agency; Defense Acquisition University; U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Cmd.;DeWitt Army Community Hospital; Night-Visionand Electronics Sensors Directorate; CECOMIEWSD Projects Division; CECOM SoftwareCenter-Belvoir; National Geospatial IntelligenceSchool; Army Management Staff College; 29thInf. Div. (Lt.) (ARNG); approx. 6,400 mil., 17,200civ. (including tenants and DoD contractors);8,656 acres, 11 miles southwest of Alexandriaand 17 miles southwest of Washington, D.C.DSN: 685-2052; (703) 805-2052.Fort Campbell294ARMY October 2010Fort Benning, GA 31905. Established 1918;named after BG Henry L. Benning, CSA;home of Maneuver Center of Excellence;Army Marksmanship Unit; 3rd Bde., 3rd Inf.Div.; Western Hemisphere Institute for SecurityCooperation; 75th Ranger Rgt.; 199th InfantryBde.; 197th Infantry Bde.; 192nd Infantry Bde.;198th Infantry Bde.; Martin Army CommunityHospital; Medical Department Activity, RangerTraining Bde.; 30,638 mil., 9,026 civ.; 181,386acres, 9 miles south of Columbus. DSN: 8352011; (706) 545-2011.Fort Bliss, TX 79916. Established as the postopposite El Paso in 1848; named after LTCWilliam Wallace Smith Bliss; home of the 32ndArmy Air and Missile Defense Command; 11thAir Defense Artillery Brigade; the 1st, 2nd, 3rdand 4th Brigade Combat Teams, 1st ArmoredDivision; 5th Bde. Army Evaluation Task Force,1st Armored Division; U.S. Sergeants MajorAcademy; William Beaumont Army MedicalCenter; Joint Task Force North; German AirForce Air Defense Center; the Garrison Command; 23,000 mil., 12,000 civ.; 1.2 million acres.DSN: 978-0831; (915) 568-2121.Blue Grass Army Depot, KY 40475-5001. Established 1941; BGAD is a conventional ammunition depot with a rapid industrial responsecapability supporting add-on armor, combatvehicle accessory production, ammunition component production and a primary mission ofperforming standard depot operations (storage,receipt, inspection, maintenance and demilitarization) of conventional munitions, missiles,nonstandard ammunition and chemical defense equipment for all DoD services; approximately 1,300 personnel; 14,500 acres, 6 milessouth of Richmond. DSN: 745-6221; (859) 7796221.Fort Bragg, NC 28310. Established as a fieldartillery site in 1918; named after then-MAJBraxton Bragg, U.S. Army (he later served as ageneral in the CSA); as “Home of the Airborneand Special Operations Forces,” houses theXVIII Abn. Corps; 82nd Abn. Div.; 1st SupportCmd. (Theater); 108th ADA Bde.; 44th MedicalBde.; 16th MP Bde.; 525th Battlefield Surveillance Bde.; U.S. Army Spc. Ops. Cmd.; JointSpecial Ops. Cmd.; U.S. Army Special ForcesCmd.; U.S. Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School; U.S. Army Civil Affairsand Psychological Ops. Cmd.; 20th EngineerBde.; the Golden Knights; 52,959 mil., 12,696civ.; 160,832 acres, 10 miles northwest ofFayetteville, 50 miles south of Raleigh. DSN:236-0011; (910) 396-0011.Fort Campbell, KY 42223. Opened 1942;

Corpus Christi Army Depotnamed for BG William B. Campbell, a Tennessee hero of the Mexican War and governorof Tennessee; home of 101st Abn. Div. (Air Assault); 5th Spc. Forces Grp. (Abn.); 160th Spc.Ops. Aviation Rgt. (Abn.); 52nd OrdnanceGroup; 30,865 mil., 4,569 civ.; 105,068 acres,15 miles south of Hopkinsville, Ky., 10 milesnorthwest of downtown Clarksville, Tenn., and50 miles northwest of Nashville. DSN: 6351110; (270) 798-3025.Carlisle Barracks, PA 17013. Established1757; site of U.S. Army War College; Centerfor Strategic Leadership; Strategic Studies Institute; Army Physical Fitness Research Institute; Army Heritage and Education Center andMilitary History Institute archives; Peacekeeping and Stability Operations Institute; 540 mil.,760 civ.; 459 acres, 18 miles southwest of Harrisburg. DSN: 242-3131; (717) 245-3131.Fort Carson, CO 80913. Established 1942;named for BG Christopher (Kit) Carson; homeof 4th Inf. Div.; 10th Spc. Forces Grp. (Abn.); 4thEngineer Battalion; 43rd Support Bde.; 10thCombat Spt. Hospital; 759th Military Police Battalion; 24,600 mil., 5,700 civ.; 137,403 acres adjacent to Colorado Springs and 235,330 acresat Piñon Canyon Maneuver Site near La Junta,Colo. DSN: 691-5811; (719) 526-5811.Cold Regions Research and EngineeringLaboratory, NH 03755. Opened 1961; part ofthe U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC); solves interdisciplinary, strategically important problems of theU.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE),Army, DoD and the nation by advancing andapplying science and engineering to complexenvironments, materials and processes in allseasons and climates. CRREL maintainsunique core competencies related to theEarth’s cold regions. 1 mil., 200 civ.; 31 acres296ARMY October 2010at Hanover, N.H.; minimal staff at Fairbanks,Alaska, and Anchorage, Alaska, field offices.(603) 646-4100.Construction Engineering Research Laboratory, IL 61826-9005. Established 1968; oneof seven labs in the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center; conductsresearch and development for Army Corps ofEngineers programs in facilities construction,operations, maintenance and environmentalquality, including pollution prevention, compliance and natural resource management; 330civ.; 33 acres at Champaign. (217) 352-6511.Corpus Christi Army Depot, TX 78419-5260.Opened 1961; DoD Center of Industrial andTechnical Excellence for rotary-wing aircraft;performs overhaul, repair, modification, recapitalization, retrofit, testing and modernization ofrotary-wing aircraft; serves as depot trainingbase for active Army, National Guard, Reserveand foreign military personnel; provides worldwide on-site maintenance service; oil and aircraft crash analysis; chemical, metallurgicaland training support; 4,029 civ., approximately1,500 contractors; 158 acres (leased fromNaval Air Station-Corpus Christi), 12 milessoutheast of Corpus Christi. DSN: 861-3627;(361) 961-3627.Deseret Chemical Depot, UT 84074-5000.Established 1942; Army-operated; responsible for the safe, secure and environmentallycorrect storage and destruction of chemicalagents; authorized strength: 2 mil., 400 govt.civilians, 1,000 contractors; 19,000 acres atRush Valley, 40 miles southwest of Salt LakeCity. (435) 833-4295.Fort Detrick, MD 21702. Established 1943;named for MAJ Frederick Louis Detrick, Maryland Army National Guard flight surgeon; community includes more than 50 tenant organiza-tions representing five Cabinet-level agenciesand all armed services. The mission encompasses three major areas: medical research,strategic communication and defense medicallogistics; approx. 1,900 mil., approx. 8,500 civ.;1,341 acres at main post in Frederick and Forest Glen Annex in Silver Spring, Md. DSN: 3438000; (301) 619-8000.U.S. Army Garrison-Detroit Arsenal, Warren, MI 48397-5000. Established 1971; underthe Installation Management CommandNortheast Region; provides installation support services for Detroit Arsenal tenant organizations, including the U.S. Army TACOMLife Cycle Management Cmd.; Program Executive Office (PEO) Ground Combat Systems; PEO Combat Support and CombatService Support; PEO Integration; and theTank Automotive Research Development andEngineering Center; 230 mil., 6,900 civ.; 169acres, 20 miles north of Detroit and 20 milessouthwest of the Selfridge Air National GuardBase. DSN: 786-5000; (586) 282-5000.Fort Drum, NY 13602. Established 1908; renamed for LTG Hugh A. Drum, commander,First Army, 1938–43; 10th Mtn. Div. (Lt. Inf.);18,681 mil., 4,700 civ.; 107,265 acres, 8 milesnorth of Watertown and 78 miles north ofSyracuse. DSN: 772-6011; (315) 772-6011.Dugway Proving Ground, UT 84022. Established 1942; performs test and evaluation ofdefensive chemical and biological materiel,environmental technology testing, meteorological and atmospheric transport modeling; 5mil., 1,450 civ.; 798,218 acres, 85 miles southwest of Salt Lake City. DSN: 789-2116; (435)831-2116.Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, AK 99506.Managed by the 673rd Air Base Wing; home tothe Alaskan Command; U.S. Army Alaska; 4thBCT (Abn.), 25th Inf. Div.; 3rd Maneuver Enhancement Brigade; 6,480 soldiers, 6,400 airmen, 3,070 civ.; 84,530 acres. DSN: (317) 5528151/8152.Fort Eustis, VA 23604. Established 1918;named for Bvt. BG Abraham Eustis, Virginianative and veteran of the War of 1812; homeof Army Training Support Center; Aviation Applied Technology Directorate; Army AviationLogistics School; 7th Sustainment Bde.; 7,800mil., 5,700 civ.; 8,248 acres adjacent to Newport News and 11 miles southeast of Williamsburg. DSN: 826-5251; (757) 878-5251. (FortEustis will join with Langley Air Force Base.)Fort Gillem, GA 30297. Opened 1941; namedfor LTG Alvan C. Gillem Jr., Third Army commander, 1947–50; subinstallation of Fort

Fort LeavenworthMcPherson, Ga.; site of First Army; 3rd MedicalCmd.; Army Criminal Investigation Laboratory;3rd MP Group; Military Entrance ProcessingStation; 467 active Army mil., 1,752 reservists,1,443 civ.; 1,427 acres at Forest Park, 18 milessoutheast of Atlanta. DSN: 797-5000; (404)469-5000.Fort Gordon, GA 30905. Opened 1941; namedfor LTG John Brown Gordon, CSA; home of theArmy Signal Center of Excellence; DwightDavid Eisenhower Army Medical Center; Headquarters, 7th Signal Cmd.; 19,000 mil., 7,000civ.; 56,506 acres, 12 miles southwest of Augusta. DSN: 780-0110; (706) 791-0110.Fort Hamilton, NY 11252. Established 1825 aspart of the New York harbor battery defensesystem; named for Alexander Hamilton; hometo the New York City Recruiting Bn.; Corps ofEngineers, North Atlantic Div. headquarters;New York Military Entrance Processing Station;1179th Deployment Support Bde.; New YorkNational Guard Task Force Empire Shield; provides administrative and logistical support forthe Army and other DoD agencies in the metropolitan area. DSN: 232-4101; (718) 630-4101.Fort Hood, TX 76544. Opened 1942; namedfor GEN John Bell Hood, CSA; site of Headquarters Cmd., III Corps; 1st Cav. Div.; 1st ArmyDiv.-West; 3rd Air Support Operations Group;13th Sustainment Cmd. (Expeditionary); 3rdArm. Cav. Reg.; 89th MP Bde.; 504th Battlefield298ARMY October 2010Surveillance Bde.; 36th Eng. Bde.; 21st Cav.Bde. (Air Combat); 41st Fires Bde.; 48th Chemical Bde.; 69th Air Defense Artillery Bde.; 13thFinance Management Center; the Dental Activity (DENTAC); the Medical Support Activity(MEDDAC); U.S. Army Operational Test Cmd.(USAOTC); and various other units and tenantorganizations; 50,343 mil., 8,909 civ.; 214,968acres adjacent to Killeen, 60 miles north ofAustin and 160 miles south of Dallas/FortWorth. DSN: 737-1110; (254) 287-1110.Fort Huachuca, AZ 85613. Opened 1877;home of Army Intelligence Center and School;Network Enterprise Technology Cmd./9th ArmySig. Cmd.; Army Electronic Proving Ground; Information Systems Engineering Cmd.; 11thSig. Bde.; Joint Interoperability Test Cmd.;6,362 mil., 3,039 civ.; 73,242 acres, 75 milessoutheast of Tucson. DSN: 821-7111; (520)538-7111.Hunter Army Airfield, GA 31409. Established 1940; named for Army Air Corps MGFrank O’Driscoll Hunter, a native of Savannah; supports 3rd Inf. Div., Combat Avn. Bde.and 1st Bn., 75th Ranger Rgt.; 3rd Bn., 160thSpc. Ops. Aviation Rgt.; 224th MI Bn.; USMCReserve Center; 260th Quartermaster Bn.;6th ROTC Bde.; USCG Air Station Savannah;6,200 mil., 600 civ.; 5,370 acres at Savannah.DSN: 729-5617; (912) 315-5617.Fort Irwin, CA 92310. Established 1940;named for MG George LeRoy Irwin, notedWorld War I artillery commander; site of National Training Center; home of 11th Cav. Rgt.;National Training Center Support Bde.; Operations Group; U.S. Army Garrison; 6,590 mil.,3,640 civ.; 768,000 acres, 37 miles northeastof Barstow. DSN: 470-4111; (760) 380-4111.Fort Jackson, SC 29207. Established 1917;named for President Andrew Jackson; BasicCombat Training Ctr. of Excellence: conductsbasic combat training and combat supportadvanced individual training; site of 157th,165th, 171st and 193rd Infantry Bdes.; 81stRegional Readiness Cmd.; Soldier SupportInstitute; Armed Forces Chaplaincy Center;Defense Academy for Credibility Assessment; Army Drill Sergeant School; MoncriefArmy Community Hospital; 3,900 mil., 5,200civ.; 52,301 acres adjacent to Columbia.DSN: 734-1110; (803) 751-1110.Fort Knox, KY 40121. Opened 1918; namedfor MG Henry Knox, Revolutionary War heroand first Secretary of War; home of the U.S.Army Armor Center and School, including194th Armored Bde., 16th Cavalry Rgt. andU.S. Army NCO Academy; Army RecruitingCmd. and the Third U.S. Army Recruiting Bde.;4th Bde., 85th Div. (Training Support); ROTCEastern Region Cadet Cmd.; the Patton Museum of Cavalry and Armor; III Corps SupportCmd.; 17,889 mil., 5,774 civ.; 109,054 acres,35 miles southwest of Louisville. DSN: 4641181; (502) 624-1181.Fort Leavenworth, KS 66027. Established1827; named for COL Henry Leavenworth,commander of the 3rd Inf. Rgt. when the postwas founded; home of the Combined ArmsCenter; Command and General Staff College;Center for Army Lessons Learned; CombinedArms Doctrine Directorate; U.S. Army and Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Center; 35th Inf.Div. (ARNG); U.S. Disciplinary Barracks; 3,448mil., 4,044 civ.; 5,600 acres adjacent to Leavenworth, 20 miles northwest of Kansas City International Airport. DSN: 552-4021; (913) 6844021.Fort Lee, VA 23801. Opened in 1917 as CampLee; named for GEN Robert E. Lee, a careerArmy officer and combat engineer; home tothe Combined Arms Support Command andSustainment Center of Excellence, the headquarters component that provides oversightof the U.S. Army Quartermaster, Ordnanceand Transportation Schools, the Army Logistics University, and the Soldier Support Institute; major tenant organizations include theDefense Commissary Agency, the 49th Quartermaster Group and the Defense ContractManagement Agency (as of September 2011);projected post-BRAC demographics are: 5,991mil., 4,993 civ., 1,884 contractors, 22,811 military family members and a daily student population of 11,061; 5,907 acres, located threemiles east of Petersburg. DSN: 539-3000;(804) 765-3000.Fort Leonard Wood, MO 65473. Opened1941; named for MG Leonard Wood, ArmyChief of Staff, 1910–14; home of the U.S.Army Maneuver Support Center of Excellence and Fort Leonard Wood; responsible fortraining chemical, engineer and military police specialists in the Army, Air Force, Navy,Marine Corps and Coast Guard; responsiblefor Basic Combat Training and motor transport training; 7,100 active duty mil., 74,400mil. for training (annual), 9,000 civ.; 61,400acres, 88 miles northeast of Springfield, 135miles southwest of St. Louis. (573) 596-0131.Letterkenny Army Depot, PA 17201-4150.Opened 1942; named after Letterkenny Township, which the depot absorbed; home of theArmy’s Center of Industrial and Technical Excellence for Air Defense and Tactical Missile

Systems and Mobile Electronic Power Generation Equipment; Patriot Recertification; HighMobility Artillery Rocket Systems; AviationGround Power Units; Route Clearance Vehicles; Humvee Recapitalization; Force Providerreset operations; conducts storage, issue, rebuilding, testing, overhauling and demilitarization of equipment, tactical missiles and ammunition; 3 mil., 1,684 civ. and 1,122 contractemployees; 18,668 acres, 5 miles north ofChambersburg and 50 miles southwest of Harrisburg. DSN: 570-8111; (717) 267-8111.Joint Base Lewis-McChord (formerly FortLewis), WA 98433. Established 1917; namedfor CPT Meriwether Lewis of the Lewis andClark Expedition; home of I Corps; 3rd Bde,2nd Inf. Div.; 4th Bde, 2nd Inf. Div.; 5th Bde, 2ndInf. Div.; 17th Fires Bde; 555th Engineer Bde.;593rd Sustainment Bde.; 201st Battlefield Surveillance Bde.; 62nd Medical Bde.; 191st Infantry Bde.; 1st Joint Mobilization Bde.; 42ndMP Bde.; 1st Special Forces Group (Abn.); 2ndBn., 75th Ranger Regt.; 4th Squadron, 6th U.S.Air Cavalry Regt.; U.S. Army Cadet Command’s 8th ROTC Bde.; Western RegionalMedical Command; Madigan Army MedicalCenter; Yakima Training Center; 40,228 mil. (allservices and components), approximately15,000 civilian employees; more than 90,000acres; 10 miles southeast of Tacoma. DSN357-1110; 253-967-1110. (Fort Lewis and McChord Air Force Base merged, becoming JointBase Lewis-McChord on February 1, 2010. AnArmy-led joint base garrison provides supportto all units stationed at the former Fort Lewisand McChord AFB.)Fort McPherson, GA 30330. Established1885; named for MG James Birdseye McPherson, Civil War commander of the Army of theTennessee, killed during the Battle of Atlanta,1864; site of Army Forces Cmd.; U.S. ArmyCentral; Army Reserve Cmd. and InstallationManagement Command Southeast; 1,757mil., 1,124 reservists, 2,204 civ.; 487 acres, onthe south side of Atlanta. DSN: 367-3113;(404) 464-3113.Fort Meade, MD 20755. Established 1917;named for MG George Gordon Meade, commander of the Army of the Potomac, 1863–65;home of National Security Agency; Defense Information School; 80 other installation partners; 10,000 mil., 26,000 civ.; 5,067 acres, 15miles northeast of Washington, D.C. DSN: 6226261; (301) 677-6261.Fort Monmouth, NJ 07703. Established 1917;named for Revolutionary War battle, 1778;Army center for research, development, acqui300ARMY October 2010sition, fielding, sustainment and integration ofsuperior command and control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance andreconnaissance (C4ISR) technologies and systems for the joint warfighter; Army CECOM LifeCycle Mgmt. Cmd.; Program Executive Office(PEO)-Command, Control, CommunicationsTactical; PEO-Intelligence, Electronic Warfareand Sensors; PEO-Enterprise Information Systems; Communications-Electronics Research,Development and Engineering Center; U.S.Military Academy Prep. School; 423 mil., 5,518civ.; 1,125 acres, 50 miles south of New YorkCity. DSN: 992-9110; (732) 532-9000.Fort Monroe, VA 23651. Established 1819;named for President James Monroe; home ofthe U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Cmd.;Headquarters U.S. Army Cadet Cmd.; JointTask Force-Civil Support; Mission and Installation Contracting Cmd.; Installation ManagementCmd., Northeast Region; School of CadetCmd.; Army Capabilities and Integration Center; Army Audit Field Office; Naval Surface Warfare Center Detachment Norfolk; 1,290 mil.,2,420 civ.; 564 acres, adjacent to Hampton.DSN: 680-2112; (757) 788-2112. (Fort Monroewill be inactivated on September 15, 2011, as aresult of Base Realignment and Closure.)Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, VA 22211.Established 1862 as Fort Whipple, renamedFort Myer in 1887 for BG Albert J. Myer, firstchief of the Army Signal Corps; on October 1,2009, Fort Myer became Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall as it merged with adjacent Henderson Hall Marine Corps Base as a result of the2005 Base Realignment and Closure decisionto gain efficiencies as a joint military operation;home of the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment (TheOld Guard); The U.S. Army Band (Pershing’sOwn); 8,000 mil., 1,374 civ.; 270 acres adjacent to the Arlington National Cemetery acrossthe Potomac River from Washington, D.C.DSN: 426-4979; (703) 696-4979. Garrisoncommand includes Fort McNair, WashingtonDC 20319, part of Joint Base Myer-HendersonHall. Established in 1791; named for GEN Lesley J. McNair, Army ground forces commanderkilled in Normandy, 1944; home of the U.S.Army Military District of Washington; JointForce Headquarters-National Capital Region;National Defense University; Center of MilitaryHistory; Inter-American Defense College; theCommander-in-Chief’s Guard (Company A,3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment, The Old Guard);108 acres in southwest Washington, D.C. DSN:426-4979; (703) 696-4979. Henderson Hall,VA 22214. With Marine Corps expansion during World War II, a Headquarters and ServiceCompany was organized at Henderson Hall onMarch 1,1942; named for Col (Brevet BGen)Archibald Henderson, first commandant of theMarine Corps; 270 acres. DSN: 426-4979; 703696-4979.Picatinny Arsenal, NJ 07806-5000. Established 1880; researches and develops advanced technology armament and munitionssystems for joint military services and provides life-cycle engineering support for munition systems; houses the Joint Munitions andLethality Life Cycle Mgmt. Cmd.; ArmamentResearch, Development and EngineeringCenter; Program Executive Office, Ammunition; and elements of PM-Soldier Weaponsand PEO Ground Combat Systems; 3,400civilian and military personnel; 6,500 acres,located 32 miles west of New York City. DSN:880-4021; operator: (973) 724-4021.Pine Bluff Arsenal, AR 71602-9500. Estab-Fort Polk

lished 1941; produces, stores and demilitarizes conventional ammunitions; center for illuminating and infrared munitions; producessmoke munitions; Army Center for Industrialand Technical Excellence; produces, repairsand stores chemical/biological defense products; supports storage and destruction of thesecond-largest chemical weapons stockpilein the United States; approx. 5 mil., 1,400 civ.;13,500 acres, 8 miles northwest of Pine Bluff.DSN: 966-3000; (870) 540-3000.Pohakuloa Training Area, HI 96720-4607.Established 1955; named for the Hawaiianword for “long stone”; supports training of active Army, Marine Corps, reserve componentand joint/combined forces in the Pacific region;4 mil., 190 civ.; 134,000 acres, 36 miles northwest of Hilo on the island of Hawaii. DSN: 4697110; (808) 969-7110.Joint Readiness Training Center & FortPolk, LA 71459. Established 1941; named forConfederate LTG Leonidas Polk, who waskilled in action at Kennesaw Mountain, Ga., in1864; home of the Joint Readiness TrainingCenter; 4th BCT, 10th Mountain Div., 1st Maneuver Enhancement Bde.; 162nd InfantryBde., 115th Combat Support Hospital; andBayne Jones Army Community Hospital; 9,876mil., 6,473 civ.; 198,555 acres, 2 miles south ofLeesville. DSN: 863-1110; (337) 531-2911.U.S. Army Garrison, Presidio of Monterey,CA 93944-5006. Established 1847; home ofthe Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center with each military service providing servicemembers as students, facultyand staff; houses the majority of the languageinstruction along with a small housing area;additional military housing, PX and commissary are located at the Ord Military Commu-nity, part of the former Fort Ord; 75 milessouth of San Jose International Airport. DSN:768-5119; (831) 242-5119.Pueblo Chemical Depot, CO 81006-9330.Established 1942; stores chemical munitions;23,000 acres at Pueblo. DSN: 749-4135;(719) 549-4135.Red River Army Depot, TX 75507-5000. Established 1941; repairs, overhauls, remanufactures and converts combat/tactical wheeledvehicles; operates DoD’s only roadwheel andtrack-shoe rebuild/manufacturing facility; 3mil., 5,000 civ.; 19,000 acres, 18 miles west ofTexarkana and 80 miles northwest of Shreveport, La. DSN: 829-2141; (903) 334-2141.Redstone Arsenal, AL 35898-5020. Established 1941; named for the red soil of the region; home to more than 50 different federaland DoD organizations; core Army missions ofthe arsenal revolve around aviation and missilesystems development and sustainment; U.S.Army Space and Missile Defense Cmd.; U.S.Army Aviation and Missile Cmd.; U.S. ArmyMateriel Cmd.; U.S. Army Security AssistanceCmd; Program Executive Office (PEO)-Missilesand Space; PEO-Aviation; U.S. Army Ordnance Munitions and Electronics MaintenanceSchool; FBI Hazardous Devices School; ATF’sNational Ctr. for Explosives Training and Research; Aviation Missile Research, Development and Engineering Ctr.; NASA’s MarshallSpace Flight Ctr.; Missile Defense Agency;1,940 mil., 32,000 civ.; 38,000 acres adjacentto southwest Huntsville. DSN: 746-2151; (256)876-2151.Fort Riley, KS 66442. Established 1853;named for MG Bennett Riley, who led the firstmilitary escort along the Santa Fe Trail; homeof the 1st Inf. Div.; 1st HBCT; 2nd HBCT; 4thSchofield Barracks302ARMY October 2010IBCT; 1st Combat Avn. Bde.; 1st SustainmentBde.; 18,000 mil., 8,500 civ.; 100,656 acres;125 miles west of Kansas City, Mo. DSN: 8563911; (785) 239-3911.Fort Richardson. See Joint Base ElmendorfRichardson.Rock Island Arsenal, IL 61299. Established1862; home to Headquarters, Army Sustainment Cmd.; TACOM Life Cycle Mgmt. Command–Rock Island; Rock Island Arsenal Civilian Personnel Advisory Center for the EastRegion and North Central Area; Defense Finance and Accounting Service, Rock IslandSite; Rock Island Arsenal Joint Manufacturingand Technology Center (RIA-JMTC); 317 mil.,7,000 civ.; 946-acre island in the MississippiRiver between Rock Island, Ill., and Davenport, Iowa. DSN: 793-6001; (309) 782-6001.Rocky Mountain Arsenal, CO 80022. Established 1942; responsible for contaminationcleanup; 17 civ.; 3,700 acres in CommerceCity, 10 miles northeast of Denver. DSN: 7492300; (303) 289-0300.Fort Rucker, AL 36362-5000. Established1942; named for COL Edmund W. Rucker,CSA, Confederate cavalry leader; home ofU.S. Army Aviation Center of Excellence; ArmyAviation Museum; Army Aviation Technical TestCenter; Army Warrant Officer Career College;U.S. Army Combat Readiness/Safety Center;Army Aeromedical Center; Army AeromedicalResearch Laboratory; Army School of AviationMedicine; 5,584 mil., 7,496 civ.; 63,072 acres,75 miles south of Montgomery. DSN: 5581110; (334) 255-1110.Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234. Established1876; named for the first elected president ofthe Republic of Texas; headquarters to U.S.Army Medical Cmd., U.S. Army North/FifthArmy, U.S. Army South; 5th Recruiting Bde.;12th ROTC Bde.; San Antonio Military Entrance and Processing Station; Army MedicalDepartment Center and School; Brooke ArmyMedical Center; Headquarters, Dental Cmd.;Headquarters, Veterinary Cmd.; the Institute ofSurgical Research; the Defense MedicalReadiness Training Institute; 470th Military Intelligence Bde.; 106th Signal Bde.; 410th Contracting Bde.; Center for Health Promotion andPreventive Medicine; DoD Medical Educationand Training Campus; Navy Medical TrainingCmd.; Military Installation and ContractingCmd., including the 410th and 412th Contracting Bdes.; Southern Regional Medical Cmd.;Battlefield Health and Trauma Ctr.; Tri-ServiceResearch Laboratory; more than 32,000 mil.and civ. personnel; approx. 3,000 acres at San

Sierra Army DepotAntonio, 28,000 acres at subinstallation CampBullis, 35 miles northwest. DSN: 471-1211;(210) 221-1211. (Fort Sam Houston will joinwith Randolph and Lackland Air Force Basesto form Joint Base San Antonio.)Schofield Barracks, HI 96857. Established1909; named for LTG John McAllister Schofield, commander in chief of the Army, 1888–95, whose recommendations led to the firstU.S. military presence in the islands; home ofthe 25th Inf. Div.; U.S. Army Garrison-Hawaii,located at Wheeler Army Airfield, which supports 22 installations; and various tenantunits; approx. 13,000 mil., 5,000 civ.; morethan 14,000 acres, 17 miles northwest ofHonolulu. DSN: 456-7110; (808) 449-7110.Fort Shafter, HI 96858. Established 1907;named for MG William R. Shafter, Civil Warhero and Spanish-American War corps commander; home of U.S. Army Pacific; 8th Theater Sustainment Cmd.; 311th Signal Cmd.(Theater); 9th Mission Support Cmd.; 94thArmy Air and Missile Defense Cmd.; Installation Management Cmd. Pacific Region; ArmyCorps of Engineers Pacific Div.; and varioustenant units; 2,438 mil., 1,316 civ.; 588 acresnear Honolulu. DSN: 456-7110; (808) 4497110.Sierra Army Depot, CA 96113-5000. Established 1942; provides worldwide expeditionary logistics support for the defenders ofour nation through long-term storage, maintenance, care of supplies in storage, reset, and304ARMY Oc

mately 1,300 personnel; 14,500 acres, 6 miles south of Richmond. DSN: 745-6221; (859) 779-6221. Fort Bragg, NC 28310. Established as a field artillery site in 1918; named after then-MAJ Braxton Bragg, U.S. Army (he later served as a general in the CSA); as “Home of the Airborne and Special Operations Forces,” houses the XVIII Abn.

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