New Cavalry Barracks
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 29° 18.272 W 100° 25.082
14R E 362283 N 3242560
The historic marker for the New Cavalry Barracks on board Fort Clark
Waymark Code: WMPK5P
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 09/11/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
Views: 3

This historic marker is affixed to a local-stone monument near the central entrance to the New Cavalry Barracks at Fort Clark, near the intersection of McClernand Road and Crockett Street on the eastern side of the reservation.

Today these former barracks, built in the 1930s, are used as a motel to support temporary guests to the Fort Clark Springs resort.
Marker Number: 15811

Marker Text:
The earliest quarters for soldiers at Fort Clark were tents along Las Moras Creek near the spring. During the forts 1870s building boom, stone cavalry barracks were constructed, but by the late 1920s. They had become too deteriorated for continued use. Three two-story stone cavalry barracks were constructed in 1931-1932 to replace the three barracks that were razed. This new, fourth barracks was constructed on the site of the first post Commissary which had burned in March, 1892, leaving the site vacant for 40 years. When the building was completed, it contained state-of-the-art facilities, including three 30 by 60-foot open bays for bunks and wall lockers, a mess hall, troop offices, supply and arms rooms, and a latrine. The building was so modern and impressive that it was singled out in order to justify the retention of Fort Clark as a permanent military post. The first occupants of the barracks with the soldiers of “F” Troop, 5th US Cavalry. In 1941 the 5th Cavalry left the post and the barracks were used by the 112th Cavalry of the Texas National Guard. The Buffalo soldiers of the 9th Cavalry, African-American troops, moved into the barracks in fall, 1942. Lastly, for the remainder of World War II, the barracks are occupied by 182 African-American enlisted women of the Women's Army Corps Detachment of the 1855th Service Unit. The two-story rectangular plan barracks is built atop a raised concrete basement. Loadbearing walls are of limestone web wall construction, with cast stone windowsills and steel lintels. The main elevation is divided into 15 days by square wooden columns, with a cross braced railing across the second-story porch. Recorded Texas Historic Landmark – 2009 Marker is property of the State of Texas


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Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log  
Benchmark Blasterz visited New Cavalry Barracks 07/21/2015 Benchmark Blasterz visited it