 Fort Hood Communities
Posted by: QuesterMark
N 31° 22.001 W 097° 41.392
14R E 624597 N 3470982
This post-mounted subject marker stands on the east side of SH 36 as it passes through Fort Hood in Coryell County.
Waymark Code: WM15AVP
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 11/25/2021
Views: 7
Marker erected by the Texas Historical Commission.
Texas Historical Commission Atlas data: Index Entry Fort Hood Communities Address SH 36 City Gatesville County Coryell UTM Zone 14 UTM Easting 624596 UTM Northing 3470986 Subject Codes military topics Marker Year 2012 Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No Private Property No Marker Location SH 36 near North Fort Hood entrance at 18th Street Marker Condition In Situ Marker Size 27" x 42" with post
Marker Number: 17087
 Marker Text: On January 15, 1942, the U.S. Army established a tank destroyer tactical and firing center near Killeen covering more than 100 square miles. Camp Hood (later Fort Hood) would be used to train fifty battalions of about 1,000 men each for World War II combat. Because of the size of the facility, the army needed to acquire more than 88,000 acres of land. About twenty small communities in Coryell County were taken by the government for the establishment of the facility, later named Fort Hood. Many communities were established in the early 1850s before the county was created. During the time of the property acquisitions there was much confusion among the citizens of Coryell County. Families who had lived on the same land for generations watched as homes and churches were lost and beloved dead were reburied in other cemeteries. Financial difficulties arose because of the chaos that followed. The changes happened in a matter of days and weeks because of the urgent need for military training and response.
It was a long and hard recovery for those uprooted. In an article in the Gatesville Messenger on February 27, 1942, the author speaks about committee representatives of the camp site area appealing to elected officials about the land prices. The people affected by Fort Hood did not oppose the government using their land for its purpose, but they did expect to be paid reasonable prices so that they might purchase similar homes in other places. Because of the common hardships, community members banded together and became a closer group. Today, even though they are more scattered geographically, these families and their descendants maintain connections through communication, reunions and the traditions of generations past. (2012)
Marker is Property of the State of Texas

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