manuel cohen

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Officers' Row and post hospital, Fort Davis National Historic Site, Texas, USA

Officers' Row, lodging for the army officers, and on the left, the post hospital, restored 1960s - 1990s, at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen

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Filename
LC17_TEXAS_MC227.jpg
Copyright
© Manuel Cohen
Image Size
7087x4724 / 11.6MB
www.manuelcohen.com
1854 19th century accommodation America American American history architecture army base building camp canyon color image colour image Davis mountains day exterior fort Fort Davis Fort Davis National Historic Site frontier military post heritage high angle view historic site history horizontal hospital house Jeff Davis County Jefferson Davis living quarters lodging Lone Star State military morning museum North America North American NPS officer officers' row outdoors outside parade ground porch post hospital street Texan Texas tourism tourist attraction travel United States United States of America US US history US National Historic Landmark US National Historic Site US National Register of Historic Places USA
Contained in galleries
Texas, USA
Officers' Row, lodging for the army officers, and on the left, the post hospital, restored 1960s - 1990s, at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen