FORT DOUGLAS

Gaurd
house, Fort Douglas, 1864
After the Civil War began in 1861 it was necessary to recall regular
troops from frontier duty for action against the South, leaving the overland
mail route to California unguarded from attack by hostile Indians. President
Lincoln called for volunteers, and Patrick E. Connor was appointed Colonel
(Brevet Major General) of the Third California Volunteer Infantry. Colonel
Connor was directed to establish a post near Salt Lake City, both to protect
the overland mail route and to keep an eye on the Mormons.
Camp Douglas (Fort Douglas) was established on 26 October 1862; it was named
after the late Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois. Winter was approaching
and dugouts were quickly built. The next summer log buildings were erected.
The post was rebuilt of red sandstone in 1873-76 and the existing brick
buildings were built in the early 1900s.
The first major Indian engagement for the troops was the Battle of Bear
River in Idaho on 28 January 1863. A band of Shoshoni Indians were almost
annihilated, nearly three hundred Indians were killed, while twenty-three
soldiers were killed or died later. The volunteers were discharged by 1866
and were replaced by regulars from the 18th Infantry.
Rails were joined at Promontory, Utah, in 1869 permitting rapid deployment
of the local troops. Fort Douglas units participated in the northern plains
campaigns of the 1860s and 1870s and in the Sioux War of 1890. During the
Spanish-American War of 1898, the 24th Infantry, a Black regiment stationed
at Fort Douglas, fought gallantly in Cuba.
Fort Douglas expanded quickly during World War I as thousands of recruits
arrived for their training. A general hospital was established in 1918 but
was never completed, and a prisoner-of-war compound was built for German
prisoners. The 28th Infantry, nicknamed "Rock of the Marne" in
World War I for stopping a German offensive, arrived in 1922. The regiment
departed in August 1940 and Fort Douglas temporarily became an air base
in conjunction with the Salt Lake Municipal Airport.
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Ninth Service Command Headquarters
was moved from the Presidio, San Francisco, to Fort Douglas in January 1942.
The fort also directed the repair of military vehicles and served as a finance
center until 1947. Once again, a prisoner-of-war camp was established at
the fort.

Fort Douglas, 1868
The Ninth Service Command was dissolved in 1946, and in 1947 the army
announced that the fort was surplus and some land was turned over to the
University of Utah and other agencies. However, the Korean War delayed dismantlement
of the fort, which served as an induction center and administrative headquarters
for the Utah Military District. The university received land in 1962 for
a medical center and again in 1967 for a research park.
Closure of the post was announced in 1964; the flag was lowered on 25 June
1967 and Fort Douglas became a subpost of Fort Carson, Colorado. The army
retained only the parade ground and many of the historic buildings, and
also reserved water rights in Red Butte Canyon. The fort continued to serve
as headquarters for the 96th Army Reserve Command. The fort was listed in
the National Register of Historic Places in 1970 and was designated a National
Historic Landmark in 1975. In 1989 Congress finally approved closure of
Fort Douglas as a military facility. Transfer of the fort to the University
of Utah began in 1991 and was completed in late 1993.
See: Leonard J. Arrington and Thomas G. Alexander, "The U.S. Army Overlooks
Salt Lake Valley: Fort Douglas, 1862-1965," Utah Historical Quarterly
33 (Fall 1965).
Charles G. Hibbard