Results for Officers Quarters
Staff Officers' Quarters
The U.S. Army built nine stone officers’ quarters at Fort ...
Officers' Row Quarters
Fort Clark was established as a U.S. Army garrison in 1852...
Fort Shannon Officers Quarters
Believed to have been constructed in c.1842 as a part of t...
Fort Bliss Officers' Quarters
Old Fort Bliss, on site formerly in Mexico. Owned after 18...
Officers Quarters – 1776
Mount Independence State Historic Site
“ . . . some ...
Officers Quarters / Magazine
This structure was reconstructed in 1890 on the foundation...
Officers Quarters
The chimney remains mark the site of a company officer’s h...
Non-Commissioned Officers' Quarters (110 & 111)
Constructed in 1888 in the architectural style of Fort Apa...
Officers' Quarters (107, 108, 109)
These three officers' quarters were constructed between 18...
Commanding Officers' Quarters (104)
A classic Victorian mansion, this building clearly represe...
Results for Officers Quarters
Staff Officers' Quarters
The U.S. Army built nine stone officers’ quarters at Fort Clark beginning in 1873. The need soon arose for additional housing for senior staff officers, and this building was constructed in 1888. Built in a T-plan, the two-story stone duplex ...
Officers' Row Quarters
Fort Clark was established as a U.S. Army garrison in 1852. The original quarters were crude log huts and houses of palisade construction. In 1857, a new program began to replace badly dilapidated structures with buildings of quarried stone.
Designed and ...
Fort Shannon Officers Quarters
Believed to have been constructed in c.1842 as a part of the Seminole War era Fort Shannon, the building was in private ownership by the time of the Civil War. It was used as a military barracks by Union troops ...
Fort Bliss Officers' Quarters
Old Fort Bliss, on site formerly in Mexico. Owned after 1849 by Simeon Hart, founder of Hart's Mill and early village of El Paso.
Officers quarters, built about 1879 on 3' foundations of hewn stone. 24" walls are double-laid adobe brick.
Marker ...
Officers Quarters – 1776
Mount Independence State Historic Site
“ . . . some of the officers have good framed houses.” -
Dr. Lewis Beebe, September 30, 1776
This fifteen-foot square, well-defined stone foundation may be the remains of quarters for one or more American officers ...
Officers Quarters / Magazine
This structure was reconstructed in 1890 on the foundations of the original 1778 building. Long thought to be an officer’s barracks, recent information is now leading archaeologists to believe that it was actually the camp magazine which held the kegs ...
Officers Quarters
The chimney remains mark the site of a company officer’s hut. The hut was a replica built in 1890 on the original site.
The company-level officer’s huts were located behind the enlisted hut line. There are several other firebacks of ...
Non-Commissioned Officers' Quarters (110 & 111)
Constructed in 1888 in the architectural style of Fort Apache's Officers' Row, these residences housed junior officers or non-commissioned officers and their families.
Like other quarters on the east end of Officers' Row, these residences were refurbished by the Bureau ...
Officers' Quarters (107, 108, 109)
These three officers' quarters were constructed between 1883 and 1888 to house junior officers and their families. With clipped-corner porches and symmetrical front elevations, these quarters reflect the architectural style established by the military for Officers' Row. The westernmost of ...
Commanding Officers' Quarters (104)
A classic Victorian mansion, this building clearly represents some of the Army's architectural motivations. Recognizing the difficulties for officers and their families of being assigned to remote posts, the Army built homes such as this one to provide a measure ...