Inscription
These two buildings date from 1854-55, soon after the U.S. Army established Fort Clark. The antebellum fort then included officers quarters and barracks for enlisted men, as well as a two-story quartermaster storehouse, powder magazine, hospital, guardhouse and post headquarters around a parade ground.
During this period, such notable army officers as John Bell Hood, J.E.B. Stuart, Fitzhugh Lee and James Longstreet served here and likely lived in these quarters. Horizontal logs and vertical posts were notched and interlocked to create these buildings. Limestone chimneys are also historic. The army closed the fort in 1944, by which time the buildings were clad in lath and plaster and wood siding.
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 2007
Location
Sources
More markers in Kinney
Commanding Officer's Quarters
Brackettville, TX
Fort Clark was established as a U.S. Army garrison in June 1852.
Dolores Townsite
Brackettville, TX
Only settlement founded in John Charles Beales' ill-fated Rio Grande colony of 1834-1836.
Fort Clark
Brackettville, TX
A strategic installation in the U.S. Army's line of forts along the military road stretching from San Antonio to El Paso, Fort Clark was...
Fort Clark, U.S.A.
Brackettville, TX
1852-1946 Founded June, 1852.
Military Roads in Texas
Brackettville, TX
The routes that moved troops in early Texas often followed old Indian trails, usually were little more than deep wagon ruts.
