Military Architecture at Fort Clark

Military Architecture at Fort Clark

A Guide to the Texas Historic Landmark

$24.99

Publication Date: 15th January 2024

Take a comprehensive tour of Fort Clark, Texas, one of best-preserved districts on the National Register of Historic Places. Thomas Jefferson recognized that a morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. The Fort Clark Historic District, in Kinney County, Texas, is far more than a morsel. It is a full-course buffet of U.S. Army architecture, with more than one hundred well-preserved structures from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, some built to Quartermaster model plans, and many the only remaining examples in the nation. While most other Texas Indian War–e... Read More

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Take a comprehensive tour of Fort Clark, Texas, one of best-preserved districts on the National Register of Historic Places. Thomas Jefferson recognized that a morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. The Fort Clark Historic District, in Kinney County, Texas, is far more than a morsel. It is a full-course buffet of U.S. Army architecture, with more than one hundred well-preserved structures from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, some built to Quartermaster model plans, and many the only remaining examples in the nation. While most other Texas Indian War–e... Read More

Description

Take a comprehensive tour of Fort Clark, Texas, one of best-preserved districts on the National Register of Historic Places. Thomas Jefferson recognized that a morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. The Fort Clark Historic District, in Kinney County, Texas, is far more than a morsel. It is a full-course buffet of U.S. Army architecture, with more than one hundred well-preserved structures from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, some built to Quartermaster model plans, and many the only remaining examples in the nation. While most other Texas Indian War–era forts are long abandoned and reduced to nothing more than stark chimneys on the prairie, Fort Clark’s wide-ranging military architecture has survived virtually unchanged. Author William Haenn surveys the landmark site that represents nearly a century of active service to Texas and the nation.

Details
  • Pages: 176
  • Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
  • Imprint: The History Press
  • Series: Landmarks
  • Publication Date: 15th January 2024
  • State: Texas
  • ISBN: 9781467155564
  • Format: Paperback
  • BISACs:
    ARCHITECTURE / Historic Preservation / General
    HISTORY / Military / Fortifications
    HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Southwest (AZ, NM, OK, TX)
Reviews

The Fort Clark Historic District remains one of the most remarkably intact districts entered into the National Register of Historic Places. 

–Texas preservation architect Killis P. Almond Jr.

This is both an excellent guide and a thoroughly researched history of part of the Second Federal Line just north of the Rio Grande.

Nick Reynolds, Book Review Editor, Journal of America's Military Past

Author Bio

Bill Haenn retired from the U.S. Army as a lieutenant colonel in 1993 and has since lived at Fort Clark, immersed in its history. He is the author of the bestselling book Fort Clark and Brackettville Land of Heroes, a photographic history for Arcadia Publishing’s Images of America series. The Texas Historical Commission honored Bill in 2011 with its prestigious Award of Merit in recognition of his prodigious historical documentation, continued leadership, preservation and heritage tourism promotion of the natural and built environment of Historic Fort Clark, Brackettville, Texas.


Take a comprehensive tour of Fort Clark, Texas, one of best-preserved districts on the National Register of Historic Places. Thomas Jefferson recognized that a morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. The Fort Clark Historic District, in Kinney County, Texas, is far more than a morsel. It is a full-course buffet of U.S. Army architecture, with more than one hundred well-preserved structures from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, some built to Quartermaster model plans, and many the only remaining examples in the nation. While most other Texas Indian War–era forts are long abandoned and reduced to nothing more than stark chimneys on the prairie, Fort Clark’s wide-ranging military architecture has survived virtually unchanged. Author William Haenn surveys the landmark site that represents nearly a century of active service to Texas and the nation.

  • Pages: 176
  • Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
  • Imprint: The History Press
  • Series: Landmarks
  • Publication Date: 15th January 2024
  • State: Texas
  • ISBN: 9781467155564
  • Format: Paperback
  • BISACs:
    ARCHITECTURE / Historic Preservation / General
    HISTORY / Military / Fortifications
    HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Southwest (AZ, NM, OK, TX)

The Fort Clark Historic District remains one of the most remarkably intact districts entered into the National Register of Historic Places. 

–Texas preservation architect Killis P. Almond Jr.

This is both an excellent guide and a thoroughly researched history of part of the Second Federal Line just north of the Rio Grande.

Nick Reynolds, Book Review Editor, Journal of America's Military Past

Bill Haenn retired from the U.S. Army as a lieutenant colonel in 1993 and has since lived at Fort Clark, immersed in its history. He is the author of the bestselling book Fort Clark and Brackettville Land of Heroes, a photographic history for Arcadia Publishing’s Images of America series. The Texas Historical Commission honored Bill in 2011 with its prestigious Award of Merit in recognition of his prodigious historical documentation, continued leadership, preservation and heritage tourism promotion of the natural and built environment of Historic Fort Clark, Brackettville, Texas.