
The Jefferson Barracks Military Post, located on the
Mississippi
River at Lemay,
Missouri, which is just south of St.
Louis, Missouri, was an active U.S. Army
installation from 1826 through
1946.
History
In 1825, General Edmund P.
Gaines (Commander of the Western Department of the Army), Brig.
General Henry
Atkinson (commanding officer of the sixth infantry regiment),
explorer William
Clark, and Missouri Governor John
Miller spent several days searching the banks of the
Mississippi
River for the perfect location for a new post to replace
Fort Bellefontaine. A site near the city of "Vide Poche" or
Carondelet,
ten miles south of St.
Louis, was recommended and then approved by Major General
Jacob J.
Brown, Commanding General of the Army.
On July 10,
1826,
two days after the deed to the land was signed, the first military
troops -- six officers and 245 enlisted men of Companies A, B, H
and I, commanded by Brevet Major Stephen
Watts Kearny -- arrived at the new post and started building
temporary quarters that they named Cantonment Miller in honor of
Governor Miller. In 1827 the military post was formally named
Jefferson Barracks in honor of Thomas
Jefferson who had died the year before. Jefferson Barracks was
designated the first "Infantry School of Practice."
The first conflict that the men of Jefferson Barracks were
involved with was the Black Hawk
War in 1832. Troops were
deployed from Jefferson Barracks to push "hostile Indians" back
into their village in present day Iowa.
Chief
Black Hawk was captured and brought back to Jefferson
Barracks.
In 1832, the United States Regiment of Dragoons were
formed and stationed at Jefferson Baracks. The dragoons, trained to
fight mounted or dismounted, were the first unit of permanent
cavalry in the
United States Army. They were formed
and stationed at Jefferson Barracks.
Mexican War
Jefferson Barracks became a major military post during the
Mexican-American
War (1846-1848) when it served
as a rest and supply station for the troops heading to Mexico.
Civil War
During the American
Civil War (1861-1865), Jefferson
Barracks served as a military hospital for both sides and a
recuitment depot for the North. In 1862 construction of the Western
Sanitary Commission's hospital facitlities began at Jefferson
Barracks. By the time that the hospital complex was complete, it
could hold 3,000 patients. By the end of the first year of the war,
over 5,000 sick and wounded had been admitted and, by the end of
the war, well over 18,000 soldiers had been treated at Jefferson
Barracks Hospital. In 2002, The Missouri Civil War Museum was
founded, which is still being restored today. The MCWM is being
brought to life in the old 1905 Post Exchange Building.
World War I
On March 1,
1912
Jefferson Barracks was the site of the first parachute jump
from an airplane.
During World War I,
Jefferson Barracks served as a training and recruitment station for
soldiers heading to Europe.
During the 1930s, the
Civilian Military Training Corps or CMT was held at Jefferson
Barracks. Young men could spend one month a year at the post being
trained as a soldier, and after three years they could enter the
military. Also during that time the
Works
Progress Administration (WPA) had camps at Jefferson
Barracks.
World War II
During World War II,
Jefferson Barracks was a major reception center for troops being
drafted into the military. It also served as a basic training site
for the Army, then later was the first Army Air
Corps Training Site. During World War II, Jefferson Barracks
had a peak area of 1,518 acres (6.14 km²), and had billeting space
for 16 officers and 1,500 enlisted persons.
Jefferson Barracks was decommissioned as a military post in
1946
with the end of World War II.
Post-World War II
After Jefferson Barracks was decommissioned, portions of the
grounds were sold off for construction of houses. Some of the
barracks were acquired by the St. Louis County Housing Authority as
temporary low-cost housing. Those were demolished in the 1960s and
replaced by the current Jefferson Townhomes development. Bishop
DuBourg High School was located on the Jefferson Barracks property
for several years in the early 1950s. The former Jefferson Barracks
School is now used for storage and maintenance; and the former
theater is St. Bernadette Catholic Church.
It is now the site of two St.
Louis County Parks (Jefferson Barracks County Park and Sylvan
Springs County Park), a National Reserve Base, the
Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery and a
Veterans
Administration hospital. Part of the hospital grounds were
donated to the Mehlville School District in the 1960s to build
Ronald S. Beasley Elementary School.
Jefferson Barracks County Park includes several museums that
house artifacts and history of Jefferson Barracks while it was an
active United States Military Post. During the 1960s and 1970s,
portions of Jefferson Barracks County Park were used as a landfill.
During the 1980s, an annual balloon race was held in the park.
Today, because of its large size, high school cross country races
are often held in the park in the fall months.
From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia
This is one of
greatest all-around parks and it has so much to offer to the
public. Come walk the hallowed grounds of Jefferson Barracks and
while you are at it locate this cache.
The location is off
of the walking path where Grant Road, CCC Road and River Road
intersect. From the parking lot there will be a walk
of
approximately .2 of a mile to the cache. Taking
the trailheads provided the terrain is through a field then
into the woods for the final 200 foot bushwhack. Take trailhead one
from the paved path, through the field along the woods. Then take
trailhead two into the woods. The coordinates for the parking and
trailheads are posted below.
For the first to
find there is a gift certificate to a local restaurant.
Congratulations
goes to
JanS03
on FTF.

|
NOTICE: Please be respectful of the posted park hours. If you enter
the park after hours you are trespassing. If you are stopped you
can be ticketed or arrested and will put the future of geocaching
in the parks in
jeopardy. |
Special permission to hide caches in St.
Louis County parks is NOT needed as long as the Groundspeak rules
are followed. "Blanket Permission" has been worked out in advance
with the park service. DO NOT CALL THE PARK as they cannot handle
the calls. The Groundspeak cache reviewer does need to know exactly
how and where the caches are hidden and what type of containers are
used. The geocaching liaisons will notify the park service of new
caches. Remember NO AMMO BOXES or PVC PIPE
caches.

