Camp McGarry: Difference between revisions

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* [http://www.nevadaheritage.com/timeline/timelinemainpage.htm Nevada Heritage Time Line] 1871: Congress made Camp McGarry an Indian reservation; land set aside for Summit Lake Paiute Reservation January 14, 1913 (Humboldt).  ''Note that these dates may be in doubt.''
* [http://www.nevadaheritage.com/timeline/timelinemainpage.htm Nevada Heritage Time Line] 1871: Congress made Camp McGarry an Indian reservation; land set aside for Summit Lake Paiute Reservation January 14, 1913 (Humboldt).  ''Note that these dates may be in doubt.''
* Colonel George Ruhlen, "[http://epubs.nsla.nv.gov/statepubs/epubs/210777-1964-3-4Cent.pdf Early Nevada Forts,]" p. 44, Nevada Historical Society Quarterly, Volume VII, Number 3-4,
* Colonel George Ruhlen, "[http://epubs.nsla.nv.gov/statepubs/epubs/210777-1964-3-4Cent.pdf Early Nevada Forts,]" p. 44, Nevada Historical Society Quarterly, Volume VII, Number 3-4,
[[Category:Camps and Forts]]

Revision as of 02:15, 31 December 2022

Camp McGarry was located at Summit Lake, about 10 miles north of Soldier Meadows.

Camp McGarry (dead link as of 2014-01-04) here on the old Applegate Trail was an Army fort manned from 1865 to 1868. Troops protected the Idaho-California mail and stage roads and the nearby trails in Nevada and Oregon. Officers' quarters, mess hall, barracks and a 100-horse stone barn were constructed 12 miles south of the fort. In 1866, Camp McGarry was made headquarters of the District of Nevada. In autumn, 1868, troops were moved to Camp Winfield Scott, north of Paradise, Nevada; and Camp McGarry, largest military reservation in Nevada, comprising 75 square miles, was abandoned.

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